Scorpion v. American-Republican, Inc.

37 A.2d 802, 131 Conn. 42, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 17, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 37 A.2d 802 (Scorpion v. American-Republican, Inc.) 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
Scorpion v. American-Republican, Inc., 37 A.2d 802, 131 Conn. 42, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 232 (Colo. 1944).

Opinions

Dickenson, J.

The plaintiff, a child eight years of age, picked up a wire on an areaway adjoining a public sidewalk and injured her eye with it. She brought this action charging the defendant with negligence in leaving the wire on the areaway. A verdict *44 was rendered in her favor. The defendant appeals from the denial of a motion to set aside the verdict and from the judgment, assigning error in the finding of the plaintiff’s claims of proof and in the charge. The jury might have found the following facts:

The defendant is a newspaper publisher in Waterbury. It divided the city into districts where newsboys, hereinafter referred to as “carriers,” delivered newspapers from house to house. The defendant through delivery employees left packages of newspapers at convenient depots to be picked up and delivered by the carriers in each district. The packages were bound with a wire with the ends twisted together. The wires were sometimes removed by the carrier and sometimes were cut by the defendant’s delivery employee, the papers taken by the carrier, and the wires left. The defendant from time to time sent notices to the carriers warning them not to leave wires and wrappers about where the packages were left in order to prevent accidents and keep the neighborhood clean. On the morning of the day the plaintiff was injured the defendant’s delivery employee delivered packages of papers at a so-called depot in front of the premises where the plaintiff lived, the papers to be delivered by two boy carriers. The area between this building and the curb is a cement walk twenty feet wide, five feet of which is the sidewalk proper. A door from the front of the building opens on to a small cement platform. The defendant had been delivering bundles of papers on the areaway for a number of years before the date of the injury. Papers and wires had been left on it frequently and the defendant had been notified of this fact by telephone and personal calls at its office. When the delivery employee left the bundles on the day in question, he “snipped the wires loose off the bundles” and the carriers picked up the *45 papers and left. The defendant knew it was a common thing for wires to be left about this place and reasonably should have known that children frequented the area. The plaintiff picked up one of the wires shortly after noon to put it in the gutter; it recoiled and she was struck in the eye by a sharp end of it and injured.

The defendant contends that the verdict should have been set aside on the grounds of lack of any evidence that the presence of the wire resulted from the conduct of its agents or that the particular injury was one that was reasonably to have been anticipated. It bases the first claim on the theory that if the wire that caused the injury came off one of its packages it was left there by one of the carriers, all of whom were independent contractors. It rests this contention on certain written contracts between it and its carriers to which we refer more in detail in that portion of the opinion dealing with claimed error in the charge. It is sufficient to say, so far as this motion is concerned, that the contracts alone were not determinative of the question of agency and that upon all of the evidence the jury might properly have found that the carriers were the agents of the defendant as to the removal of wires at the so-called depot. A person may be a contractor as to part of his service and a servant as to another part. Clough v. Malley’s Estate, 126 Conn. 379, 382, 11 Atl. (2d) 398. In the absence of controlling circumstances the question is one of fact. Francis v. Franklin Cafeteria, Inc., 123 Conn. 320, 326, 195 Atl. 198. The written contracts were not such a controlling circumstance.

As to the defendant’s claim that, whether or not it was responsible for the presence of the wire, there was no reasonable foreseeability that it would inflict the injury it did, this was primarily a question of fact for the jury and unless their conclusion was one which *46 they could not reasonably reach it may not be disturbed. Burns v. Metropolitan Distributors, 130 Conn. 226, 228, 33 Atl. (2d) 131; State v. Chin Lung, 106 Conn. 701, 705, 139 Atl. 91. The defendant in argument compares the wire to a matchstick or twig which a child might as readily pick up as a wire. An examination of the wire in evidence and observation of its use in argument before us support the jury’s conclusion of the likelihood of its inflicting the injury it was found to have caused. Its curve and spring and sharp ends warn that it must be handled with care. The defendant makes the point that, while there had been one or two instances where persons tripped or their legs were scratched by such a wire, there was no reasonable foreseeability that it would be picked up and so cause the injury it did. The defendant can hardly mean that it would reasonably be expected that the wire would be left lying there. The jury might reasonably have found that the defendant reasonably should have foreseen from past experience and warnings that the carriers would not pick it up and that someone would pick it up to remove it. In picking up the wire it was not to be expected that a child would use the care of an adult. Schrayer v. Bishop, 92 Conn. 677, 680, 104 Atl. 349. One is required to use greater care where the presence of children is reasonably to be expected. See Wolfe v. Rehbein, 123 Conn. 110, 114, 193 Atl. 608. The test is: “Would the ordinary [prudent] man in the defendant’s position, knowing what he knew or should have known, anticipate that harm of the general nature of that suffered was likely to result?” Orlo v. Connecticut Co., 128 Conn. 231, 237, 21 Atl. (2d) 402; Przwgocki v. Wikris, 130 Conn. 419, 422, 34 Atl. (2d) 879. We may not say that the jury could not justifiably have found that the defendant should have anticipated, under the circum *47 stances, harm of the general nature of that suffered by the plaintiff. The trial court was not in error in refusing to set the verdict aside on this ground.

The defendant further claims that the verdict of $15,000 should be set aside as excessive. The plaintiff has practically lost the use of her injured eye. She cannot get binocular vision with glasses. Further, it appears there was a secondary effect, perhaps more important. This the trial court recognized, pointing out to the jury that the loss of the sight itself was not alone involved but also the suffering of mind that might reasonably be attributed to the condition which would exist throughout the plaintiff’s life. In support of this, there was evidence of definite behavior changes in the child as a result of the injury. The judgment of the trial court in refusing to set aside a verdict should be given great weight. McNulty v. Sherman Realty Corporation, 123 Conn. 335, 337, 194 Atl. 726. The fact that it might have ordered a remittitur and did not is of further significance.

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Bluebook (online)
37 A.2d 802, 131 Conn. 42, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scorpion-v-american-republican-inc-conn-1944.