Peterson v. Thomas

136 A. 687 | Conn. | 1927

The defendant claims that the court erred in its refusal to make certain corrections in the finding, and in its rulings as to the negligence of the defendant and the lack of contributory negligence of the plaintiff. There was a ruling admitting evidence and an exception thereto discussed by the defendant. This ruling, which admitted evidence tending to prove that plaintiff's wife, because of his injuries, had to go to work and so continued until he had recovered and still is working in order to pay bills contracted as a result of his injury, was an erroneous admission of evidence in proof of special damage incurred, or to show the extent of the plaintiff's injury. The error cannot be taken advantage of by the defendant, because this matter was not pleaded as an element of special damage, and, further, the defendant's ground of objection does not appear as a matter of record. Practice Book, p. 276, § 151; Welbrot v. Levenberg,98 Conn. 217, 118 A. 911. If the defendant could take advantage of this error, the finding, paragraph sixteen, shows that the court neither considered nor found this as an element of special damage, hence the error was harmless.

The defendant is not entitled to corrections of the finding other than as granted by the trial court, since *627 the additional facts which it is sought to have included in the finding are not admitted or undisputed facts, nor are they necessary to present a question of law decided adversely to the appellant. DeFeo v. Hindinger,98 Conn. 578, 120 A. 314; Ross v. Stamford, 88 Conn. 260,264, 91 A. 201.

The record discloses that the court found in detail the conduct of the parties under the following general circumstances: On January 16th, 1925, at about 8:15 in the evening, the plaintiff, walking easterly on Cedar Street in Norwalk, was approaching West Avenue in order to cross to the side of the trolley tracks which ran north and south on West Avenue to take a trolley car. As he advanced into West Avenue he saw an automobile approaching on his right and the automobile of the defendant approaching on his left, each about one hundred feet away; the plaintiff then, for safety, turned about and returned to the sidewalk which he had left and as he stepped upon it the automobile of the defendant was driven upon the sidewalk and into the plaintiff, severely injuring him.

Under these general conditions there was presented to the trial court a situation where its inference of defendant's responsibility was "`a conclusion upon the questions of the measure of duty and the extent of performance, which are from the nature of the case so interdependent as to constitute, for the purposes of review, a single, indivisible question of fact, and the conclusion is therefore final'." Fox v. Kinney,72 Conn. 404, 407, 44 A. 745.

The question of legal liability became purely that of prudent conduct under the circumstances of the particular case, and no violation of law by the trial court is apparent upon the record. In such a case the conclusion of the trial court as to negligence, or legal liability, including the measure of duty as well as the *628 extent of performance, is final. Lawler v. HartfordStreet Ry. Co., 72 Conn. 74, 81, 43 A. 545, and cases there cited.

There is no error.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.