Pescatore v. MacIntosh

319 A.2d 21, 113 R.I. 139, 1974 R.I. LEXIS 1150
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 1, 1974
Docket73-56-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 319 A.2d 21 (Pescatore v. MacIntosh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pescatore v. MacIntosh, 319 A.2d 21, 113 R.I. 139, 1974 R.I. LEXIS 1150 (R.I. 1974).

Opinion

*141 Joslin, J.

Maria Pescatore brought this civil action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained while riding as a passenger in an automobile owned by the defendant, William D. Macintosh, and operated with his permission by his son, Greg, also a defendant. Maria was single and a minor when the suit was commenced, but married and attained her majority prior to the trial. She is now known as Maria Malak. Her mother, Lucy Grieco, is also a plaintiff and she seeks consequential damages. The case was tried before a judge and jury in the Superior Court. Prior to its submission to the jury, the parties agreed that if the award were for the plaintiffs it should be reported in a single sum. The jury found for the plaintiffs in the amount of $22,000, and judgments for that amount plus interest and costs were entered. The case is here on the defendants’ appeal.

The litigation arises out of an automobile accident which occurred shortly before 2 a.m. on the morning of October 13, 1967, when the Macintosh vehicle swerved from the highway and collided with a telephone pole on the northeast side of Oaklawn Avenue in Cranston, approximately 150 feet north of where it intersects Dean Parkway. Maria was a passenger in the front seat of the automobile at the time of the accident, and sustained serious injuries including facial lacerations, a possible fractured jaw and the loss of five teeth.

Just how the accident happened or what caused it is uncertain. Maria was unable to relate anything about the attendant circumstances because she was asleep when the accident occurred. That left Greg as the only known eyewitness. He stated at the trial that he was proceeding slowly and that as he made a right-hand turn onto Oaklawn Avenue from Dean Parkway, an overtaking vehicle forced him off the road and caused him to hit the telephone pole. Two police officers who arrived on the scene soon after the *142 incident also testified. One said that upon arrival he found Greg “in a very semi-unconscious state,” “seriously injured” and unable to “relate as to how the accident occurred.” The other testified that he had a brief conversation with Greg just before the latter became unconscious, and he quoted Greg as saying that he lost control of his own vehicle and then hit the pole. He further testified that Greg said nothing about being forced off the road by another vehicle.

Before us, defendants assign as errors the trial justice’s overruling of their objection to the admission of evidence, his refusal to grant their motion to pass the case, his denial of their motions for a directed verdict and for a new trial, and his rulings with respect to plaintiffs’ entitlement to damages.

The Evidentiary Ruling

At the commencement of direct examination, Maria identified herself and furnished some general background information. She was then permitted to testify, over objection, that the accident occurred as she and Greg were returning to their homes from a restaurant in Warwick known as the Bank Cafe.

The defendants argue that this testimony should have been rejected on the basis of Handy v. Geary, 105 R. I. 419, 427-31, 252 A.2d 435, 440-42 (1969), where we held that it was error to admit evidence of the mere fact that an operator of a motor vehicle had been drinking intoxicating liquor, unless it reasonably establishes his intoxication to a degree indicative of unfitness to drive. We adopted that rule in Handy because in our judgment the prejudicial effect of .that kind of evidence outweighs its probative value. See McCormick, Evidence §185 at 438-41 (2d ed. 1972); 6 Wigmore, Evidence §1904 at 574 (3d ed. 1940).

The question in this case, however, is not whether to apply the Handy rule, but whether to enlarge it to ban not *143 only evidence that an operator had a drink of intoxicating liquor, but also evidence that he was at a place where he might have had such a drink. The Pennsylvania court sees no “functional difference” between the two and holds that either one “* * * give[s] rise to the insidious inference that the individual involved was intoxicated or under the influence of alcohol * * *." Morreale v. Prince, 436 Pa. 51, 53, 258 A.2d 508, 508-09 (1969). Accord, Miles v. Ryan, 484 F.2d 1255 (3d Cir. 1973); Sentz v. Dixon, 224 Pa. Super. 70, 302 A.2d 434 (1973); see also Cook v. Philadelphia Transp. Co., 414 Pa. 154, 199 A.2d 446 (1964).

The defendants urge upon us the Pennsylvania enlargement, but whether we should extend Handy that far is a question which, on the facts of this case, we need not decide. A comparison between the facts here and those in the Pennsylvania cases makes that clear. Testimony that Greg was at the Bank Cafe prior to the accident obviously is not susceptible of the same kind of inference as in Cook v. Philadelphia Transp. Co., supra, where the litigant had been at a nocturnal drinking establishment with the “image-creating sobriquet of the 'Crazy Bar’ ”; and while “* * * one might almost automatically form a recklessly exagerated notion of the inebriating proclivities of a place called the 'Crazy Bar,’ ” Cook v. Philadelphia Transp. Co., supra at 159-60, 199 A.2d at 448, the same connotation no more attaches to a restaurant known as the Bank Cafe that it would to a hotel or a friend’s home, where one might stop for a cup of coffee, a snack or an early morning breakfast. In short, the reference to the Bank Cafe did not reasonably convey an innuendo that it was an establishment catering to late-night drinkers where Greg was likely to imbibe intoxicants to excess. Although the testimony that he had been there was wholly immaterial and irrelevant, it did not reasonably tend to exert an influence upon the determination of any real issue in the case and to admit it was there *144 fore not reversible error. Heuser v. Goldstein, 107 R. I. 317, 321, 267 A.2d 420, 422 (1970); State v. Reardon, 101 R. I. 18, 23, 25, 219 A.2d 767, 771, 772 (1966).

The Motion to Pass

The defendants also argue that their counsel was so disparaged by the trial justice that it became impossible for them to have a fair and impartial trial. The colloquy 1 be *145

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Bluebook (online)
319 A.2d 21, 113 R.I. 139, 1974 R.I. LEXIS 1150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pescatore-v-macintosh-ri-1974.