Pickering v. Town of Windsor
This text of 672 A.2d 499 (Pickering v. Town of Windsor) 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.
Opinion
In this civil rights action, the plaintiff, Carl Pickering, alleged that three members of the police [215]*215department of the defendant town of Windsor had used excessive force in arresting him for the crime of interference with a police officer in violation of General Statutes § 53a-167a.1 In answer to special interrogatories, the jury found that the plaintiff had failed to prove the use of excessive force by any of the individual police officers named as defendants in the complaint. The trial court accepted the answers of the jury and rendered a judgment in favor of the defendants. After the trial court denied the plaintiffs motion to set the verdict aside, the plaintiff appealed to the Appellate Court, which affirmed the judgment of the trial court in a per curiam decision. Pickering v. Windsor, 37 Conn. App. 901, 902, 654 A.2d 389 (1995).
We granted the plaintiffs petition for certification to appeal from the judgment of the Appellate Court. Our permission to appeal was limited to the issue of whether the trial court had improperly permitted the plaintiff to be cross-examined about two misdemeanor convictions, after he had testified, on direct examination, that publicity about his arrest and conviction for violation of § 53a-167a had injured his reputation in the community. 2
After examining the record on appeal and after considering the briefs and the arguments of the parties, we have concluded that the appeal in this case should be dismissed on the ground that certification was improvidently granted. The contested evidence was offered to rebut the testimony of the plaintiff regarding the damages that he had suffered as a result of the defend[216]*216ant officers’ allegedly excessive use of force. The trial court expressly instructed the jury that it could consider the evidence only as it pertained to the issue of damages. It would serve no purpose for us to decide the admissibility of such evidence in this case, in which the plaintiff has failed to prove any excessive use of force.
The appeal is dismissed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
672 A.2d 499, 236 Conn. 214, 1996 Conn. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickering-v-town-of-windsor-conn-1996.