159 A. 271 | Conn. | 1932
On the evening of August 2d 1930, Thomas Honan, son of the defendant, drove the defendant's automobile, having with him as a guest William Giddings, to Bantam Lake where they visited a dance hall and each had two drinks of liquor from a bottle which was passed around by friends of Honan. At about eleven o'clock they started for Waterbury where Honan had an engagement. Two men who soon afterward drove in the same direction came upon the *475 defendant's car standing in the middle of the road on Morris Hill, its windshield broken, the fenders bent, and the body scratched as if the car had rolled over, and the left front tire was flat. Honan was lying partly over the hood of the car and Giddings by the side of the road, both in an unconscious condition. They were taken to the Waterbury Hospital where Giddings died without regaining consciousness, and Honan remained unconscious until the following morning. Other evidence appearing in the finding is referred to hereafter.
The assignments of error are based principally upon the failure of the trial court to charge in three specified particulars and to comment upon certain phases of the evidence. The plaintiff filed no requests and if the charge as a whole is correct in law and sufficient to guide the jury in deciding the issues, error cannot be predicated upon the omissions complained of. Miller
v. Pierpont,
It is claimed, also, that the factual situation presented by the evidence was such as to render the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur applicable and that the jury should have been instructed "that there was an inference of negligence on the part of the defendant that [he] was liable unless he explained or rebutted the inference by satisfactory evidence." This claim appears, from the record, to have been made for the first time in this court, and the circumstances were not such as to require instruction on that subject without a request. These considerations are sufficient to absolve the trial court from harmful error in failing to so charge. Schiesel v. Poli Realty Co.,
Complaint is also made that the court failed to comment upon claimed defects in the recollection of the driver as to occurrences during the drive immediately preceding the accident and concerning the cause of the accident itself. The finding shows that this witness testified to conversation had with plaintiff's decedent and the subject thereof and that he recalled passing an intersecting road, and there is no suggestion in the finding that there were any unusual incidents preceding the accident which it might be claimed the driver should have noted and recalled. Especially in view of the further fact that his injuries rendered him unconscious for hours, we cannot say that there was such a significant failure of memory as to require emphasis in the charge. As to this and other criticisms relating to comment by the court, there was no reversible abuse of reasonable discretion as to the extent to which the facts shall be commented upon in the charge. Aldrich v. Duggan,
We find no harmful error in the charge; none of the requested corrections of the finding which could be granted would materially affect decision upon the assignments of error; the only ruling on evidence which is made ground of appeal was correct.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.