delivered the opinion of the Court.
This automobile tort case presents the question whether punitive damages may be recovered in the absence of a specific claim for them in the motion for judgment. It also involves the question whether the trial court рroperly granted a motion in limine which had the effect of precluding evidence of the defendant’s conduct during several hours before the accident occurred.
Because the case comes to us on aрpeal from an order striking the plaintiffs evidence, the evidence will be stated in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, adopting those inferences most favorable to his case.
Jones
v.
Downs,
Woodson was particularly interested in learning whether Harrell was with Woodson’s former girlfriend. When Austin left the store, Woodson followed him to a nearby nightclub. Woodson saw Harrell’s car parked in the lot оutside, and circled the nightclub a number of times, waiting for Harrell to emerge. After a time, Woodson left to take his sister home, then returned to the nightclub parking lot. About 12:30 a.m., Harrell came out with two male friends, entered his car, and drovе away. Woodson drove out of the parking lot immediately ahead of Harrell and the two cars travelled side-by-side for a time. Both cars were proceeding west on Route 360, a four-lane highway, with Harrell in the right lane and Woodson in the left lane, at 50 to 55 miles per hour.
In the direction the cars were travelling, approaching the intersection of Meadow Drive, Route 360 widens to provide a “left *120 turn only” deceleration lane. Harrell, intending to turn left at Meadow Drive, slowed, displayed his left-turn signal, and moved into the lane behind Woodson in preparation for a further move into the “left turn only” lane. When Harrell was about four car lengths distant, directly behind Woodson, Woodson suddenly applied his brakes and came almost to a complete stop. Harrell succeeded in averting a collision with Woodson, but lost control of his car, swerved to the right and went off the road into a ditch. Harrell’s сar came to rest on its side, and Harrell was injured. Wood-son did not stop, but continued west on Route 360.
Harrell’s motion for judgment alleged that Woodson breached his duty to drive with reasonable care and with due regard for others using thе road. It also alleged that Woodson acted “wantonly, carelessly, recklessly and negligently.” It contained no claim for punitive damages.
At the beginning of a jury trial, Woodson moved the court, in limine, to exclude any evidence in support of punitive damages and particularly to exclude any evidence of Woodson’s conduct and statements on the evening in question, including his consumption of alcohol, prior to the time the two cars met on Route 360. The court stated: “what happened immediately prior, during, and immediately after the accident is what is relevant here. . . . [W]e ought to start after both cars are on Route 360.” The court granted the motion in limine, but permitted introduction of discovery depositions as a рroffer of what the excluded evidence would have been.
Harrell presented evidence limited to the maneuverings of the two cars on Route 360, at the conclusion of which the court granted Woodson’s motion to strike the plaintiffs evidence on the ground that the evidence showed that Harrell was either contributorially negligent as a matter of law, or that his negligence was the sole proximate cause of the accident. We grаnted Harrell an appeal.
We have not previously addressed the question whether punitive damages must be expressly claimed in pleadings under the present Rules of Court. Rule l:4(d) provides that a pleading “shall be sufficient if it сlearly informs the opposite party of the true nature of the claim or defense.” Rule 3:16(b) provides that a bill of particulars may be stricken if it “fails to inform the opposite party fairly of the true nature of the claim or defense. . . .” We think a motion for judgment which fails to inform the defen *121 dant that he will be faced by a claim for punitive damages at trial lacks the fairness, candor, and clarity required by these rules.
In
Wood
v.
Amer. Nat. Bank,
The cоmmon-law system of pleading, for all its complexity, had the merit of permitting each party to require the other to state his claim or defense with great precision before the case matured for trial. The less formal systеm established by the present rules offers greatly enhanced opportunities for the discovery of an opponent’s evidence, but much less opportunity to pin down the legal theories underlying his claim. It is therefore evеn more important under the present system to insure that each party be fairly informed of the “true nature of the claim or defense.” As we said in
Ted Lansing Supply
v.
Royal Alum.,
It is firmly established that no court can base its judgment or decree upon facts not аlleged or upon a right which has not been pleaded and claimed. Pleadings are as essential as proof, and no relief should be granted that does not substantially accord with the case as made in the pleading.
(Citations omitted).
*122 Accordingly, we hold that punitive damages may only be recovered where the plaintiff has made an express claim for them in the prayer for relief or ad damnum clause, sufficient to put the defendant on notice that an awаrd of punitive damages is sought apart from, and in addition to, the compensatory damages claimed. Because no express claim for punitive damages was made in Harrell’s motion for judgment, the trial court correсtly ruled, in limine, that no such damages could be recovered and that evidence having the sole purpose of supporting such an award would, therefore, be excluded.
Some of the evidence excluded in limine, however, was relevant to the issue of liability. Harrell’s аllegation that Woodson had acted “wantonly, carelessly, recklessly and negligently” was broad enough to encompass his theory of the case: that Woodson, while not necessarily intending to cause him physical injury, nevertheless applied his brakes suddenly in an effort to frighten and disconcert him, with reckless indifference to the consequences. The excluded evidence would have furnished circumstantial proof from which the jury might have inferred thаt Woodson felt ill-will toward Harrell, that he devoted considerable time and effort to stalking him, and that he intended at least to trouble and harass him. Thus, the excluded evidence might have presented an entirely different picture to the jury than the simple negligence case which they heard.
Woodson’s theory of the case was that he was surprised when Harrell’s car “whipped” behind him, and that he applied his brakes because he was “startled.” The exсluded evidence would have had a strong tendency to refute Woodson’s version. Every fact, however remote or insignificant, that tends to establish the probability or improbability of a fact in issue, is relevant, and if otherwise admissible, should be admitted.
Va. Real Estate Comm.
v.
Bias,
Harrell also assigns error to the court’s exclusion of Woodson’s admission that he hаd consumed four cans of beer between 8:15 and 9:00 p.m. while “riding around” in Richmond before the accident. Harrell contends that this was relevant as circumstantial evidence of wanton and reckless conduct. Woodson argues that there was no evidence that he was intoxicated or that his “manner, dis
*123
position, speech, muscular movement, general appearance or behavior” were affected, and that some such showing would be necessary as a foundation for the admission of evidence of the mere consumption of alcohol.
See
Code § 4-2(14);
Hemming
v.
Hutch
inson,,
Subsequent to the trial of this case, we decided
Baker
v.
Taylor,
Here, applying the same standard, we hold that the consumption of four cans of beer within a 45-minute period, whiсh ended three and one-half hours before the accident, is sufficient evidence to raise a similar inference of intoxication or impaired capacity, which the jury might draw or reject. On remand, therefore, the evidence should be admitted.
For the reasons stated, the judgment will be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
