Mancaniello v. Guile

225 A.2d 816, 154 Conn. 381, 1966 Conn. LEXIS 463
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 21, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 225 A.2d 816 (Mancaniello v. Guile) 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
Mancaniello v. Guile, 225 A.2d 816, 154 Conn. 381, 1966 Conn. LEXIS 463 (Colo. 1966).

Opinion

King, C. J.

Shortly before 8 o’clock in the evening of Sunday, August 25, 1963, Peter Mancaniello was *383 a passenger in an automobile owned and operated by his son, John Mancaniello, who was one of the defendants in this action. They were traveling in heavy, northbound traffic, on route 9, a two-lane highway with narrow shoulders. Estimates as to the speed of the northbound traffic ranged between thirty and forty-five miles per hour. The posted speed limit was forty-five miles per hour. Immediately ahead of the Mancaniello car were one or two vehicles, and these were preceded, in the sequence hereinafter set forth, by a car operated by Jennie Cerasoli, two cars whose operators were not identified, a 1949 Ford pickup truck owned by the defendant Richard H. Spencer and operated by his employee, the defendant William A. Guile, a car driven by Armando E. Cerasoli, and one or two other cars. John Mancaniello turned his car into the left, or southbound, lane and began to pass all of these vehicles, accelerating to a speed of seventy miles per hour in the process. The right front fender of his car and the left rear fender of the truck driven by Guile came into contact, and the Mancaniello car veered off the left side of the highway, snapped off a telephone pole, spun around, and struck the car driven by Armando E. Cerasoli which was next ahead of the Guile truck. Peter Mancaniello received the injuries from which he ultimately died.

This action, brought by the plaintiff as executrix under the will of Peter Mancaniello, resulted in a plaintiff’s verdict against the defendant John Mancaniello only and defendants’ verdicts in favor of Guile and Spencer. The plaintiff has appealed from the judgment insofar as it was in favor of the defendants Guile and Spencer.

At the trial, one of the issues was whether or not the Guile truck was at all times in its right-hand *384 lane. The plaintiff claimed to have proved that Guile attempted to pass the cars ahead of him and turned the truck onto the left side of the highway, causing a collision with the Maneaniello car just as that car was commencing to pass the truck. Guile claimed that he did not cross the center line of the highway.

The plaintiff submitted a written request to charge that, under General Statutes § 14-232, 1 it is the duty of the driver of an overtaken vehicle “to give the right of way” in favor of a passing vehicle and that, if Guile violated this statute, he was negligent as a matter of law. The statute, however, requires, in this connection, only that the overtaken driver “give way to the right” in favor of the overtaking vehicle. The requested charge stated, for the overtaken driver,' a duty different from, and more onerous than, that prescribed by the statute. Error cannot be predicated on a refusal to comply with a request which is erroneous. Penna v. Esposito, 154 Conn. 212, 214, 224 A.2d 536; Bernard v. Ribner, 151 Conn. 670, 673, 201 A.2d 658. The court did not err in refusing to charge as requested.

Moreover, paragraph 7 (c) of the complaint charged Guile with a violation of General Statutes *385 § 14-232 as an operator of an overtaking, rather than an overtaken, vehicle, and it is obvious that the court correctly so construed the complaint. In its charge as given, the court first read § 14-232 in its entirety. It then charged as to the duties of the operator of an overtaking vehicle under the statute.

At the conclusion of the charge, the plaintiff excepted to the court’s failure to give a specific charge on the portion of § 14-232 which stated the obligations of Guile as an overtaken motorist. As pointed out, this was a specification of negligence not appearing in the complaint. Furthermore, and quite apart from the deficiency in pleading, an exception was an insufficient basis for such an assignment of error. “Any party intending to claim the benefit of . . . any specific statute shall file a written request to charge on the legal principle involved.” Practice Book § 250. 2 An explanation of this rule, together with the requisites of an adequate request to charge, is set forth in Lowell v. Daly, 148 Conn. 266, 269, 169 A.2d 888, and need not be repeated here. Neither the plaintiff’s erroneous request to charge, which incorrectly stated the law applicable to an overtaken operator, nor her exception, constituted a compliance with the rule. Had the complaint contained a proper allegation of the statutory negligence now claimed against Guile, and had the plaintiff conformed to § 250 of the Practice Book, this claimed error would almost certainly not have occurred. As the case was presented, the plaintiff can predicate no reversible error on the *386 court’s failure to charge on the duties of an overtaken motorist under General Statutes § 14-232.

The plaintiff also claimed that Guile, in violation of General Statutes § 14-220, operated his truck at such a slow speed as to impede traffic. 3 On the plaintiff’s own claims of proof, the Guile truck was preceded by two or three automobiles and was in, or closely approaching, a “no passing zone”, designated by a state traffic commission sign and a solid line painted down the center of the highway. See General Statutes § 14-234. Thus, there was in the case substantial evidence tending to bring Guile within the first two exceptions set forth in General Statutes § 14-220, viz., “when reduced speed is necessary for safe operation or in compliance with the law.” There was, however, no mention whatsoever of either of the two exceptions in the plaintiff’s request to charge, which merely paraphrased the first portion of the statute and stated that, if Guile violated that portion of the statute, he was negligent as a matter of law. In the light of the plaintiff’s own claims of proof, the giving of such a charge as requested would have been reversible error. Obviously such an erroneous request to charge is not a compliance with the requirements of § 250 of the Practice Book on at least two grounds. First, it was erroneous, and, second, it utterly failed to explain “the meaning and interpretation of the statute in the light of the claims of proof in the case.” Lowell v. Daly, 148 Conn. 266, 270, 169 A.2d 888.

*387 We have not had occasion previously to consider General Statutes § 14-220. It is obvious that its meaning, in many not unlikely applications, is obscure. Similar statutes in other states have been productive of much difficulty. Cases illustrating the difficulty in applying such a statute can be found in an annotation in 66 A.L.R.2d 1194 and in 5 A.L.R.2d Later Case Service, p. 1015.

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Bluebook (online)
225 A.2d 816, 154 Conn. 381, 1966 Conn. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mancaniello-v-guile-conn-1966.