H. Wales Lines Co. v. Hartford City Gas Light Co.

93 A. 129, 89 Conn. 117
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 5, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 93 A. 129 (H. Wales Lines Co. v. Hartford City Gas Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. Wales Lines Co. v. Hartford City Gas Light Co., 93 A. 129, 89 Conn. 117 (Colo. 1915).

Opinion

Prentice, C. J.

The defendant complains of the court’s refusal to direct a verdict in its favor, of certain portions of the charge, and of two rulings upon the admission of testimony.

The motion for the direction of a verdict was properly denied. The issues involved the determination by the jury of the cause of the damage alleged to have been done to the pumping-station, and the defendant’s legal responsibility for that cause. The plaintiff averred, and offered testimony, covering between five hundred and six hundred pages of the printed record, to establish that the cause was illuminating-gas escaped into the public sewer from the defendant’s works or conduits, or given off by other products of *121 the defendant’s gas manufacture similarly escaped, and that the presence of this gas in the sewer was due to the defendant’s negligence. These propositions the defendant undertook to refute. The first of the two propositions was the fundamental one. If established, the evidence pointed the road to the second so clearly that the jury might well take it. The evidence offered to establish this first was circumstantial as distinguished from direct, but was none the less competent on that account, and it was of such a character that an eminent expert did not hesitate to assert and stoutly maintain that the cause of the explosion was illuminating-gas. This evidence was sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to go to the jury upon it, unless we are prepared to say that the conclusion contended for was one which a jury could not reasonably accept. The evidence does not justify us in taking that extreme position. The case is one presenting not so much a conflict of direct testimony as a disagreement in the inferences to be drawn from facts established. Here the conflict is indeed a sharp one, but it is for the most part one of reasoning from circumstances and conditions to conclusions. The question for the jury was not so much what direct evidence to believe, as what scientific theory to adopt or inferences of fact to draw. This is a field which we should enter upon with caution, lest we forget how circumscribed our office therein is, and be misled into setting up our own judgment as furnishing the standard for the determination of sane reasoning.

A considerable number of objections are addressed to the charge. No one of them directly concerns the law applicable to the case. Apparently^ the defendant can find no criticism of the court’s instructions as to the controlling principles of law. Its criticisms all relate to that part of the charge in which the claims *122 of the parties based upon the evidence are summarized, and the attention of the jury called to the particular portions of the evidence relied upon in support of the several claims. This part of the charge discloses a painstaking attempt on the court’s part to assist the jury by an orderly statement of these claims, and of the reasons therefor as advanced by counsel.

A few of the assignments of error in effect accuse the court of partiality in certain of its statements of claims and evidence, in its assumption of facts not established, and in its disparagement, • express or implied, of the defendant’s contentions. Our examination of the charge in connection with the evidence satisfies us not only that these accusations are unfounded, but also that the court was eminently successful in preserving an attitude of strict impartiality and fairness. Its effort plainly was to submit the case just as counsel had presented it, and it requires an acutely critical interpretation of the court’s language and subtle refinement of criticism to give color to any other view.

These criticisms aside, - the assignments of error touching the charge all gather about two propositions: (1) that the jury were in effect permitted to impute actionable negligence to the defendant upon the strength of no other proof than the fact of the explosion; and (2) that the court improperly included, in its summary of the circumstances in evidence relied upon by the plaintiff to establish that the cause of the explosion was the defendant’s illuminating-gas, certain circumstances that furnish no substantial support for such a conclusion.

The first of these propositions harks back to the contention of /the defendant, made in support of its motion to direct the verdict, that the plaintiff was without proof upon which a verdict in its favor could be founded, and rests upon that view of the case which *123 we have already seen to 'be unfounded. The res ipsa loquitur doctrine was neither invoked by the plaintiff nor countenanced by the court. On the contrary, the plaintiff rested its case upon proof of circumstances and conditions claimed to establish its allegations, and the court carefully confined the jury to a consideration of that proof, and authorized a plaintiff’s verdict only in the event that it thereby established the alleged cause and the responsibility for negligence. The defendant indeed asserted, and still aserts, that the proof adduced was inconsequential, so that nothing was left of the plaintiff’s case but the fact of the explosion. But the trial court did not concur in that view, the jury did not, and we do not.

The defendant’s claim under the second head is that harmful error was committed by the court’s inclusion— in its recital of the circumstances in evidence relied upon by the plaintiff to establish the alleged cause of the explosion—of circumstances and conditions which the defendant says were not in fact indicative of the presence of illuminating-gas, since by such inclusion a dignity and character was given thereto as possessing probative value which they did not deserve in view of the conditions shown. It is said that in this way the appearance of substantial importance was given to that which possessed no true significance in aid of the plaintiff’s contention, and the weight of the court’s recognition of value accorded to that which had no true value when rightly appreciated.

This claim rests in part upon the false assumption that, by a review of reasonable claims of counsel based upon evidence, whether they be strong or weak, added weight is, or can reasonably be understood to be, given to them; and in part upon an attempt to disassociate the evidential value of one circumstance, taken by itself, from its significance when taken in *124 connection with a group of other related circumstances. The defendant’s real difficulty here, as in the other aspects of the case already considered, arises from the fact that it is unable to see in the plaintiff’s evidence anything in the nature of proof of the facts alleged, whereas the trial court correctly appreciated that the jury might reasonably do so.

The failure of the court to instruct the jury as requested in each of three requests is complained of. Although the court did not charge in terms as requested, the defendant has no just cause for complaint. The subject-matter of the requests was sufficiently covered, and the rights of the defendant fully protected in the charge as made.

The testimony of the witness Phelps was properly received. True it is.that buildings are ordinarily considered a part of the realty, with the title thereto in the owner of the land upon which they stand.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 A. 129, 89 Conn. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-wales-lines-co-v-hartford-city-gas-light-co-conn-1915.