In this action both the plaintiff and the defendant sought damages which resulted from a collision between the plaintiff's tractor and the defendant's automobile. The trial court found that the parties were equally at fault and awarded each of them one-half of the damages he had suffered, in accordance with our comparative negligence statute, General Statutes
The memorandum of decision recites that on January 31, 1977, at about 7:30 p.m., the plaintiff's tractor stalled while traveling westerly1 on route 6, a two-lane highway in Woodbury. The tractor was towed to the side of the road, where it remained wholly on the shoulder of the highway except that its left rear wheel was on the line separating the shoulder from *Page 576 the traveled portion. The defendant, who was also driving westerly,2 struck the left rear wheel of the tractor with the right front part of his automobile. The trial court found that the plaintiff was at fault in having the left wheel of the tractor on the shoulder line and that the defendant was at fault in failing to keep a proper lookout.
It appears that the finding of negligence on the part of the plaintiff was based entirely upon his claimed violation of General Statutes
Furthermore, even if the court had found that the tractor constituted a traffic hazard or that it obstructed traffic, it would also have had to find that the plaintiff's situation did not fall within the exception contained in this provision of
We need not consider the remaining errors raised. The rulings on the admission of evidence are unlikely to arise at a new trial. It would be premature to consider the errors claimed regarding damages or the failure to award attorney's fees to the plaintiff. The defendant did concede error in the failure of the trial court to allow for the salvage value of his automobile in awarding damages on the counterclaim.
There is error in the failure of the trial court to find facts sufficient to support its conclusion that the plaintiff was negligent by virtue of his violation of
