This was an action for damages for personal injuries claimed to have been sustained by Carl F. Johnson, Jr., the plaintiff’s intestate, 1 by virtue of an accident which occurred on October 7, 1961, when the late Carl F. Johnson, Jr., was driving his automobile on Connecticut route 7 in the vicinity of Cornwall Bridge, Kent. The first count of the complaint, alleging a breach of warranty, was directed against the defendant, John Newell, doing business as Newell’s Atlantic Service Station, who was engaged in selling “new recapped tires” at retail. The second count of the complaint, also alleging a breach of warranty, was directed against the defendants James and Ralph DeSantie, doing business as J and R Retreading Company, who were engaged in the manufacture and sale of “new recapped tires” which were sold to dealers including the defendant Newell. The third count in negligence is brought against all the defendants.
The various specifications relating to warranty, alleged, inter alia, that the defendants warranted a “new recapped tire”, sold to Carl F. Johnson, Jr., was free from defects; that it was safe; that it was fit for the particular purpose for which it was purchased; that it was of merchantable quality; that it was in good condition; and that Johnson relied on the skill and judgment of the defendants in selecting the tire he purchased.
In the third count the plaintiff alleged that Newell
The complaint further alleged, as to the first two counts in warranty, that “in fact” the defendants breached the warranties since the “tire was not fit for use on a motor vehicle as intended, was not of merchantable quality, was not in good condition and was defective, cracked and worn and so weak as to be liable to blow out when in use.” Under the count concerning negligence, it was alleged as to all defendants that the recapped tire was defective, unsafe and unfit “for use on a motor vehicle in that the sidewalls were old, rotted, defective, cracked and worn and so weak as to be liable to blow out when in use.”
At the conclusion of the trial, after all the evidence had been submitted, the defendants made a motion for a directed verdict which was denied. Thereafter, the jury, although they had been returned by the court for further deliberations on two occasions, reported that they were unable to reach a verdict and were discharged. The defendants, pursuant to Practice Book § 255, then moved to have judgment entered in accordance with their motion for a directed verdict and the court thereupon directed the entry of judgment in favor of the defendants.
We consider the evidence introduced in the course of the trial in the light most favorable to the plaintiff in reviewing the action of the court in rendering a judgment for the defendants when, after a full trial, no verdict was returned; see
Pelletier
v.
Bilbiles,
The plaintiff agrees that in order to recover in
The witness Charles Gf. O’Neill testified that he inspected the tire in question about four days after the accident at the garage where the car had been towed and he was permitted to state that he observed, at the time, a jagged tear in the tire’s sidewall, the only one he saw; and that the fabric or cord was showing. The court refused, however, to permit him to testify that he observed horizontal lines or cracks showing on the sidewall; that when he pushed a pencil into the tear, it went all the way through the sidewall; and that the tire was flat at the time of his inspection. This ruling on evidence has been assigned as error. The court properly excluded evidence of the experiment of O’Neill, made four days after the accident, in which he allegedly pushed a pencil through the sidewall of the tire. It should be noted that the tire was not available at the trial nor could it be located back in 1962. The other testimony in this regard, excluded by the court, was admissible provided the conditions found by the witness O’Neill,
The plaintiff also assigns as error the refusal of the trial court to permit Mrs. Ella Richardson, a witness for the plaintiff, to state what she observed about the right front tire when she saw it a few days after the accident at the garage. No offer of proof appears in the record. Without knowing the purpose of the offer or the answer that might be forthcoming we are unable to rule on this assignment of error. Practice Book § 648;
Hanauer
v.
Coscia,
Raymond D. Weeks, another witness called on behalf of the plaintiff, testified that at the time of the accident he was standing in his driveway, fifteen to twenty feet away from route 7, near the scene of the accident, when he heard a car coming down the road; that he heard a noise which sounded like a shot, a bang; that the car was forty to fifty feet away from him when he heard the bang and he saw the car go by him before it hit the telephone pole. The witness characterized the sound as “a tire blowout.” The court sustained the defendant’s objection to such a characterization of the sound, ordered any testimony that what he heard was a “blowout” stricken and instructed the jury to disregard anything that had been said concerning it. “The general rule is that witnesses must state facts and not their individual opinions, but there are exceptions to this rule as well established as the rule itself.”
Sydleman
v.
Beckwith,
The remaining assignments of error we need discuss in disposing of this appeal are the claims that the court should have allowed in evidence at the trial an exclamation of Franklin Dutil to the effect that “that sounds to me like a shot or blowout” and the proffered testimony of the witness Weeks that he heard Dutil utter the exclamation which the plaintiff characterizes as a spontaneous utterance. Dutil, at the time of the accident, was talking to his uncle, Raymond D. Weeks, in the latter’s driveway. The declarant, Dutil, was a bystander, and he did not see the accident. He only heard it. A declaration to qualify as an exception to the hearsay rule as a spontaneous utterance must meet certain requirements to guarantee its trustworthiness. See 6 Wig-more, op. eit. §1 1747-1757; 29 Am. Jur. 2d, Evidence, § 708. One such requirement is that the declaration is made by “one having an opportunity to observe the matter of which he speaks.”
Perry
v.
Haritos,
In rendering judgment for the defendants in accordance with their motion for a directed verdict the trial court ruled that such a course was justified because the jury on the evidence could not reasonably and legally reach any other conclusion than that embodied in the verdict as directed.
Johnson
v.
Consolidated Industries, Inc.,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Carl F. Johnson, Jr., died on April 18, 1970. James J. Gentile, appointed administrator of his estate on May 28, 1970, was substituted as party plaintiff on September 11, 1970.
