A station Avagon owned and operated by the plaintiff collided with a motor vehicle operated by the defendant. The accident took place in or near the intersection of Broоkside Drive and the Boston Post Road in Darien at about 8 o’clock on the morning of December 11, 1956. The plaintiff seeks recovery of damages for injuries to his person and to his station wagon, claimed to have been caused by the defendant’s negligence. The jury rendered a verdict for the defendant and the court refused to set it aside. The plaintiff has appealed from the judgment.
The plaintiff’s only assignments of error relate to two rulings on evidence. Both rulings were made during cross-examination of the defendant, who in his direct testimony had given his version of the circumstances of the collision. Thе defendant, in response to questions, testified that he had discussed the case Avithin his family but not with anyone outside the family except his attorneys. He was then asked whether at any time he had admitted that he was in any way at fault in connection with the accident. He objected but assigned no ground. The plaintiff claimed the question but assigned no ground. The jury were excused and in their absence some further colloquy occurred, the nature of which is not disclosed in the finding. The defendant then renewed his general objection to the question and the court sustained the objection.
A ruling on evidence must be tested by the finding. Practice Book § 405;
Facey
v.
Merkle,
The forerunner of what is now Practice Book § 155 appeared as § 116 in the Rules of Court of 1899 and as § 116 in the Practice Book of 1908. It provided that “[w]henever an objection to the admission of testimony is made, counsel shall state the ground of the objection succinctly and in such form as he desires it to go upon the record, before any discussion or argument is had therеon.” This rule, changed materially, became § 151 of the Practice Book of 1922, § 158 of the Practice Book of 1934, and § 155 of the Practice Book of 1951. The vital difference between the earlier rulе and the present one is that the latter includes a requirement that “counsel shall state the grounds upon which . . . [the proffered evidence] is claimed” as an alternative to the requirement that “сounsel shall state the grounds . . . upon which objection is made.” Neither requirement becomes operative until “an objection [whether general or particular] to the admission of evidence is *629 made.” The change in the rule is no mere matter of form, and in the present case is not only applicable but decisive.
Under this rule, when an objection is made to the admission of evidence, оne of two things is called for. Either the party making the objection should accompany it with a statement of the specific ground or grounds on which the objection is based or the party offering the еvidence should state the specific ground or grounds on which he claims the evidence is admissible. Of course each party may make such a statement. Whether the offering party will avail himself of the opportunity to make a statement in support of the admissibility would ordinarily depend upon whether the objecting party had stated his ground of objection with sufficient accuracy and specifiсity to form a satisfactory basis, from the offering party’s standpoint, for a reviewable ruling.
Andreozzi
v.
Rubano,
Had either party complied with the provisions of § 155 of the Practice Book, the attention of the court would have been directed to the precise ruling it was being called upon to make. See
State
v.
Tryon,
Nor does the fact that the ruling occurred during cross-examination relieve the plaintiff from the obligation of giving the court some inkling as to the ground of admissibility claimed.
Fahey
v.
Clark,
After that ruling and still in the absence of the jury, the plaintiff asked the defendant whether he had at any time paid a fine in connection with the accident. The defendant objected, and the plaintiff then asserted that the payment of a fine on a specific criminal charge is an admission, regardless of whether any plea was made. Apparently, what the plaintiff was claiming was an admission by conduct, under the rulе of cases such as
Cashman
v.
Terminal Taxi Co.,
Had there been a plea of guilty to a specific charge relevant to the circumstances of the accident, it would have been admissible as a verbal admissiоn.
Flynn
v.
Raccuia,
The plaintiff included an appendix to his brief in an attempted amplification of the finding. The matter contained in the appendix, if it was necessary or desirable to an understanding of the two evidential rulings complained of, should have bеen summarized in the finding. Practice Book
%
405;
Facey
v.
Merkle,
Under Practice Book § 155, argument of the applicable law in support of a claim for the admission or exclusion of evidence is permitted only if the *633 court requests it. Especially when difficult or unusual evidential problems involving material rulings are encountered, a court is well advised to avail itself of all proper assistance which competent counsel can give. Here, while the court allowed counsel to state, as required by Practice Book § 155, the ground on which he claimed the question concerning the payment of the fine was admissible, the court refused to permit argument of the claim of admissibility. The court was technically within its rights in refusing to permit any argument at all. Sincе, as already pointed out, the answer clearly would have been inadmissible, no argument, even had argument been permitted, could have been of assistance to the court.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“See. 155. objeсtions to evidence. Whenever an objection to the admission of evidence is made, counsel shall state the grounds upon which it is claimed or upon which objection is made, succinctly and in such form as he desires it to go upon the record, before any discussion or argument is had. Argument upon sueh objection shall not be made by either party unless the court requests it and, if made, must be brief and to the point.”
