262 Mass. 13 | Mass. | 1928
These are actions of tort brought to recover compensation for damage to person and property arising from a collision occurring at the intersection of two streets between a motor truck belonging to the corporate plaintiff and driven by the individual plaintiff, and an automobile driven by the female defendant and owned by her husband. The cases were submitted to the jury, resulted in verdicts for the defendants, and come before us on exceptions by the plaintiffs.
The female defendant was asked to describe her feelings immediately after the accident as she sat in her car and before alighting from it. She answered that she was stunned and then, on objection by the plaintiffs’ attorney, the trial judge ruled that she might answer. Substantially the same
The request for instructions numbered 7 presented by the plaintiffs was to the effect that in determining the speed of the car driven by the female defendant the jury might consider the damage done to the truck and the position in which it was found after the collision. There was evidence to which the request was applicable. It was an instruction that might appropriately have been given. Kelsea v. Stratford, 80 N. H. 148, 150. Duprat v. Chesmore, 94 Vt. 218, 222. Alabama Great Southern Railroad v. Molette, 207 Ala. 624, 626. Maritzky v. Shreveport Railway,144 La. 692, 697. But it is not reversible error to refuse such a request in the circumstances here disclosed. Of course it is the duty of the judge presiding over a jury trial to give full, fair, correct and clear instructions as to the principles of law governing all the essential issues presented, so that the jury may understand their duty and be enabled to perform it intelligently. If he does this, it is not necessary that he single out particular facts for emphasis. Maxwell v. Massachusetts Title Ins. Co. 206 Mass. 197, 200. Hanley v. Eastern Steamship Corp. 221 Mass. 125, 135. Altavilla v. Old Colony Street Railway, 222 Mass. 322. Herrick v. Waitt, 224 Mass. 415. Goldsmith v. Gryzmish, 238 Mass. 341, 344. As was said by Knowlton, J., in Hicks v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad, 164 Mass. 424, 428: “It is largely a matter of discretion for the presiding judge as to how far he will discuss different phases of the testimony upon a particular subject
The sanie principle applies to the refusal to give the remaining requests of the plaintiffs now relied upon. They relate to the right of way of the parties as they approached and reached the square at the intersection of the two streets. We think that the instructions actually given afforded sufficient guidance to the jury in the light of the testimony.
Earnest argument has been addressed to us in behalf of the plaintiffs that the charge was open to exception in that it was argumentative and put emphasis upon inconsistencies in the testimony of the plaintiff Buckley without calling attention to inconsistencies in the testimony of the female defendant, these being the two witnesses upon whose testimony the verdict of the jury must be mainly founded. The duties1 of a judge presiding over a jury trial have been stated in several recent decisions. It was said in Whitney v. Wellesley & Boston Street Railway, 197 Mass. 495, 502, with ample citation of authorities, that the judge "may sum up the testimony according to his recollection, .... In any clear analysis of the evidence, however impartial, the attention of the jury necessarily must be directed to the weight and importance of particular facts which they may find to have been proved. If an unbiased analytical statement of the testimony and of the law distinctly indicates the party who is entitled to prevail, this furnishes no just reason for the defeated party to complain, either of the method employed or of the adverse verdict. Besides, it is not a violation of the constitutional requirement that judges shall be ‘as free, impartial and in
The charge does not seem to us indicative of any opinion by the judge as to the facts, nor to constitute a violation in any degree of the rights of the plaintiffs. A reading of the entire charge produces the conviction in our minds that it states fairly the respective contentions of the parties and does not overemphasize one part of the evidence as compared with other parts, and does not disclose which witnesses seemed to the judge the more credible, or which party ought to prevail. It appears to us to be impartial and clear, and to do justice to both sides.
Exceptions overruled.