169 Conn. 337 | Conn. | 1975
The plaintiff instituted this action against Union Carbide Corporation, Presto Hartford, Inc., and his employer. The action against
The plaintiff’s claimed errors all relate to the court’s refusal to charge as requested or to the court’s having charged as it did.
The plaintiff claimed to have proved the following facts: On August 19, 1968, the plaintiff was using an apparatus attached to acetylene and oxygen tanks to cut steel on the body of his truck. The apparatus and tanks were owned by the plaintiff’s employer and were being used, after working hours, on the employer’s premises. The plaintiff had had some experience using an acetylene tank and torch prior to this date. He had carried the acetylene tank, which was almost full, and had dragged the oxygen tank to the driveway which had
The defendants claimed to have proved the following facts: The plaintiff was not authorized to return to the premises of his employer after working hours nor was he authorized to use the acetylene equipment. A set of instructions for the use of the tanks and hoses was kept in the office of the employer. Acetylene gas emits a very bad and very strong odor which is detected immediately. When the plaintiff took the acetylene tank out of the closed garage where it was stored, he did not smell any odor. He noticed the red decal on the tank but did not read the small print which stated “flammable, close valve when not in use.” He had used these tanks previously. When the plaintiff first started to cut, he was thirteen and one-half feet to eighteen and one-half feet from both tanks, which were in an upright position and not secured to anything. The maximum length of flame that could come out of the fuse plug is four to six feet. The metal slag from the cutting operation burned the hose, permitting the escape of gas which impinged on the back of the plaintiff’s trousers. The fire which the plaintiff felt on the back of his legs came from the hose which was on fire. The burning hose melted the first fusible plug at the bottom of the tank. The heat that caused the plug to give way came from an external source. The sides, the footband and the base of the tanks showed evidence of scorching. The falling of the tanks caused the hoses and the torch to move toward the tanks, and the heat from the cutting tip of the torch or from the hose melted the fusible plug. The burning of the tip of the torch was caused by the
More facts with greater detail were offered by all of the parties but the above recited facts are sufficient to discuss the claimed errors in the charge.
The plaintiff claims that the court was in error in not charging eighteen paragraphs of his request to charge that cover about eight pages of the record. These requests relate to the defendants’ duty to warn, the defendants’ duty to inspect, proximate cause, contributory negligence, and assumption of the risk.
The plaintiff submitted several written requests to charge in different form on the issue of the duty of the defendants to warn users and potential users of the hazards involved in the use of acetylene. The court was under no duty to consider these requests to charge as this was clearly improper and in violation of Practice Book § 252 which states that “[a] principle of law should be stated in but one request and in but one way. Bequests attempting to state in different forms the same principle of law as applied to a single issue are improper.” That aside, the court did charge extensively regarding the duty to warn on the part of a manufacturer or distributor. The plaintiff asserts that the court’s instructions were inadequate because they failed to make sufficient reference to the evidence and claims of proof and therefore failed to provide the jury with adequate guidance. In determining whether a charge to the jury is sufficient, the charge is to be read as a whole, and the instructions claimed as errors read in that context. Hally
The plaintiff claims that the court was in error in not adopting the request to charge on the issue of the duty to inspect placed upon a manufacturer and distributor. The request assumed the truth of facts which were disputed, and, therefore, was improper. Practice Book § 252. See Cook v. Miller, 103 Conn. 267, 275, 130 A. 571. The request took the position that regular replacement of plugs was required in addition to routine inspection. This point was in dispute, and it was error for these facts to be included in its request as admitted facts. See Cook v. Miller, supra; Skladzien v. Sutherland Building & Construction Co., 101 Conn. 340, 343, 125 A. 614. The court did charge on the duty and obligation of a manufacturer upon the subsequent servicing of the tank to repair and service it adequately as a reasonably prudent manufacturer would do. The court also charged: “ [Y] ou will determine whether the manufacturer used reasonable care and, in a ease of this type and this type of gas, it would require the exercise of the closest attention.” The instruction was concise but adequate guidance on how to apply the law to the facts in the case. The plaintiff’s request to charge was
The plaintiff assigns error in the court’s refusal to adopt his request to charge on proximate cause. He concedes that the court’s instruction on proximate cause was correct hut claims that the court did not distinguish between the two fires, as requested, that is, each fire should have been considered separately as to the issue of proximate cause. It is noted that the complaint makes no such distinction, and, indeed, this is the only request which indicates two distinct fires. Moreover, the offers of proof do not indicate two distinct fires but a fire which became intensified when a second plug ignited. At any rate, the charge on proximate cause was accurate and complete and taken as a whole fairly presented the issue to the jury even if they could have found that any liability of the defendants would not have arisen until the fire resulting from the melting of the second plug struck the plaintiff.
The remaining assignments of error which go to the court’s charge relating to the special defenses of contributory negligence and assumption of risk have been examined. No useful purpose would be served by discussing in detail these two issues. The instructions were brief and succinct and covered the issues presented by the requests to charge and correctly charged the jury on those issues although not in the language of the requests. In any event, the verdict was a general one, and no interrogatories were presented to the jury. The plaintiff has failed to demonstrate any error in the court’s charge to
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
The plaintiff’s assignments of error addressed to one of the court’s rulings on evidence and one of its findings have not been briefed and are therefore considered to have been abandoned. State v. Lally, 167 Conn. 601, 605, 356 A.2d 897.