27 A.2d 631 | Conn. | 1942
The plaintiff, a pedestrian, while crossing a highway in the town of Manchester, was struck by an automobile operated by the defendant. He brought this action to recover damages for the injuries which he claimed to have suffered. After a trial to the jury a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant moved to set it aside and appealed from the denial of that motion, but upon this appeal only claims that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as matter of law. He also appealed from the judgment, alleging various errors in the charge. As stated in his brief, however, the questions to be reviewed are whether the court erred in charging the jury that if they found the defendant had been driving recklessly contributory negligence would not be a defense; whether the plaintiff was guilty of negligence as a matter of law; and, whether damages were excessive.
Taking the view of the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, the jury might reasonably have found these facts: Hartford Road is one of the main roads leading out of Manchester, running in an easterly and *304 westerly direction and intersected from the north, but not crossed, by Fairfield Street. At the point of intersection Hartford Road is thirty-five feet in width from curb to curb and straight for more than three hundred and fifty feet to the east, affording an unobstructed view for that distance. Between 6:30 and 7 o'clock in the morning traffic on Hartford Road, in both directions, was usually busy at the intersection, the neighborhood being fairly thickly settled with residences and stores. The defendant was familiar with this condition. Shortly before 7 o'clock, the plaintiff was walking in a southerly direction along the west side of Fairfield Street towards Hartford Road. He was a tall man and took a stride of three feet and was walking at a brisk walk but at no time running. It was raining at the time. When the plaintiff was about fifteen feet from the north curb of Hartford Road he looked to the right and saw the car of a friend slowing down and coming to a stop on the south side of Hartford Road and headed in an easterly direction. The plaintiff waved to the friend, intending to enter that car and proceed to the factory in Manchester where both the plaintiff and his friend were employed. The plaintiff, continuously in motion at a good brisk walk, looked to his left when about ten feet from the north curb of Hartford Road and saw the defendant's car over three hundred feet away and approaching, traveling in a westerly direction along Hartford Road. Its speed was at least forty miles an hour. As the plaintiff reached the curb, he looked to his right the second time and took a long step over the gutter in order to clear water standing there, and continued at a brisk walk to the center of the road. He then heard a swishing noise, looked up and saw the defendant's car bearing down upon him about thirty to thirty-five feet away about in the center of *305 the Hartford Road and bearing to the left. The plaintiff then swung around and was struck by the right front fender with great violence and his body hurled through the air to a grass plot on the northwest corner of the intersection. The left side of the defendant's car passed about three feet north of the standing car of the plaintiff's friend which the plaintiff intended to take and struck another car parked in the rear. With the exception of the three cars described, there was no other traffic at the intersection at that time.
The defendant did not blow his horn or give any warning signal of his approach, although he saw the plaintiff, when the latter was yet about twenty feet from Hartford Road, walking fast towards it. At that time the defendant was considerably more than three hundred feet away from Fairfield Street and had a clear and unobstructed view of the plaintiff and of the two cars moving easterly on Hartford Road and slowing down as they approached the Fairfield Street intersection. When the plaintiff had reached a point in Hartford Road eight or nine feet from the northerly curb, the defendant swerved and, when he saw that he would not avoid hitting the plaintiff, applied his brakes. These were not applied until the car had reached the easterly curb line of Fairfield Street about thirty to thirty-five feet from the plaintiff. His brakes were constantly applied thereafter until the car stopped about eighty feet west of the point where the plaintiff was struck. At the time the plaintiff reached the center of Hartford Road there was approximately seventeen feet of room for the defendant to pass along the northerly side of Hartford Road without striking the plaintiff. We cannot hold that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law.
The trial court charged the jury that recklessness *306 meant the operation of a motor car without regard to the safety of others, without regard for their life or limb; that it was a high degree of misconduct in the operation of a motor vehicle, and if recklessness was present then negligence on the part of the plaintiff contributing to his injury would not be a defense to recklessness on the part of the defendant. The defendant does not claim that the trial court erred in the substance of its instructions on reckless driving, but claims that recklessness was not alleged in the complaint and that no basis for a claim of recklessness had been established in the evidence. The complaint alleged that the injuries to the plaintiff were caused by the "recklessness, carelessness, and negligence" of the defendant, with a specification of the several respects in which this was claimed to be so, and that he operated his car "in a reckless, careless, and negligent manner having regard to the width, travel and use of the highway and the rights of others in the highway, and particularly, without regard to the position of the Plaintiff who was then and there a pedestrian on said highway," with some additional allegations of negligence.
In Puza v. Hamway,
Briefly to summarize the plaintiff's claims of proof as to the conduct of the defendant, they are: When the defendant was more than three hundred feet from the intersection he saw the plaintiff approaching it some twenty feet away from Hartford Road. He had thereafter a clear and unobstructed view of the intersection, but it is not found whether he saw the plaintiff again until he was thirty or thirty-five feet from him. At that point he applied his brakes and swerved slightly to the left. Until the brakes were applied he continued at a speed of at least forty miles an hour. He gave no signal of his approach to the intersection. There were seventeen feet between the plaintiff's position when he was struck and the northerly street curb, and the defendant might have turned to his right and so avoided the accident. It was raining. The neighborhood is fairly thickly settled and, as the *308
defendant knew, at the hour of the accident there is a large amount of vehicular traffic on Hartford Road, but there was no evidence that any large amount of pedestrian traffic was to be expected. Recklessness is a state of consciousness with reference to the consequences of one's acts. Commonwealth v. Pierce,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.