Lawler, Admr. v. Hartford Street Ry. Co.

43 A. 545, 72 Conn. 74, 1899 Conn. LEXIS 135
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 8, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 43 A. 545 (Lawler, Admr. v. Hartford Street Ry. 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
Lawler, Admr. v. Hartford Street Ry. Co., 43 A. 545, 72 Conn. 74, 1899 Conn. LEXIS 135 (Colo. 1899).

Opinion

*79 Hall, J.

The defendant suffered a default, and the plaintiff, on the hearing in damages, proved that by force of the collision described in the complaint his intestate was thrown from his wagon and sustained injuries from which he died on the following day. The plaintiff then rested his case and the defendant, under a notice filed in pursuance of Chap. 220 of the Acts of 1897, offered evidence to prove that the accident was not caused by its negligence, and that the negligence of the deceased, Lawler, contributed to cause his injury. The plaintiff then offered evidence to rebut that of the defendant. From all the evidence so offered the court has found the facts set forth in the finding and, without having found as a fact from such evidence, or as a conclusion of fact or law from the facts found, either that the defendant was negligent or that it was not negligent, or that Lawler was not negligent or that he was negligent, has rendered judgment for the plaintiff for substantial damages. Nowhere in the record is it stated that the court held that the defendant was negligent, or that the deceased exercised due care. The conclusion and ruling of the court, in the language of the finding, was that it “ did not find from the evidence that the defendant was not guilty of negligence, or that the plaintiff’s intestate was guilty of negligence, but ruled and held that the facts found did not show that the defendant was not guilty of the negligence charged in the complaint, or that the plaintiff’s intestate was guilty of negligence contributing to his injury.”

In this conclusion, in connection with the final judgment rendered, three rulings by the trial court are involved: First, that the defendant failed to establish, as a fact, by preponderance of evidence, either its claim that it was free from negligence, or that the deceased was negligent; second, that the facts which were proved did not of themselves constitute in law either due care upon the part of the defendant or negligence upon the part of the plaintiff; and third, that when in such a hearing the evidence presented by both the defendant and the plaintiff fails to show, either that the defendant was without negligence or that the plaintiff was negligent, *80 the plaintiff may recover substantial damages; in other words, that the burden of establishing the proposition that it exercised due care, or that the plaintiff failed to exercise due care, rests upon the defendant, and that when it appears from the evidence presented by both sides that the defendant has failed to sustain that burden, judgment will follow for the plaintiff for the amount of damages proved.

We cannot review the decision of the trial court as to the weight of the evidence bearing upon the questions of negligence, as questions of fact. To the extent that the claims of the defendant upon the subject of negligence presented only questions of fact, the decision of that court that the evidence in support of its claims did not preponderate over that against them, is final.

Inasmuch as the court has neither held, as a conclusion of law from the facts found, that the conduct of either party was negligent, nor that it was free from negligence, our inquiry is not, did the court err in deducing from the facts found an inference which was wrong, but did it err in failing to draw from such facts an inference of law favorable to the claims of the defendant, or in failing to hold that the facts in themselves constituted contributory negligence by one party and due care by the other, as the defendant claimed ?

If the facts found show of themselves that Lawler failed to perform some duty imposed by law, or that the defendant did not fail, as alleged, to perform some duty imposed by law, the decision of the trial court was erroneous. But if it appears from the record that the court, in reaching its conclusion of legal liability, did not violate any principle of law, either in defining a legal duty or in the'process of deducing an ultimate fact from the subordinate facts found, and that the only duty involved in the case is that of ordinary prudence in the conduct of the parties under all the circumstances as testified to at the trial, this court will not undertake to decide whether the conduct of the parties as described in the finding does, or does not, in its opinion, support an inference of negligence, i. e. legal liability. In such cases the inference of the trial court is a conclusion upon the questions of the measure of *81 duty, and the extent of performance, which are from the nature of the case so interdependent as to constitute, for purposes of review, a single, indivisible question of fact, and the conclusion is therefore final.

If the subordinate facts stated in the finding as descriptive of the conduct of the parties, are such as to be necessarily and wholly inconsistent with the inference drawn, the record then includes another question, i. e. the plain violation of legal principles in reaching the conclusion.

The grounds of this rule were fully discussed in Farrell v. Waterbury H. R. Co., 60 Conn. 239, 246-257, and again as affected by recent changes in procedure, in Nolan v. New York, N. H. & H. R. Co., 70 Conn. 159, 185, 193. The rule is firmly established, and has frequently been expressed by this court in various forms. While the nature of the rule is such that it cannot be both fully and accurately stated in a brief form, it may be put thus : When the question of legal liability is purely that of prudent conduct under the circumstances of a particular case, and no violation of law by the trial court is apparent from the record, its conclusion as to negligence or legal liability, including the measure of duty as well as the extent of performance, is final.

In the case at bar the facts relevant to the questions of negligence which were proved in the court below are recited in the finding. The act which the defendant claims constituted contributory negligence was the attempt of Lawler to cross the track under the circumstances detailed in the finding. The defendant claims that the failure of Lawler to look for an approaching car behind him was in itself negligence. But it is not found that he failed to look. The defendant, under the ruling of the court as to .the burden of proof, failed to establish that fact. The finding is: “Whether he looked back or listened before attempting to cross did not appear.” If it is the defendant’s claim that there is an unbending rule of law which requires one to stop, look and listen before crossing a street railway track upon a highway, we cannot sanction it. But it is unnecessary to discuss that question here. If it was not of itself negligence for Lawler to attempt to *82 cross the defendant’s tracks after having seen the approaching car, then the facts in this case do not show contributory negligence as a matter of law.

We think the facts found do not show that it was necessarily unreasonable conduct for him to attempt to cross after having seen the car. Upon the facts proved it may or may not have been. The finding does not state how near to him the car was when he turned in upon the track.

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Bluebook (online)
43 A. 545, 72 Conn. 74, 1899 Conn. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawler-admr-v-hartford-street-ry-co-conn-1899.