This аction was brought by the adminis-tratrix of Patrick Oates, who was killed by the collision of the defendant's trolley car with a tipcart which he was driving upon a public highway, in the city of Providence, May 29,1902. It seeks to recover damages for his death, alleging that the collision was caused by the negligence of the defendant’s servants. The car struck the hub of one of the wheels of the cart as the latter had nearly crossed the car track. The shock threw the intestatе from his seat on the cart to the ground. A wheel of the cart passed over his body, and his injuries resulted in death the same evening.
At the trial in the Superior Court the jury found for the plaintiff, and assessed the damages at the sum of four thousand and ninety-five dollars.
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The trial justiсe denied this petition, and the defendant excepted to his decision and now brings his bill of exceptions to this court, assigning as error the denial of the petition and certain rulings of the justice at the trial to which exception was taken.
The objection in regard to the juryman as a ground for new trial was properly overruled. It appears that the name George W. Bennett, Jr., clerk, appeared on the list of persons drawn by the board of aldermеn of the city of Providence, to serve as jurors in the Superior Court, but that the city clerk, having ascertained that George W. Bennett, .senior, was a clerk and George W. Bennett, junior, was not, conceived that George W. Bennett, senior, was the person drawn, and so erased the letters “jr.” as a clerical error. Notice was accordingly served on George W. Bennett, who appeared in court and was duly impanelled. We can hardly say that this was еrror. But it does not appear that George W. Bennett was not duly qualified, or that his presence on the jury in any way prejudiced the defendant. In such case it has been held that after verdict the objection that a juror has not been duly drawn comes too late. Sprague v. Brown, 21 R. I. 329.
In the course of the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence the ordinances of the city of Providence limiting the speed and regulating the management of trolley cars. The defendant's cоunsel objected, on the ground that the violation of the city ordinances was not alleged in the declaration as a ground of action; but the court admitted them as establishing a rule of conduct the infraction of which would be negligence, and furthermore charged the jury “that if you find that at the time of the collision the car in question was being propelled at a greater rate of speed than ten miles an hour, in violation of that ordinance, that the dеfendant was guilty of negligence as a matter of law, and if by reason of such negligence the injury to the deceased occurred, the plaintiff is entitled to recover;” and *502 in reply to the defendant’s request to charge: “That thе violation of the ordinances of the city does not excuse the plaintiff from exercising reasonable care,” the court refused the request and allowed the defendant an exception.
The charge of the сourt, as a whole, stated very clearly the law relating to the relative rights of the car company and the driver of a cart in the circumstances shown, and the request might have been refused, as having been already substantially givеn. If the court had so stated we think the refusal would not have misled the jury; but as they had just been' told that disobedience of the city ordinance constituted negligence • which entitled the plaintiff to recover, the specific refusal tо modify the statement by the addition of the proposition contained in the request was likely to be understood as excluding contributory negligence as a defense in case of breach of an ordinance. It may not be imprоper, in this connection, to say that the practice of reading to a jury a request to charge which is refused is always unnecessary and often misleading. Requests to charge are required, by Superior Court Rule 17, to be submitted in writing. So much of the instruction, or such modification of it, as the court thinks correct and applicable to the case should be given to the jury, and exceptions to modifications and refusals should be allowed and made part of the record by direction to the stenographic clerk. But aside from this objection, we think that the court erred in its conception
The next exception is to the introduction of a series of questions addressed to the defendant’s conductor and to a witness called to contradict the conductor’s answers.
The conductor was asked if, on the Sunday after the accident, he said to Dr. Callahan, in Briggs’s drug store on Smith street, that “if he had had his regular motorman on that car the accident would not have happened.” The conductor denied that he so stated and Dr. Callahan was called and testified that he did so state, to all of which evidence the defendant excepted.
The admission of this testimony was erroneous. Thе conductor’s opinion as to the efficiency of the motorman was not pertinent or admissible in the case, and as a matter of fact it had not been asked for. His alleged statement to Dr. Callahan was not a contradiction of any of his testimony. As the question to the conductor was erroneously admitted, it follows that the examination of Dr. Callahan was likewise erroneous; and the whole line of inquiry on this subject manifestly tended to prejudice the jury against the defence.
The objection that certain of the hypothetical questions did not correspond with the facts in evidence need not be considered, as the evidence to be adduced upon a new trial may differ from the present record. It is unnecessаry to re-affirm *505 the familiar doctrine that hypothetical questions should be based upon the evidence or possible deductions of fact therefrom.
This has been too often decided to admit of any question,” citing
Bassett
v.
Porter,
Our own practice has always conformed to the Massachusetts doctrine. Judgment upon the insufficiency of the plaintiff’s case alone should generally be as of nonsuit, which would leave him the right to renew his action if so advised. Tilden v. R. I. Co., 27 R. I. 482.
The defendant’s exceptions to the several errors of law above referred to are sustained; its petition for a new trial is granted, and the cause is remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings.
