145 A. 31 | Conn. | 1929
The plaintiff claimed and offered evidence tending to prove that a collision between a truck owned by the defendant and operated by his employee, one Skinner, and a sedan, owned by one Hoskings, in which the plaintiff was riding as a guest, was caused by negligent operation of the truck, and that the plaintiff was injured thereby. At the beginning of the presentation of evidence by the plaintiff, Skinner was *618 called as a witness and was inquired of, only, as to whether, at the time of the collision, he was in the employ of the defendant and engaged in his business, and to identify an accident report made by the witness to the State Commissioner of Motor Vehicles. Thereupon counsel for the defendant, notwithstanding objection that it was not admissible cross-examination, was permitted to elicit from the witness his version of the details of the collision and the events preceding and following it, none of which had been touched upon in the direct examination.
After the plaintiff had rested his case, the defendant recalled the same witness who again testified, with greater particularity, to the same matters which he had related in his previous testimony. The plaintiff's objection, that the witness had already, under the guise of cross-examination, been fully examined as to the subject-matter, was overruled.
These rulings are made grounds of appeal. The record indicates that the trial court, in overruling the objection to the proposed line of "cross-examination," regarded the question presented as one of order of proof, only, as to which a liberal discretion is vested in the trial court. The exercise of such discretion ordinarily cannot be reviewed on appeal. Hurlburt v.Bussemey,
The admission of this evidence also involved a conspicuous transgression of the established and salutary general rule that cross-examination shall be limited to the subject-matter of the direct examination. Roberts
v. New York, N. H. H.R. Co.,
The testimony given by Skinner during the presentation of the defendant's case was objectionable only in being substantially an elaborated repetition of his evidence previously given as cross-examination. Standing by itself it was proper, but considered in connection with his prior testimony it enhanced the tendency of the original error to prejudice the plaintiff through reiteration of and emphasis upon a version of the circumstances which was adverse to his recovery.
A witness who had qualified as an experienced automobile mechanic was asked if he could state, from his examination of the Hoskings car, where it received the impact of the collision with the truck, and replied that he could, but, upon objection, he was not permitted to so state, apparently because, since it was undisputed that the car, after its contact with the truck, collided with a highway fence, the court regarded it impracticable to identify, separately, the physical effect of the first collision. The evidence was admissible, notwithstanding that its weight might be materially affected *621 if it subsequently developed that reliable identification of the results of the first impact could not be made.
The numerous assignments of error relating to the charge and refusal of requests to charge lack substantial merit. The charge regarding the effect of concurring negligence of the driver of the Hoskings car, if found, upon the plaintiff's right of recovery from the defendant was correct, though brief. The other principles of law involved in the case were adequately stated and, notwithstanding that application thereto of the facts claimed to have been proved was not made to the extent usually found desirable, the charge was, on the whole, sufficient for the guidance of the jury. The record indicates that the requests to charge numbered fifty; most of them were voluminous, and all transgressed the principle, now made a rule of practice, that each request shall contain "a single proposition of law clearly and concisely stated." Practice Book. p. 275, insert. Most of them consisted of mere statements of evidence, or of facts claimed to have been proven coupled with a proposed instruction that these facts would constitute negligence as a matter of law, which instruction would have been incorrect if given.
There is error and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.