Ryan v. Town of Bristol

27 A. 309, 63 Conn. 26, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 6, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 27 A. 309 (Ryan v. Town of Bristol) 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
Ryan v. Town of Bristol, 27 A. 309, 63 Conn. 26, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 20 (Colo. 1893).

Opinion

TorrANCE, J.

This is an action to recover damages for the death of William Ryan, caused by a defective highway. The defect claimed to exist was an insufficient railing on the side of the highway forming the approach to a bridge over the Pequabuck river, and a hole in the walk or foot path near the defective railing. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendant brings this appeal for certain claimed errors in the admission of testimony and in the charge of the court.

In some of its aspects the case is a peculiar one. Rya.n was last seen alive about midnight of August 30th, 1890. He was then on the south side of the river on the highway in question, walking towards the bridge, and in the direction of his home. The next morning his dead body was found down the embankment on the north side of the river, not far *29 from the abutment of the bridge and near the point where it was claimed the highway was defective.

There was no direct evidence showing the acts or conduct of Ryan after midnight, nor the certain hour, cause or manner of his death. All these things were largely matters of inference from circumstantial evidence, no eye-witness testifying to any of them. The contest in the court below, so far as we are here concerned with it, was mainly upon two questions, namely, whether Ryan’s death was caused at all by the defective highway, and, if so, whether he was in the exercise of due care at the time.

According to the law of this state, and under the pleadings, it was clearly incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove both of these essential facts by a fair preponderance of evidence. To prove both she relied chiefly if not entirely upon circumstantial evidence. The record shows in a general way the nature and character of that evidence, but all the facts and circumstances comprised in it are not of course before us. From the allusions made to it in the charge of the court, in stating the claims of the parties upon the evidence, we can see that much of it related to the facts and circumstances seen and observed when the body was found next morning. It related to the appearance of the broken railing and its condition ; to the size and location of the hole in the walk near by; to the appearance of the bank and the bushes and branches thereon as disturbed, displaced or broken by Ryan’s fall; to the proximity of the body to the railing and abutment ; to the posture and position of the body and the marks and bruises thereon ; and to other matters of a similar nature.

It was under this state of things that the defendant made the requests to charge set forth in its reasons of appeal. These reasons contain ten assignments of error. The first relates to the admission of evidence and will be considered later on. The last one has no foundation in the record and was abandoned upon the argument. Of the remaining eight, two of them, the eighth and ninth, relate to certain parts of *30 the charge as given, and six of them to the refusal of the court to comply with certain requests to charge.

In discussing the questions pertaining to the charge and the refusals to charge, it must be borne in mind that the entire evidence in the case is not before us, and also that the question of the sufficiency of the whole or any part of that evidence is not before us. The case is not here as upon a motion for a new trial for a verdict against evidence, nor upon proceedings to set aside a nonsuit, where all the evidence in the case would appear of record and the question of its sufficiency or its relevancy would be involved. Aside from the question of evidence the errors assigned, as heretofore indicated, relate entirely to the instructions which the court gave or refused to give to the jury. Bearing these things in mind we will first consider the refusals to charge as requested.

The first of these is the alleged refusal of the court to charge as follows: — “ In deciding upon the question of contributory negligence the jury should consider the character of the highway at that place as to breadth of side-walk, direction, straight or not, and the kind of night, whether light or dark, and all the other circumstances.” We assume that evidence of all the matters mentioned in the request was before the juiy, although the record perhaps does not clearly show this. The court did not charge this request in terms.

The defendant in its brief claims that in refusing to charge this request in terms the court took away from the consideration of the juiy the very facts and circumstances which bear upon the question of due care. If the record disclosed that the court had done this, either in form or in substance and effect, we think it would entitle the defendant to a new trial. But this nowhere appears. The evidence upon these matters was before the jury, and was not withdrawn from their consideration upon any point involved in the trial. In its charge on the question of contributory negligence the court refers to some of the facts and circumstances, and in other parts of the charge had referred to others, but it nowhere *31 professes to refer to all. All, however, including those embodied in this request, were before the jury.

The jury were correctly told what the exercise of due care meant as applied to one in Ryan’s situation that night; that it meant such care as a person of ordinary prudence would have exercised under the same circumstances ; and that it was Ryan’s duty to use every care and precaution to avoid falling from the bridge that a sober man of ordinary prudence would have used under the circumstances. What circumstances ? Why all the circumstances surrounding Ryan as he approached the defective portion of the highway, including those specifically embodied in the request and all the others.

The jury were also told that whether Ryan exercised such care was a question of fact to be determined by them from the evidence ; that in the absence of evidence they were not at liberty to guess or surmise that he used such care ; and that while the existence of due care might be inferred from the facts and circumstances in evidence, these last must be such and so shown as fairly and reasonably to support and warrant the conclusion that Ryan exercised such care.

It is plain, we think, from this charge that the “ evidence ” and the “ facts and circumstances ” to which the court thus alludes and to which it refers the jury, include the very evidence which the defendant claims the court withdrew from their consideration. It seems clear to us that the court in substance and effect complied with this request, and that the refusal to charge in the terms of the request did the defendant no harm.

The next error, stated in the third reason of appeal, is without foundation on the record. Upon this point the court clearly and explicitly charged in substance and effect and almost in terms as requested. This is true also of the error assigned in the sixth reason of appeal and we need not otherwise notice it. The errors assigned in the fourth, fifth and seventh reasons of appeal may be considered together, as they relate to the refusal of the court to charge requests bearing upon the question of contributory negligence. The *32 substance of these three requests may be stated fairly and with sufficient accuracy for our present purpose as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
27 A. 309, 63 Conn. 26, 1893 Conn. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-town-of-bristol-conn-1893.