121 A. 804 | Conn. | 1923
The plaintiff complains mainly, that the court erred in refusing to set aside the verdict, and in returning the jury to a second consideration of the case after they returned with a verdict for the plaintiff. Under the evidence the jury could reasonably have found a verdict for the defendant.
Under General Statutes, § 5788, the court is authorized to return the jury to a second and a third consideration of a case, if it judges from the verdict returned that the jury have mistaken the evidence in the cause and have brought in a verdict contrary to it, or contrary to the direction of the court in a matter of law. What we said in reference to this statute in Black v. Griggs,
The plaintiff claims error on the part of the court in failing to give several of her requests to charge, and in charging the jury in several particulars, and in rulings upon the admission of evidence.
The requests of the plaintiff to charge, in so far as essential to adequately present the case to the jury, were given in substance. The court is not required to use the language, often prolix and largely argumentative in substance, with which a party clothes a pertinent request to charge. It is sufficient, and usually desirable, for the court to do as was done in this case, to incorporate in its own arrangement of a charge the pertinent suggestions of the parties found imbedded in their requests. Roth v. Chatlos,
The reasons of appeal relating to certain excerpts from the charge are, upon examination, so refined and so clearly untenable as not to justify further consideration. The charge called the attention of the jury to whatever was necessary to properly guide *418 them in the situation before them, correctly stated the law relative to the situation and was adequate for their guidance.
As to the claimed errors in rulings upon the admission of evidence, two are so clearly correct and the third so inconsequential, that they do not merit discussion.
There is no error.