King v. Connecticut Co.

149 A. 219, 110 Conn. 615
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 5, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 149 A. 219 (King v. Connecticut 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
King v. Connecticut Co., 149 A. 219, 110 Conn. 615 (Colo. 1930).

Opinion

Wheeler, C. J.

The plaintiff seeks to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by him in consequence of a trolley car of defendant colliding with him while he was upon a public highway. Among the errors assigned in defendant’s appeal are the court’s failure to charge upon the last-clear-chance, or supervening negligence, doctrine in accordance with its requests four, five and six, stating the grounds which indicated that this doctrine did not apply. Instead, the court charged that it did apply. If the facts in evidence did not require a charge upon this subject, the defendant would have been justified in pressing, not only its claim that the doctrine was not applicable, but also the trial *617 court’s error in charging upon it. The decision of this point depends upon the conclusion to be drawn from the facts found. Since the same question arises on the appeal from the denial of the motion to set aside the verdict, we will reserve further discussion of it until we take up that ground of appeal.

Defendant’s fourth request to charge on the last-clear-chance doctrine limited the zone of danger to the trolley track without taking into account the space outside the track from which the plaintiff, lying down, could extend his feet so as to place them on the track, that alone would furnish ample support, without further consideration, for the court’s failure to incorporate this request in its instructions. The first part of the fifth request upon the care required to be exercised by the plaintiff, the court fully and correctly presented to the jury. After giving the ordinary rule of duty as to the care the plaintiff was required to exercise, the court continued: “And of course, if he [the plaintiff] was seized, as has been testified, while so walking, with a sort of shock or thrombosis, which caused him to fall and make it impossible for him to get away, of course he would not be to blame for that. Now, ordinarily, if a man lay down with his legs across the trolley rail and stayed there, he would be guilty of contributory negligence. But if he fell there, when properly there and using ordinary care, as a result of a seizure which came upon him without his fault, he would not be guilty of such negligence.” This charge covered the situation, upon the facts claimed by the plaintiff to have been proved, with sufficient accuracy and in terms easily within the comprehension of the jury. If the plaintiff, while in a position safe from danger from the car, in consequence of an attack of cerebral thrombosis, became incapable of exercising reasonable care and, by extending his feet so as to put them on the track, fell *618 into a position of danger from the car, this could not be attributed to his contributory negligence, for nature, not his will, placed him there. So, if an insane man became incapable of exercising reasonable care, or a child of so tender years as to be incapable, in the eye of the law, of contributory negligence, came into the path of the trolley car, neither of these persons would be guilty of contributory negligence in being in such place of danger, and if the car struck him his conduct would not be in law the proximate cause, that is the substantial factor, in causing his injuries. Mahoney v. Beatman, 110 Conn. 184, 195, 147 Atl. 762; Bohlen, Studies in the Law of Torts, p. 568.

The fifth request, in its second part, that as matter of law this doctrine did not apply, we shall take up at a later point and shall show1 that the facts in evidence required the court to present this doctrine to the jury in accordance with our law and leave to them its application as one of fact. The sixth of defendant’s requests, which contained the elements of this doctrine and the proof required to support it which defendant claimed made this doctrine inapplicable, so far as it coincided with our law, was presented to the jury in unexceptionable instructions: That the last-clear-chance doctrine “requires the presence of four conditions—first, that the injured party had already come into a position of peril; . . . Second, that the injuring party then or thereafter becomes or, in the exercise of ordinary prudence, ought to have become aware, not only of that fact but also that the party in peril either reasonably could not escape from it, or apparently will not avail himself of opportunities open to him to do so. . . . Third, that the injuring party subsequently has the opportunity, by the exercise of reasonable care, to save the other from harm. Fourth, that he fails to exercise such care.” This statement literally corresponds with *619 the rule found in Fine v. Connecticut Co., 92 Conn. 626, 103 Atl. 921, and was supplemented by comments which helped to malee these four conditions—so plainly stated by this court—better understood by the jury. These were followed by this instruction: “Now, the question for you to determine is whether the motorman knew or should have known, if he had kept a proper lookout, that the plaintiff was in a position of danger from which he could not or would not extricate himself; that after he knew or should have known that, there was still opportunity, in the exercise of due care, to stop the car, and that he failed to so stop it. All these? things must be proved by the plaintiff by a fair preponderance of the evidence.” After a correct exposition of the meaning of preponderance of the evidence, the court concluded its charge upon this subject in these words: “Now, after you have passed upon all these questions which it is necessary for the plaintiff to prove, if you find that he has failed to prove any of them by a fair preponderance of evidence, then your verdict must be for the defendant and you need go no further. On the other hand, if you find that the plaintiff has proved his contentions by a fair preponderance of the evidence, you come to the question of damages.”

The court thus specifically directed the attention of the jury to the factors which they must consider in passing upon the third of these conditions and this was the real question in the case. And then the court finally instructed the jury that if they found the plaintiff had failed to prove any of these conditions by the required proof their verdict must be for the defendant. The jury must have understood that it was necessary for them to find the facts underlying this third condition, otherwise the verdict must be for the defendant. Taking the charge as á whole, the jury could not have *620 misunderstood the requirement of any of these conditions.

The other assignments of error—four, five and eight —manifestly do not conform to our rules. General assignments of error, such as these, are wasted legal effort.

The defendant rests its appeal from the denial of its motion to set aside the verdict upon its claim that, upon the evidence, the doctrine of the last-clear-chance is not applicable. It urges as matter of law, in its fifth request, that “after the plaintiff’s danger was or should have been apparent to the motorman,” he “had no opportunity by the exercise of reasonable care to save him from harm, and therefore the doctrine ... is not applicable.” The solution of the problem involves the ascertainment of the distance the trolley car was from the plaintiff when he should have been observable to the motorman and the location the plaintiff was in at that time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 A. 219, 110 Conn. 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-connecticut-co-conn-1930.