Plaintiff appeals from judgment entered on a jury verdict of no cause for action in his suit for damages resulting from personal injuries sustained when he was struck by an automobile operated and owned by defendants, respectively.
Chief factual dispute relates to point of impact and to what plaintiff had been doing just before he was struck. Plaintiff says that he had been stand
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ing along the left side and facing the front of his automobile, parked at the right curb, removing moisture from its windshield and side mirror, and that as he was moving back to open the door and to enter it he was struck by defendants’ automobile approaching from his rear. Defendants say that plaintiff was crossing the street and stepped in front of their automobile just before the collision. Bearing on that disputed point, plaintiff contends that skid marks on the pavement and the appearance of the left front fender of his car, across which he claims to have been thrown, tend to support his version. One of plaintiff’s witnesses testified concerning the existence and location of the skid marks before defendant objected. Plaintiff assigns as error the trial court’s subsequent exclusion of further testimony of that character based on observations made 1-1/2 to 2-1/2 hours after the accident on a prominent city street. Defendants objected to the proffer because too remote and also stated that their objection would continue unless the marks were first connected up with defendants’ automobile. Plaintiff made no effort thereafter to so connect them. The court did not err in sustaining the objection. Among the cases relied upon by plaintiff in this connection are
Wallace
v.
Kramer,
Insofar as testimony about the appearance of the fender in question is concerned, the court sustained objections only to witnesses testifying concerning their conclusions drawn from such appearance that plaintiff had been brushed over his fender. They were not prevented from, nor limited in, testifying to the fender’s appearance. Despite the objections and rulings of the court, even the mentioned conclusions were expressed by some of the witnesses before the jury. There is no basis for plaintiff’s claim of error in this regard.
Plaintiff next assigns error for failure to give requests to charge. Unfortunately, he fails to specify which of his requests the court erroneously failed to give. He contends that the court should have charged that as he stood alongside his parked auto
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mobile lie was under no duty to look back to see defendants’ approaching automobile traveling in a lane where it normally had a right to be, citing such cases as
Kirl
v.
Zinner,
Again, without referring to specific requests to charge, plaintiff complains, in general, that the court erred in failing to instruct the jury that the plaintiff had a right to rely on assumptions that defendants would obey the law in certain respects, operate their automobile carefully, and avoid striking plaintiff. The requests made by plaintiff which most nearly approach requesting such instructions are not correct statements of the law because, in each instance, they state it but partially. As said in syllabus of
People
v.
Campbell,
Finally, plaintiff claims that the court erred in refusing to grant a new trial on the ground that the judgment and verdict are against the great weight of the evidence. In this connection plaintiff’s arguments again are addressed to what the proofs show in relation to the question of where plaintiff was when he was struck and what he had been doing immediately before. Plaintiff testified in accord with his version. Defendant driver and a passenger in his automobile testified in support of defendants’ claim. A disinterested witness gave testimony which, coupled with some of plaintiff’s own testimony, tended to support the defense on this point. Counsel points to particulars in the testimony of defendant driver and his witnesses, which he claims support jDlaintiff’s contention. These consist of estimates of such witnesses concerning distances from the center lino of the pavement and from the curb at which plaintiff was at given stages and when struck. Plaintiff, in effect, contends that such estimates should override the direct testimony of those same witnesses that plaintiff was crossing the street in front of defendants’ automobile and was not standing alongside his own automobile immediately before the collision, and that a verdict apparently not in accord with that contention must be held to be *626 against the great weight of the evidence. We do not agree.
Affirmed, with costs to defendants.
