Thе plaintiff Bosemarie Baia brought an action to recover damages for injuries she suffered when her husband’s motor vehicle which she was operating struck a bridge abutment. The plaintiff Francis Baia sought recovery for damage to his motor vehicle and for wages lost because he was required to care for his wife. The plaintiffs alleged that the negligence of the defendant Harry C. Topehius in operating a motor vehicle owned by the defendant Alfred Tanguay caused the aforementioned injuries and damages. The defendants denied the allegations of negligence and pleaded contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff Bosemarie Baia. The jury returned a verdict and judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs, and the defendants have appealed.
Three of the four assignments of error which are pursued in the defendants’ brief relate solely to thе trial court’s instruction to the jury on the issue of liability. The correctness of the charge is determined by the claims of proof of the parties related in the finding. Practice Book §635;
Busko
v.
DeFilippo,
The defendants offered evidence to prove and claimed to have proved that while the defendant was operating the Tanguay vehicle on route 195, a public highway, a motor vehicle operated by the plaintiff pulled out in front of him from a side road. The defendant slammed on his brakes and turned to his right and his vehicle went off the side of the road, up an embankment and brushed against a tree, damaging the bumper, front end and grill. The plaintiff did not stop. The defendant drove up behind the plaintiff and in an attempt to attract hеr attention the defendant sounded his horn and blinked his lights. The plaintiff gave no indication of an intent to stop her vehicle. The defendant then passed the plaintiff’s vehicle and pulled completely back into the westbound lane of route 195. When he saw the plaintiff’s headlights in his rear view mirror he touched his brakes. Thereafter, he heard a crashing sound and brought his vehicle to a stop. Each lane of travel on route 195 is fifteen and one-half feet wide and the bridge abutment at the scene of the accident protrudes into the traveled portion of the highway between one and two feet.
The defendants assign error in the court’s refusal to charge the jury that if they found from the evidence that the incident was a “pure accident” or an “unavoidable accident,” then the plaintiffs could not recover. “Instructions concerning unavoidable acci
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dent should usually be given only when the record can support a finding that the negligence of neither party is involved. When a foundation has been established for the charge, it is within the sound discretion of the trial judge to determine whether a charge should be given on the subject of unavoidable accident.”
Robinson
v.
Faulkner,
The defendants claim that the court erred in rеfusing to. charge the jury on the maxim falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus as requested in a written request to charge. Only the court’s charge removing from the jury’s consideration the defendant’s allegation of speed in the special defense appears in the finding. As the remainder of the charge is not in the record, it is presumed that the portion of the charge relating to instructions concerning the credibility of witnesses is correct. State v. Mallette, supra.
The maxim falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus in its permissive form has been approved in this state as an instruction to the jury in relation to their determination of the credibility of witnesses.
Willa
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metz
v.
Guida-Seibert Dairy Co.,
The defendants next claim that the court was in error in refusing to charge the jury that they were entitled to draw an adverse inference from the failure of the plaintiff to call as a witness A. Frederick Serbin, one of the physicians who examined the plaintiff. Two necessary elеments must be shown before an unfavorable inference may be drawn by the jury against a party not producing a witness: the witness must be available and he must be a witness whom the party would naturally produce.
State
v.
Cobbs,
Serbin was a witness whom the plaintiff naturally would have produced. The defendants argue that they had a right to rely on representations by the plaintiff’s counsel that Serbin would be called, and that proof of availability was not required under such circumstances. There is no indication that these representations were made with any motive to deceive or to lull the defendants into reliance on such statements. Mere evidence of intention on the part of an attorney to call a witness is not evidence that the witness is available. The statements of the plaintiff’s counsel did not place the defendants in a position different from any other defendant who realizes at the close of the plaintiff’s case that a witness who would naturally be called by the plaintiff did not testify. To avail themselves of the rule the defendants had the burden of showing that Serbin was available. Since the defendants failed to provide evidence of Serbin’s availability, an instruction on the rule would have been erroneous.
State
v.
Cobbs,
supra;
Queen
v.
Cagliola,
supra, 169;
Greenwich Contracting Co.
v.
Bonwit Construction Co.,
The final claim of error briefed by the defendants is that the court erred in refusing to set the vеrdict aside or to order a remittitur in the case of Rosemarie Raia in that the verdict of $7500 was excessive. This claim is tested by the evidence printed in the appendices to the briefs. Practice Book § 718;
State
v.
Manning,
Viewing the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, as the trial court did in its memorandum of decision on the motion to set aside the verdict, the jury could have found that the plaintiff suffered multiple bruises, a cervical strain and strain and contusion of the temporal mandibular joints. After the accident, which occurred on December 3, 1968, the plaintiff’s face was swollen and bruisеd to such an extent that she could not open her jaw. She had pain in her neck and in certain instances had discomfort when she turned her head. About three weeks after the accident, she complained of pаin in the lumbar area. Around January 9,1969, her headaches were severe and constant and at the end of January, 1969, she had difficulty turning her head. She wore her neck collar until the end of February, 1969. She experienced pain in her jaw up to the time of trial in September, 1971. The plaintiff was treated by Norman Zlotsky, a physician, and visited his office about fifteen times. As a further result of the accident, she was unable to return to work for a period of abоut four weeks. Her average pay for the eleven weeks prior to the date of the accident was about $50 per week.
“In determining whether or not the award was excessive we must bear in mind that the weight to be aсcorded to testimony is a matter for the jury, and the assessment of damages is peculiarly within their province.
Douglass
v.
95 Pearl Street Corpora
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tion,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
