152 A. 399 | Conn. | 1930
This action grew out of a collision between two automobiles at a street intersection. The appellant claimed error in certain rulings upon evidence. One of them is the exclusion of the report of the accident made by the defendant Peter McNerney to the commissioner of motor vehicles. McNerney was the driver of the car which was owned by his wife, the other defendant, and was claimed by the plaintiff to be a family car. The report would ordinarily have been admissible against him as a party to the action and against his wife by reason of the agency to make it implied in his being the operator of the car. Ezzo
v. Geremiah,
The other rulings on evidence complained of are not stated in accordance with our practice, which requires that each ruling as to which error is claimed should be stated in a separate paragraph with a sufficient showing of the relevant circumstances so that the question presented may be fairly understood. *423
Practice Book, p. 307, § 6; McIsaac v. Hale,
The plaintiff complains of the failure of the trial court to give a number of its requests to charge. For *424 the most part these requests violated our rule that each such request shall contain a single proposition of law clearly and concisely stated; Practice Book, p. 275, insert; and so far as they were correct the subject-matter of all of them was sufficiently covered by the charge as given.
The appellant complains of two portions of the charge. His contention as to one involves the same principles of law considered above in our discussion of the rulings admitting evidence of the defendant's reputation for veracity and is disposed of by what we there say. In the other the trial court charged the jury that in order to recover the plaintiff must not only prove negligence of the driver of the defendant's car which was a proximate cause of the accident but also that neither he nor his own driver was negligent in any way which "substantially or materially contributed to produce" the injuries suffered. It is to the quoted words that the plaintiff addresses his assignment of error. The negligence of a plaintiff which will defeat a recovery is of the same kind and character as the negligence of a defendant which will support a recovery and the test of causal connection which must exist between the negligence and the injuries is the same. Brockett v. Fair Haven W. R. Co.,
A casual reading of these various expressions might suggest that they were intended to convey different conceptions of the principle sought to be stated. This of course is not so. Whichever is used it is intended to express the same underlying thought, and all connote the same relation between the negligence of a plaintiff and the injuries suffered which will defeat a recovery. It is not every negligent act or omission of a plaintiff which, though it be causally connected with the injuries, will defeat a recovery.Andrews v. Dougherty, supra, 46; Stickney v. Epstein,supra, 175; De Lucia v. Polio, supra, 438. The word "contribute" carries in itself the significance of a causal connection between the negligence and the injury. Whatever the phrases we have used to qualify it, the purpose has been to distinguish those negligent acts *426
or omissions which play so minor a part in producing the injuries that the law does not recognize them as legal causes. Norton v. Barton's Bias Narrow FabricCo.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.