169 A. 197 | Conn. | 1933
The plaintiff brought this action to recover for injuries to her person and property resulting from a collision at a street intersection between an automobile she was driving and one owned by one of the defendants and being operated by the other, and from a judgment upon a verdict in her favor the defendants have appealed. The only errors assigned relate to the charge of the trial court. In defining the obligation of the plaintiff as regards the burden of proof resting upon her, the trial court charged the jury that "she must prove by the better evidence, by evidence which is more satisfying to you gentlemen," the essentials of the cause of action alleged; in other places in the charge the court, in speaking of the burden resting upon the plaintiff, stated that it required proof by "the better evidence;" and nowhere in the charge did it further define the duty resting upon her. The test to apply in determining whether the charge constituted reversible error in this respect is stated in Mead v.Husted,
In an ordinary civil action the party upon whom rests the burden of proof has sustained it if the evidence, considered fairly and impartially, induces in the mind of the trier a reasonable belief that it is more probable than otherwise that the fact in issue is true.Hoyt v. Danbury,
In the instant case, the trial court did not rest with a charge that the plaintiff must prove the essential elements of a cause of action by the "better evidence," but it defined that as meaning "the evidence which is more satisfying to you." In effect the jury were told that the evidence as to the existence of the necessary elements of the plaintiff's cause of action must be more satisfactory to them than the evidence to the contrary. Satisfaction of the minds of the jury might well be understood as requiring more than the creation of a reasonable belief; Herrick v. Gary,
The only other assignment of error is based upon a single sentence taken from that part of the charge in which the trial court was instructing the jury as to the rights and duties of the drivers of the two cars as they came to the intersection of the two streets. Read in its proper context, the sentence of which complaint is made was correct. The trial court was using the phrase "risk of collision" as it is used in Neumann v. Apter,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.