Gianini v. Cerini

171 P. 1007, 100 Wash. 687, 1918 Wash. LEXIS 789
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1918
DocketNo. 14419
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 171 P. 1007 (Gianini v. Cerini) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gianini v. Cerini, 171 P. 1007, 100 Wash. 687, 1918 Wash. LEXIS 789 (Wash. 1918).

Opinion

Webster, J.

In an action to recover damages for . personal injuries, the plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment, from which defendants appeal, assigning as error the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict, the refusal of the court to give certain requested instructions, and misconduct of the plaintiff in injecting into the case the fact that the defendant was protected by liability insurance. We shall discuss these assignments in the order stated.

On August 8, 1916, the plaintiff, an employee of the defendant, while backing an automobile truck in an effort to turn it around, was precipitated over a steep bluff, resulting in the injuries complained of. The defective condition of the brakes on the truck was the only ground of negligence submitted to the jury. The plaintiff’s version of the accident, in his own language, is:

“I went to back up the truck, the front around, and when I see I am far enough I take my foot off from the gas and put it on the brake, and the brake don’t hold and the truck went overboard. Q. Why? A. Why? Because the brake don’t hold me; even when I put in the emergency brake, down he went. ’ ’

He further testified that the defendant Peter V. Cerini visited him at the hospital a day or two- after the accident and said that he was sorry he had never [689]*689said anything about the brakes; that the brake was loose from the drum and had been “all along.”

This evidence was sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the plaintiff reasonably used all the appliances provided for stopping the truck without effect; that the brakes were in a defective condition; that the defendant had knowledge of this fact, and that he failed to inform the plaintiff thereof. Furthermore, it appears that the plaintiff had never driven the truck before the day on which the accident occurred, and only for a short time prior to the accident. The evidence therefore, if believed by the jury, was sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict in his favor, and we are not prepared to say that the court abused its discretion in refusing to set it aside.

The instructions requested and refused, upon which the second class of assignments of error is based, all relate to the testimony of the plaintiff concerning admissions made by the defendant on the occasion of his visit to the hospital. The court was asked to charge, in varying forms of words, that casual statements made in random conversations and testified to by bystanders or listeners should be scrutinized with great caution and are the weakest character of evidence. In view of the constitutional inhibition against comment on the facts by trial judges in their charge to juries, it has not been the policy of this court to encourage the giving of cautionary instructions. There are very few classes of evidence of any kind in which inherent weakness may not be found in the light of the facts of a particular case, and it would open the door to serious abuses to permit nisi prius judges, under the guise of cautioning the jury, to express their views concerning the weight and probative .force of testimony. Such practice, if much indulged in, would seriously trench upon the constitutional right of trial by [690]*690jury, and make easy the accomplishment of the very evil sought to he guarded against. Moreover, the conversation in question was not a casual or random one, and the testimony concerning the statements made was not given by a chance or uninterested bystander. Here, if the evidence is to he believed, the defendant, made a deliberate statement to the plaintiff relative to the very ground of negligence upon which the action is based. If it he assumed that this important admission against interest was, in fact, made, it cannot he said to be weak or dangerous evidence. The weakness, if any, lies in the question of whether it was made, depending in this case upon the weight of credit to he given the testimony of the plaintiff in the light' of his interest, prejudice, and bias, upon which subject the jury was properly charged by an appropriate instruction. There was no reversible error in refusing to give the requested instructions.

Lastly, it is contended that the court should have granted the defendants’ request to discharge the jury and discontinúe the trial of the case, for the reason that the plaintiff, while testifying as a witness in his own behalf, disclosed the fact that defendant carried liability insurance covering the accident in question. On cross-examination, the plaintiff was interrogated at length concerning a typewritten statement signed by him which had been procured by Mr. Murphy, one of the attorneys for defendants, during a visit made by the plaintiff to Mr. Murphy’s office. On redirect examination, in an effort to show that the plaintiff had been imposed upon and not treated fairly when the statement referred to had been given, the several visits and conversations leading to the procurement of the statement were.gone into by plaintiff’s counsel, during which the record shows the following transpired:

[691]*691“Q. How did you come to go in there that day? A. Well, I went in there to get some money, because a fellow come up to my house and say he represent Cerini’s lawyer.- Q. He said.he was from Mr. Murphy’s office? A. He said he was represent Cerini’s lawyer; and he says he wants to know what I am going' to do; and the lawyer wants to see me; and I says all right; and I says where is the office of Cerini’s lawyer, and he said, he is down in the Central building; so after fifteen days I come down and tell Mr. Murphy I need some money for an operation. I had my baby with me, and so Mr. Murphy he take my baby on his lap and he says, how much do you want; and I say, I want five hundred dollars; and he say, if you give me the baby, I will give you more than five hundred dollars; and I says, is that Cerini talking now, and he says yes; he say, I will go up and see him this afternoon, and you come back about three o’clock; and then the time he say that, he push a button and a lady come out and what I said she put down; and so I says, you don’t have to write that down, there was a man there who took the statement all at my house; and he said, he lost that. Q. That is the yellow slips? A. Tes, the yellow slips; and the next day I went back, and I said to Mr. Murphy I am here again; and he said did you sign that paper yesterday? And I said yes; and he say, now, if you want any money you sue Cerini for it; I am not his lawyer; I am the insurance lawyer. Q. That is Mr. Murphy now? A. Tes.”

The foregoing is the only reference to the subject of insurance made throughout the trial.

While it is the settled law of this state that the wanton intrusion into a personal injury case of the fact that the defendant carries liability insurance covering the accident in question is prejudicial error necessitating the reversal of a judgment for the plaintiff, we do not think this case falls within that principle, for three reasons: first, the mere statement that Mr. Murphy was the “insurance lawyer” did not advise the jury that the defendant was protected by indemnity insur[692]*692anee; second, the statement was made on redirect examination relative to a matter brought into the case by the defendant and was incidental to a legitimate and proper inquiry; and third, the statement was not wantonly injected into the case through misconduct of counsel for the ulterior purpose of prejudicing the jury.

In Edwards v. Burke, 36 Wash. 107, 78 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
171 P. 1007, 100 Wash. 687, 1918 Wash. LEXIS 789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gianini-v-cerini-wash-1918.