1 Conn. App. 48 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1983
In this negligence action, the plaintiff injured his foot in 1973 while operating a three-wheeled roller supplied by the defendant to his employer, Laviero Construction Company, Inc.1 The plaintiff sued the defendant, claiming that the roller was missing a *49 guard. In addition to special defenses of contributory negligence and settlement of the claim by the plaintiff, the defendant filed a special defense of gratuitous bailment of the roller which, if proven, would reduce the standard of care required of the defendant. See Wright Fitzgerald, Conn. Law of Torts (2d Ed.) 80, p. 158. From a judgment rendered on a defendant's verdict the plaintiff appeals,2 raising essentially three issues, only two of which we need discuss.
The plaintiff first claims that the trial court erred in precluding him from impeaching his employer's principal, Daniel Laviero, whom he had called as a witness, by use of a prior inconsistent statement. Laviero testified on direct examination by the plaintiff that, because of friendship between his father and the founder of the defendant, he did not pay the defendant for use of the equipment. The plaintiff then attempted to impeach Laviero on the basis of a prior written statement in which he acknowledged financial considerations between him and the defendant for use of the machine. Laviero had given a deposition in which he had disavowed the statement, claiming that he misunderstood it. The court sustained the defendant's objection.3
It is clear from the record that the basis of the trial court's ruling was the holding of State v. Mitchell,
The first line has as two of its points Gondek v. Pliska,
Meanwhile, the second line of cases was proceeding apace. In Liebman v. Society of Our Lady of Mount St. Carmel, Inc., supra, the court upheld the trial court's exercise of discretion in permitting impeachment by a prior inconsistent statement even in the absence of surprise. It stated the rationale for the rule as follows: "Although counsel may have good ground for believing that a witness intends to testify in a manner contrary to a statement he has previously given, counsel may still call the witness to the stand under the belief that, when confronted by the prior statement, the witness will abandon efforts to deviate materially therefrom. Carpenter's Appeal, [
Faced with this divergence, we believe that Roberson represents the law of this state. First, it is the latest Supreme Court pronouncement on the issue.4 Second, *52
we find its rationale more persuasive than that of Gondek and Mitchell, which rest more rigidly on the outmoded notion that a proponent of a witness vouches for his credibility. See 3A Wigmore, Evidence (Chadbourn Rev. 1970) 896 through 899.5 Third, it more closely adheres to the earlier, flexible formulation of the rule, vesting discretion in the trial court to permit impeachment "as the interests of justice under the particular circumstances of the case seem to the court to require." Schmeltz v. Tracy,
Had the trial court here, having found no surprise, exercised its discretion to prohibit the impeachment, our task would be at an end, because such impeachment is a privilege, not a right, "and error cannot be predicated upon its refusal. Sandora v. Times Co.,
The complaint was based on negligence and did not even liberally construed, support a claim of strict products liability. It neither alleged that the defendant was engaged in the business of supplying three-wheeled rollers nor that the roller was expected to and did reach the user without substantial change in the condition in which it was supplied. See Prokolkin v. General Motors Corporation,
We need not discuss the plaintiff's third ground of appeal, which arises from inclusion in the case of the issue of settlement of his claim, raised by the defendant's third special defense. The trial court refused to permit the jury to consider this defense because of insufficiency of evidence. It does not appear, in view of the evidence available, that this issue will arise in a new trial.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.