This is аn action to recover damages for personal injuries claimed to have been sustained as the result of a collision betweеn the plaintiff’s automobile and the named defendant’s bus. Although both the operator and the owner of the bus were made parties defendаnt, the operator alone will be referred to as the defendant since the issue of agency was conceded. The court directed a verdict for the defendant and thereafter denied the plaintiff’s motion to set it aside. The plaintiff has appealed.
The power of a trial court to direct a verdict is necessarily sharply circumscribed. “[Ljitigants have a constitutional right to have issues of fact dеcided by the jury and not by the court.”
Ardoline
v.
Keegan,
In the exceptional case, however, a verdict may properly be directed. Our rule as to the direction of a verdict has remаined unchanged although it has not always been expressed in identical phraseology. It is clearly and tersely stated in
Mott
v.
Hillman,
If the evidence is so considered, the jury might have found the following facts. At about 9:15 in the evening of February 14, 1953, the defendant’s common carrier motor bus was proceeding easterly towards Danbury on the trunk-line highway running from Danbury to Ridgefield. Prior to the collision between the plaintiff’s car and the bus, a third car, never identified, had been proceeding easterly in front of the bus for a distаnce of two to four miles. The defendant, noticing that this ear was proceeding in an erratic and peculiar manner as to speed and direction, assumed that its operator was *548 either intoxicated or inattentive. As a consequence the defendant was afraid to pass the ear and decided that the safe course for himself and his passengers was to drop back about twelve car lengths. Thereafter he maintained a distance of six to twelve car lengths between the bus and the erratic car, although just before the accidеnt this distance was reduced to between thirty and forty feet. While the bus was staying behind the erratic car, another car overtook the bus and thеreafter was between the bus and the erratic car. As the latter reached a point at or near a curve in the road, the lights of the plaintiff’s ear, which was approaching from the east toward the bus, were seen by the defendant. The erratic car forced the рlaintiff’s car to veer to its right, strike the fence, and then turn sharply to its left directly in front of the bus. The collision occurred when the plaintiff’s car was broadside across the eastbound lane. After the collision, it was headed south, with its front wheels on the south shoulder .and its rear end about four feet south of the center line, blocking the eastbound lane. The bus, entirely on its own side of the road, was on a slight diagonal with the center line, аnd its left front was six or seven feet south of that line. The road was dry. The plaintiff’s injuries were such that he remembered nothing of the details of the accident. The defendant was operating the bus at a speed of about twenty-five miles an hour and did not apply his brakes before the impаct.
The plaintiff claimed that the defendant was negligent in failing to keep farther to the rear of the ■erratic car, in operating аt too high a speed, in failing to maintain a proper lookout and to apply Ms brakes, and in not sooner stopping the bus.
There was no evidence that the plaintiff’s ear
*549
started its cоurse onto the defendant’s side of the road in time for the defendant to have thereafter done anything to avoid the collision, nor do we understand the plaintiff so to claim.
Szabados
v.
Chatlos,
The claims of the plaintiff were that the movements of the erratic car forced him so to operate his car as to hit thе fence on his own side of the road, that this in turn caused him to lose control of the car, and that this in turn caused it to swing broadside directly in front of thе bus.
There were no specifications of statutory negligence. See Practice Book, Form No. 167. To find negligence in any of the resрects alleged, the jury would have had to find a breach of duty on the part of the bus operator, and this in turn would depend on whether they cоuld reasonably find that the ordinary man in the position of the defendant, knowing what he knew or should have known, would have anticipated that harm оf the general nature of that suffered was likely to result from his conduct in any of the respects alleged to have constituted negligencе.
Figlar
v.
Gordon,
This disposes of the appeal and makes unnecessary a consideration of the issue of proximate cause, on which the рlaintiff had the burden of proof. We point out, however, that according to the plaintiff’s claims, the negligence of the defendant antedated the start of the course of the plaintiff’s car across the highway. Under these circumstances, for the plaintiff to prevail on thе issue of proximate cause,
*550
the jury would have had to find that any negligence of the defendant in any of the respects claimed was a proximate cause notwithstanding the foregoing claimed chain of causation flowing from the negligent operation of the erratic car, under the rule of cases such as
Corey
v.
Phillips,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
