196 A. 631 | Conn. | 1938
The plaintiff, a pedestrian, was struck by a light truck owned by the named defendant and driven by the other defendant, Kleber, as his agent, while the plaintiff was crossing Dixwell Avenue in New Haven. The plaintiff, in his appeal, seeks to secure numerous corrections in the finding. These corrections, if granted, would result in a finding which would not support the conclusions of the trial court.
There were only two witnesses of the accident, the plaintiff and Kleber. A comparison of their testimony with the facts found discloses that the court did not accept that of either in its entirety. This was its right. Shupack v. Gordon,
The plaintiff, wearing dark clothing, walked north on the west side of Dixwell Avenue which is fifty-one feet wide. He saw the lights of a car approaching from the north. He started to cross Dixwell Avenue at a point about ten feet south of the south line marking the southerly crosswalk at the intersection of West Division Street and Dixwell Avenue and did not again look to the north. He was carrying a small dog on his left shoulder. He continued to advance at a slow walk until he was struck. It was dark and the intersection was poorly lighted.
Kleber, as agent of Arndt, was driving the latter's small truck, equipped with lighted standard headlights, south on Dixwell Avenue on the most westerly of the four trolley rails at a speed under thirty miles per hour. When he was about thirty feet from the plaintiff, he saw the latter directly in front of him. He immediately applied his brakes and after proceeding a few feet turned his truck sharply to the left to avoid the plaintiff. In the meantime the plaintiff had continued to walk across the street and when he had reached a point between the two sets of trolley tracks his right foot, as he extended it forward in taking a step, was run over by the right front wheel of the truck. When the truck stopped between the rails of the northbound track, the plaintiff was lying opposite the right-hand door of the truck. Brake marks made by the truck began at about the center of the southerly crosswalk on the most westerly rail and extended for twenty-seven feet to the point where the truck stopped.
The plaintiff claimed that the defendant was guilty *588
of wanton misconduct but there is nothing in the finding to support this claim. The court reached the conclusion that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence which was a substantial factor in causing his injuries. This was a question of fact. Russell v. Vergason,
The plaintiff's principal claim in oral argument was that judgment should have been rendered in his favor on the basis of the last clear chance doctrine. The conditions under which that doctrine applies are well established. They are: "`(1) That the injured party has already come into a position of peril; (2) that the injuring party then or thereafter becomes, or in the exercise of ordinary prudence ought to have become, aware not only of that fact but also that the party in peril either reasonably cannot escape from it or apparently will not avail himself of opportunities open to him for doing so; (3) that the injuring party subsequently has the opportunity by the exercise of reasonable care to save the other from harm; and (4) that he fails to exercise such care.' Fine v. Connecticut Co.,
The court concluded that the plaintiff had proved neither of the last two conditions. The poor lighting, the dark clothes of the plaintiff and the fact that he was crossing at a place other than the regular crosswalk, support the conclusion that Kleber was not negligent in failing to observe the peril of the plaintiff until he was thirty feet away. Curtis v. Bristol
Plainville Electric Co., supra. The court concluded as to the last condition that "after the defendant Kleber observed that the plaintiff was in danger or in the exercise of reasonable care should have observed that the plaintiff was in danger he, the defendant Kleber, had no opportunity by the exercise of reasonable care to avoid the collision." The negligence in this connection must have consisted in the failure of Kleber to stop before striking the plaintiff or in his failure to turn to the right or a little further to the left. As to *590
his failure to stop, the length and character of the truck's brake marks justified the inference that he applied the brakes as hard and as soon as could reasonably be expected under the circumstances. Kerr v. Connecticut Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.