143 A. 902 | Conn. | 1928
The plaintiff purchased an automobile from the defendant, paying a portion of the purchase price in cash and giving a series of notes for the balance, which were indorsed by the defendant to a third party. Before these notes were fully paid the car was stolen and the following day was found totally destroyed *522 by fire. The complaint alleged that on the day plaintiff bought the car he paid the defendant $37.50, which was the amount of the premium upon a fire and theft insurance policy upon the car, and that the defendant agreed to take out such a policy for the benefit of the plaintiff but failed to do so, and this action was brought to recover the value of the car at the time it was burned. The plaintiff claimed to have proved that he paid the defendant $37.50 which the latter agreed to devote to the payment of the premium upon a fire and theft insurance policy which he agreed to take out for the protection of his own and the plaintiff's interest in the car, but which he failed to do. The defendant claimed to have proved that the plaintiff did not ask him to purchase fire and theft insurance upon the car and did not advance him any money for that purpose.
The plaintiff offered the evidence of two witnesses, who were managers of automobile agencies in Waterbury, as to the custom and usage in the trade with regard to fire and theft insurance upon a car which was not paid for in full at the time of sale. The evidence was objected to, but was admitted by the court as tending to render more probable the existence of the express agreement to insure, which the plaintiff claimed was made. Lockwood, Jr., Inc. v. Gross Co., Inc.,
The ruling of the court permitting cross-examination of the defendant upon the question of his ownership of the automobile for the purpose of testing his credibility was within its discretion.
Error is predicated upon the charge of the court upon the question of damages because it is claimed that the plaintiff had offered no evidence to show the value of the automobile at the time it was burned. This claim is negatived by the finding that the plaintiff did offer such evidence.
The only claimed errors of the trial court were in *524 rulings on evidence and in the charge to the jury, and the printing of the evidence was unnecessary and a needless expense. The court should have refused to certify it.
There is error and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.