142 A. 397 | Conn. | 1928
The plaintiff was driving northerly on the main highway between New Haven and Hartford. As he approached a place where that highway is intersected by another coming from the west but not crossing *710 it he turned to the west side of the road to pass an automobile which was preceding him in the same direction. As he did so an automobile owned by the defendant company and operated by its employee was proceeding out of the intersecting highway to turn south on the road to New Haven and when it was partly upon the paved portion of the road it was struck by the plaintiff's car. The plaintiff obtained a verdict and the defendant has appealed, claiming error in the denial by the trial court of its motion to set the verdict aside as against the evidence and also in certain portions of the charge to the jury.
The contention chiefly relied upon in support of both claims of error has to do with the meaning of the statute governing the right of way at street intersections. This reads: "Every driver and operator of a vehicle approaching any intersecting public street or highway shall grant the right of way at such intersection to any vehicle approaching from his right, provided such vehicles are arriving at such intersection at approximately the same time, and provided traffic officers shall have authority to regulate traffic." Public Acts of 1923, Chap. 246, § 1. At the intersection in question there was no traffic officer and the plaintiff was approaching the defendant's car from its right. The trial court charged the jury that under the statute the plaintiff had the right of way. The defendant claims that the statute did not apply to the situation before the court because the plaintiff as he came to the intersection was driving upon the left side of the road. Such a limitation upon its operation would hardly accord with the policy of our automobile law. There is no statutory provision requiring an automobile to travel at all times upon the right side of the highway and, except in certain situations for which provision is expressly made, and subject to the obligation of its *711
driver to use due care, it may proceed upon any portion of the highway. Irwin v. Judge,
The only other claim of the defendant is that the trial court, while quoting in full the portion of the statute in question, failed to explain to the jury the meaning of the phrase "provided such vehicles are arriving at such intersection at approximately the same time." One reads the record in vain to find any suggestion of a claim by either party in the trial court that the vehicles were not arriving at the intersection at approximately the same time, and in such a situation no specific instruction as to the meaning of the phrase was necessary. Lamke v. Harty BrothersTrucking Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.