168 A. 17 | Conn. | 1933
The plaintiff received personal injuries while riding as a guest in an automobile driven by the defendant. The accident happened in Massachusetts, and the substantive elements necessary to a recovery are governed by the law of that State. Slobodnjak v.Coyne,
The jury might reasonably have found the following facts: On February 20th, 1932, the plaintiff and Catherine Walsh were guests in a car driven by the defendant on a trip which they had planned to take from Hartford to Boston. They left Hartford about two-thirty in the afternoon and proceeded along the Stafford Springs highway. The weather was clear and the road was dry. The plaintiff and Miss Walsh sat in the back seat of the car and kept up a running conversation in which the defendant joined from time to time. As they passed through Union and were making a sharp turn in the road the car swerved severely. The defendant had his head down toward the running board, and the plaintiff called to him and asked what was the matter. He replied that he was all right. The plaintiff watched his driving for a few minutes and it seemed all right, and she paid no more attention to it. The car had crossed the Massachusetts line into Sturbridge and was near the foot of a long descending grade when it took a sudden spurt in its speed, left the traveled portion of the road, knocked *432 down four concrete highway fence posts, ran on about one hundred and twelve feet until it hit and scraped a tree, and ended up by pushing through a stone fence forty-three feet from the edge of the traveled highway, making an opening in it of ten to fifteen feet. The sudden increase in the speed of the car attracted the plaintiff's attention to the defendant, and she observed that he was in a relaxed position, with his head down and his chin on his chest not far from the steering wheel. She could not see his eyes but his lips were "pouted" and he seemed to be asleep.
If this accident was the result of the gross negligence of the defendant it was because he was operating the car when he knew or should have known of the likelihood that sleep would overtake him, and that he actually did fall asleep thereby causing the accident. Counsel for the defendant concede that if the evidence justifies these conclusions, both of which they say are essential to the plaintiff's case, the defendant could reasonably be held to be guilty of gross negligence under the Massachusetts decisions cited in their brief. Shriear v. Feigelson,
The evidence as to whether the defendant realized or ought to have realized the likelihood of sleep overtaking him is meager, being practically confined to the testimony of the plaintiff that when the car swerved sharply as they were rounding a curve in Union the defendant had his head down, and that when she spoke to him he sat up and said he was all right, and that it was "quite a few minutes after that" that they had the accident. Attention is called to the fact that in Blood v. Adams, supra, in which the facts were somewhat similar, the defendant admitted that he was sleepy and must have fallen asleep just before the accident. Here it appears that the defendant was present at the trial but did not testify. His failure to do so permits an inference that his evidence would not have supported his present claim, and such inference may be weighed with the entire evidence in the case. Ezzo v. Geremiah,
In determining whether the jury could reasonably *434
find the defendant guilty of gross negligence the same rules are to be applied as in the ordinary negligence action. If their conclusion is reasonable in the light of the evidence and the inferences they may properly draw, it must stand. Potz v. Williams, supra; Coner
v. Chittenden,
The defendant assigns as error the court's charge that the burden of proof of the plaintiff's contributory negligence rested upon the defendant. Such is the rule by statute in Massachusetts. Assuming that it is a procedural matter to be governed by the law of the forum, and that ordinarily in this State the burden is upon the plaintiff to establish his freedom from contributory negligence, the plaintiff contends that, since the defendant in his answer affirmatively alleged that the plaintiff was negligent, he cannot complain of the charge of the court that he assumed the affirmation of that issue. Rix v. Stone,
The assignment that the court erred in charging the jury that, in their consideration of the question of damages, they would naturally start with the special damages — bills incurred and loss of wages — amounting to over $1500, is without merit, since it appears from the finding that the plaintiff offered proof of such special damages in the sum of $1511.59, and it does not appear that the amount or reasonableness of the bills incurred was questioned upon the trial, and the fact, if it be a fact, that some of the bills had not been paid, is immaterial. Carangelo v. Nutmeg Farm,Inc.,
The jury brought in a verdict of $2500 in favor of the plaintiff. The court asked the jury to reconsider its verdict, stating that, if they found liability, in its opinion, with special damages of over $1500 which *436
were not disputed and the general damages which had been testified to, the verdict was inadequate. The jury later returned with a verdict for $4500 which the court accepted. Under General Statutes, § 5657, the court may return the jury to a second and a third consideration of a case if it judges from the verdict returned that they have mistaken the evidence and brought in a verdict contrary to it, or contrary to the direction of the court in a matter of law. It is proper for the court to inform the jury why they are so returned, and, in the absence of erroneous instructions to the jury in returning them, its action will not be reviewed by this court, especially when it appears that the verdict finally accepted is not, by reason of the change made, contrary to the law or the evidence.Daniels v. Grand 5, 10 and 25-Cent Stores, Inc.,
Under the statute the exercise of the power to return the jury is not conditioned upon a conclusion by the trial court that the verdict is so unreasonable that if accepted it would have to be set aside as against the evidence. State v. Candido,
The other assignments of error do not require discussion.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.