Thе plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for the death of her decedent, Walter Szela, allegedly caused by the negligence of the defendant Play Jackson in operating a tractor-trailer truck in the course of his employment for the named defendant. The plaintiff had a vеrdict. The defendants, their motion for a directed verdict having been denied, moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and, in the alternative, that the verdict be set aside. Practice Book §§ 233, 234. The court denied their motion, judgment was entered upon the verdict, and the defendants have appealed. *716 Their assignment of errors raises questions of law concerning the court’s ruling on their motions and concerning the finding, the charge, and rulings on the admission of evidence offered by the defendants.
Some of the parties’ claims of proof are not in serious dispute. Szela was fatally injured in an accident which involved the tractor-trailer truck driven by him and the truck of the defendants. The accident occurred in the early morning hours of August 23, 1954, at a railroad, underpass on the Boston Post Road in Madison in this state. The weather was clear, the roadway was dry, and the traffic was light. Szela’s vehicle was empty. The one operated by Jackson carried 27,000 pounds of cotton goods. Szela approached the underpass, proceeding west, while Jackson was proceeding east. Their respective vehicles came together a foot or two south of the middle line of the two-lane сoncrete highway. The vehicles came to rest on the southerly portion of the highway, partly on and partly off the eastbound lane, forty-six feet eight inches from the point of impact. After the accident, there were marks caused by a dual-tired wheel of a type used on the defendants’ trаiler which started in the westbound lane two feet north of the middle of the highway and twenty feet west of the underpass. These marks extended northward in an arc to within three feet of the northerly edge of the concrete pavement, where they turned southward, crossed the middle line of the roadway, pаssed through some debris at the point of impact and continued to within ten or fifteen feet of the left rear wheel of the defendants’ vehicle. As Jackson approached the underpass, he was driving at the rate of forty miles an hour.
The parties were sharply at issue as to who caused thе accident. The defendants claimed that Jackson
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was not negligent and that the collision occurred because Szela, driving a truck more than twelve feet six inches in height without a permit, in violation of General Statutes § 2501, negligently attempted to drive his vehicle under the railroad bridge, which was too low to admit it, and that the front of his trailer struck the bridge, causing the trailer to “jackknife” to the left and turn over directly in the path of the defendants’ vehicle. The plaintiff claimed that Jackson, approaching the underpass on a slight downgrade at forty miles an hour, was driving in the northerly or westbound lane. Szеla, she argues, confronted with the truck, coming toward him on its wrong side of the road, pulled to his left sharply to avoid a head-on collision and thereby caused his trailer to jackknife, so that its front corner tilted upwards and struck the bridge and the trailer turned over. Variable factors entering into the meаsurement of the height of the underpass at the point where the Szela trailer struck the bridge and the height of the front end of the trailer made it impossible to fix the exact height of either as an indisputable fact. See
Nelson
v.
August,
The defendants also claim that the verdict of $75,000 should have been set aside as excessive. We have had occasion recently to examine the elements which enter into the assessment of damages under our wrongful death statute. Cum. Suр. 1955, § 3230d (now Public Acts 1957, No. 532);
Floyd
v.
Fruit Industries, Inc.,
Before wе consider the errors claimed in the charge and the rulings on evidence, we shall first pass upon the errors assigned in the finding. In a ease tried to the jury, the trial court’s action upon a motion to set aside the verdict or for judgment notwithstanding the verdict is tested by the evidence.
New Britain Trust Co.
v.
New York, N.H. & H.R. Co.,
We turn now to the errors claimed in the charge. The defendants complain of the failure of the court to grant certain of their requests concerning the application of the rule of proximate cause. They
*720
assert that Jackson’s negligence, if any, including his speed, was a condition, as distinguished from a cause, of the accident and that the court should havе instructed the jury specifically concerning this distinction. They rely upon
Kinderavich
v.
Palmer,
The defendants requested the court to charge that there was no evidence from which the jury could find the life expectancy or state of health of Szela “after the instant of his collision with the [bridge] and before the instant of his collision” with the defendants’ vehicle, or determine whether his injuries were proximately caused by the collision with the bridge or by the collision with that vehicle. The refusal of the
*721
court to comply with these requests, even if it is conceded that they were proper, in no way harmed the defendants. According to the theory upon which the case was tried, Szela’s trailer struck the bridge either because it was too high to go under, in which event Szela could be found negligent, as claimed by the defendants, or because, in the emergency created by Jackson’s negligence, Szela’s sudden turn to the left to avoid a head-on collision caused the trailer to jackknife, rise up, and hit the bridge, as claimed by the plaintiff. Upon the court’s instructions relating to proximate cause, if the jury found the former to be the situation and therefore that Szela was contributorily negligent, they would not need to consider the issue of damages; if they found the latter, the charge as given was adequate. The test of a charge is not whether it applies pertinent rules of law to every ramification of facts conceivable from the evidence. Rather, it is whether the charge “fairly presents the casе to the jury in such a way that injustice is not done to either party under the established rules of law.”
DeCarufel
v.
Colonial Trust Co.,
The defendants complain of the court’s refusal to charge that a violation of General Statutes § 2501 was negligence as a matter of law. The court charged that a violation of this statute constituted
*722
negligence but, to be contributory negligence, such a violation must be a “proximate cause or substantial factor” in bringing about the injuries. The defendants rely upon
Essam
v.
New York, N.H. & H.R. Co.,
The defendants complain because the court failed to grant their specific request to charge relating to the conduct of a driver of a motor vehicle in an emergency. The charge of the court on this matter was correct.
Danehy
v.
Metz,
The defendants assign error in two rulings on evidence. In connection with the depositions of the office and branch managers of the company which had manufactured the trailer attached to the tractor operated by Szela, the defendants offered a document called a “Sales & Production Order.” It was a printed form filled in with typed data comprising specificatiоns for the construction of the trailer. Figures relating to its height were included. The form also contained, on its face, some written memoranda described by the witnesses as computations relating to the height of the tractor and the trailer and, on the reverse side, a diagrammatic sketch drawn in pencil. The court, after a series of rulings relating to the admissibility of the written memoranda on the face and reverse side of the exhibit, admitted it with these deleted. Section 3159d of the 1955 Cumulative Supplement allows the admission in evidence of a record “made as a memorandum or record of any аct, transaction, occurrence or event ... if the trial judge shall find that it was made in the regular course of any business, and that it was the regular course of such business to make such writing or record at the time of such act, transaction, occurrence or event or within a reasonable time thereafter.” The statute lays down three distinct qualifications, all of which must be met: (1) The memorandum must be made in the regular course of business. (2) It must be the regular course of business to make the memorandum. (3) The memorandum must be made at the time when the act, transaction or event occurred or within a reasonable time thereafter.
Weller
v.
Fish Transport Co.,
The defendants offered in evidence the testimony of a highway department engineer, in charge of issuing permits under General Statutes § 2501 for the operation of a motor vehicle exceeding twelve feet six inches in height, to show that no such permit had been issued for the Szela trailer. The court refused to admit the offer over the plaintiff’s objection that there was no evidence that the trailer exceeded twelve feet six inches in height. Evidence that the trailer exceeded that height had, however, been previously introduced. But the court’s ruling was harmless, because the plaintiff later conceded that no permit had been obtained—a concession which the court repeated in the charge.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
