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Shook v. Eastern Connecticut Health Network, Inc.
165 A.3d 256
Conn. App. Ct.
2017
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Background

  • On Nov. 21, 2012, Shook (plaintiff) and Bartholomew (defendant driver) collided in a busy Manchester intersection; witnesses gave conflicting accounts about which driver ran a red light.
  • Shook sued Bartholomew for negligence and Eastern Connecticut Health Network (her employer) vicariously; defendants pleaded comparative negligence as a special defense.
  • The cases were consolidated and tried to a jury; defendants submitted a written request to charge including comparative negligence instructions but did not specify the evidence supporting that charge.
  • At the charging conference the trial court declined to give a comparative negligence instruction, noting no evidence of sightlines or other facts that would support apportioning fault to Shook; defendants excepted.
  • The jury returned a verdict for Shook; defendants’ postverdict motion to set aside the verdict was denied. Defendants appealed, arguing (1) erroneous refusal to instruct on comparative negligence, (2) improper admission of Shook’s driving-history testimony, and (3) erroneous denial of motion to set aside the verdict.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Whether the court should have instructed the jury on comparative negligence Shook: no evidence supported apportioning fault; case was about who ran the red light Defendants: evidence (intersection configuration, sightlines, opportunity to perceive/react) supported comparative negligence and statutes/case law allow apportionment even if plaintiff had right-of-way Court: refused review of appellate factual and legal theories; defendants’ request to charge violated Practice Book rules by failing to tie law to evidence, so no error in refusing the instruction
Whether admission of plaintiff’s testimony about prior driving history was improper character evidence Shook: testimony was relevant and for jury weight Defendants: testimony (one prior minor accident ~20 years earlier) was improper character evidence and should have been excluded Court: claim not preserved—defendants objected only on relevance, not on character-evidence grounds, so appellate review refused
Whether the court abused its discretion in denying motion to set aside verdict Shook: verdict was supported by jury and trial rulings were proper Defendants: verdict should be set aside because of (a) refusal to instruct on comparative negligence and (b) admission of driving-history evidence Court: denied abuse of discretion; prior rulings rejecting defendants’ preserved claims are determinative, so motion denial was proper
Preservation and request-to-charge requirements — scope of appellate review Shook: Practice Book rules require specificity linking requests to evidence Defendants: raised broader statutory and case-law arguments on appeal not presented below Court: appellate review limited where trial request failed to specify evidence and party did not raise legal authorities below; refusal to scour record for supporting evidence is appropriate

Key Cases Cited

  • Hall v. Burns, 213 Conn. 446 (Conn. 1990) (request to charge defective when it did not refer to evidence; abstract law insufficient)
  • Mancaniello v. Guile, 154 Conn. 381 (Conn. 1966) (party relying on statute must submit written request citing statute)
  • State v. Johnson, 288 Conn. 236 (Conn. 2008) (raising new theories on appeal can amount to ambush of trial court)
  • Birkhamshaw v. Socha, 156 Conn. App. 453 (Conn. App. 2015) (objection on relevance does not preserve character-evidence claim)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Shook v. Eastern Connecticut Health Network, Inc.
Court Name: Connecticut Appellate Court
Date Published: Jun 20, 2017
Citation: 165 A.3d 256
Docket Number: AC38945
Court Abbreviation: Conn. App. Ct.