186 A. 491 | Conn. | 1936
The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages which he claimed to have suffered when thrown to the floor of a trolley car of the defendant as he was changing his seat in it, when it came to a sudden stop in the effort to avoid a collision with an automobile upon the track. The plaintiff claimed to have proved that the driver of the automobile had been trying for some minutes to park it at the side of the street, and that the motorman should have seen it on the track in time, in the exercise of proper care, to have brought the car to a stop with no more than the usual jarring due to the stopping of street railway cars. The defendant, on the other hand, claimed to have proven that when the front of the trolley car was about fifteen feet from the rear of the automobile, the latter was driven out from the curb where it was parked, without warning, in front of the trolley car, thus confronting the motorman with a sudden emergency. Verdict was rendered for the defendant and from the judgment upon that verdict the plaintiff has appealed, claiming errors in the failure to charge the jury as regards certain matters and to comply with certain requests to charge, and also in the charge as given.
The matters as to which no requests to charge were made are within that class of cases where a failure to give specific instructions upon special features of the situation as to which no such requests are made does not constitute reversible error. Bullard v. de Cordova,
It is true that buried in the middle of this long request was a statement as to the duty of the motorman if the jury found that the existence of the emergency arose without fault on his part. We cannot say that the trial court committed reversible error in not culling out this statement from a request which in its length and complexity was in violation of our rules; Petrillo v. Kolbay,
The plaintiff contends that the court did not in terms instruct the jury that the motorman should have exercised the care which a reasonably prudent motorman would have used; but the instructions were such that the jury could not have understood otherwise *514
than that this was the test to be applied; and the plaintiff's requests to charge fell far short of making it plain that they desired a specific charge in accordance with their present claim. While the defendant made no claim of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, the fact that the trial court submitted that issue to the jury as a question of fact is not ground for reversible error, particularly in view of its charge to the jury that the plaintiff had a right to change his seat as he was doing when the car came to a stop. Kilday v. Voltz,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.