Frisbie, Admx. v. Schinto

1 Conn. Super. Ct. 95, 1 Conn. Supp. 95, 1935 Conn. Super. LEXIS 42
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1935
DocketFile #45989
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Conn. Super. Ct. 95 (Frisbie, Admx. v. Schinto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frisbie, Admx. v. Schinto, 1 Conn. Super. Ct. 95, 1 Conn. Supp. 95, 1935 Conn. Super. LEXIS 42 (Colo. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

BALDWIN, J.

The accident resulting in the death of plaintiff’s decedent occurred very shortly after ten o’clock on the night of July 3rd, 1934, on the Post Road in Darien about a half or three'quarters of a mile westerly from the railroad underpass. The highway is a fourdane highway thirty--six feet wide having a shoulder five feet wide on the northerly side.

It was misty and raining, a shower having been in progress for approximately an hour, having somewhat abated at the time. There was no artificial lighting in this locality. It was dark and visibility was poor because of the condition of the weather.

The decedent had been driving a Chevrolet truck having a closeddn body, the top of which was black with red sides and doors, of which there were two at the rear end. He was accompanied by the owner of the truck and the owner’s son, a child nine years of age. They were en route from Norwalk to Stamford, having been driving through the rain storm. *96 Because of a flat tire on the rear left wheel the decedent drove the truck onto the shoulder at the right of the road and stopped, leaving the left wheels a foot or a foot and a half over the hardened surface or travelled part of the road. When he stopped the truck he stopped the motor and there' upon all lights upon the truck were extinguished, the battery being out of service. There was a reflector three and one' half inches in diameter attached to the left-hand rear door near the bottom of the door and ‘a little to the left of the center of the truck. The truck had been driven through the storm and was dirty. There was substantial evidence that the reflector was so dirty that it destroyed its visibility, and the officer, summoned to the scene and looking for the truck involved could not see the reflector as he approached until he alighted from his car. It was perfectly clean when presented as an exhibit in the trial.

In this position upon the road and with the truck in the condition described the decedent and the owner of the truck and his son awaited in the truck approximately one'half hour for the rain to abate sufficiently to admit of removing the flat tire and placing upon the wheel a good tire.

The decedent was removing the nuts from the lugs upon this left rear wheel when the defendant’s car came in col' lision with him throwing him forward and under or near the forward wheel of the truck breaking four ribs and the scapula, one of the ribs probably puncturing the lung. Pneumonia developed the next day and he died July 9th.

The decedent was fifty'four years old, he had an expectancy of eighteen and a fraction years. There was no evidence that the economic value of his life to his estate up to the time of his death had been of any value. The verdict was for eight thousand five hundred dollars.

This verdict, in so far as negligence of the defendant opera' tor was concerned, must have been based upon the testimony of the witness Huchins, since Ciordano, the owner of the truck, testified that he did not see the injuring automobile until the moment of the impact and could not give its rate of speed, except to say that it was fast and testified that this automobile travelled after hitting the decedent a distance esti' mated at one hundred feet, whereas at the hearing before the coroner shortly after this accident he testified the automobile travelled after contact with the deceden thirty'five to forty feet.

The witness Hutchins testified he was driving from Bridge *97 port to Bronx, N. Y., that he was driving a truck with which he could drive sixty miles an hour, that he overtook defendants who were travelling forty miles an hour or better and that he tried, two or three times to pass the defendants, coming alongside of defendants’ car sounding his horn to indicate his desire to pass and that he could not quite make it; that the occupants of defendants’ car were talking to each other and not observing where they were driving; that at times she would be to her right and at times to her left, “indirect traffic” that he wanted to pass because at a grade some three quarters of a mile or more further on he might have to shift gears because of slow traffic ahead; that he saw the truck upon which decedent was working and the reflector and the decedent himself working at the rear left wheel when he was five or six hundred feet away, and that when defendants’ car was one hundred feet from the decedent he saw then that the defendant operator was going to hit the decedent “because I knew she didn’t see where she was going”, that he saw a bright object going through the air, and went and got his flashlight and found the object he saw going through the air was a pair of glasses and they were found about twenty-five or thirty feet ahead of where plaintiff was struck. It appeared that the decedent wore glasses.

Although Hutchins saw that the defendant operator when one hundred feet from the decedent, was going to strike him, he sounded no horn to warn decedent of the approaching danger, and drove on three hundred feet past the scene of the accident before he came to a stop. He claimed defendants’ car came to a stop one hundred feet beyond the point of contact.

There were other respects in which Hutchins tried to prejudice the jury by testifying to circumstances for which there was no foundation in fact. He would have it appear that he was concerned to see that defendant operator did not “hit and run”, but stopped; that he wanted the injured put in defendants’s car to be taken to hospital, and that one of the occupants of defendants’ car go to hospital, when in fact the defendant operator although she did not see the injured man until after she had stopped, which she did at once, and returned to where he was and then endeavored to stop cars to take him to the hospital, because her car because of tis load and construction was not convenient, and she drove to the hospital and showed every interest and concern.

The defendant operator and the other two in the car with *98 her were truthful and honest witnesses; their every answer and statement and appearance, both upon the witness stand and in the court bespoke their integrity and the truth of their testimony in the case and made it evidence of worth and weight.

The witness Hutchins was not worthy of belief; his story in its essential features, was “built up” and perjury.

I am fully aware of the functions of the jury and of the court in respect to a situation such as here presented, and I am quite aware that no record can present the picture that the actual observation and listening to the witnesses presents. I am also mindful of the care that should be exercised in dis' turbing a verdict of the jury and the duty one owes to conscience and that the court should exercise in the interest of justice. This verdict for the reasons given I cannot permit to stand.

But there are other reasons why the verdict should be set aside, and these concern the obvious failure of the court to adequately charge the jury. Although the charge was lengthy, probably too lengthy, I wholly failed to instruct the jury on a very essential feature of the case. A provision of the statute relating to the feature of the case referred to is as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Conn. Super. Ct. 95, 1 Conn. Supp. 95, 1935 Conn. Super. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frisbie-admx-v-schinto-connsuperct-1935.