The plaintiff brought this action to recover for personal injuries sustained in a collision allegedly resulting from the negligent operation of a motor vehi
The plaintiff presents the following issues on appeal: (1) Whether the trial court erred in its charge to the jury regarding proximate causation; (2) Whether the trial court erred in admitting the testimony of an expert witness in response to a hypothetical question; and (3) Whether the trial court erred in denying the motion to set aside the verdict.
The jury could reasonably have found the following facts: On November 11,1977, at approximately 6 p.m., the plaintiff was driving his automobile in a northerly direction on Flanders Road in Southington. Flanders Road runs in a general north-south direction and is a main road. At the same time the defendant, Janet Richey, (hereinafter the defendant) was operating her automobile in an easterly direction on Pattonwood Drive, also in Southington. Pattonwood Drive runs in a general east-west direction and is a minor road. There is a stop sign at the easterly end of Pattonwood Drive, where it intersects Flanders Road in a “T” intersection.
Upon reaching this intersection, the defendant stopped at the stop sign, and subsequently executed a right turn in order to proceed along Flanders Road in a southerly direction. During the course of this turn, a collision occurred between the plaintiff’s and the defendant’s vehicles. The left front fender area of the
The plaintiff testified that as he was proceeding along Flanders Road in the right or northbound lane, he first saw the defendant’s vehicle coming out of Pattonwood Drive when he was approximately 150 feet from the intersection. He stated that he was travelling at approximately twenty-five miles per hour. As the gap between the vehicles lessened, he realized that the turning vehicle was encroaching on his side of the highway, and he attempted to “squeeze” to the right to avoid being hit. At no time prior to the accident did he apply his brakes. 2 The collision flung him to the right, away from the steering wheel, and when he reassumed his driving position he found his car partially over the center line in the southbound lane of Flanders Road and angling toward the side of the southbound lane. As the plaintiff looked up, he saw the headlights of another vehicle proceeding southbound and toward him on Flanders Road: To avoid a head-on collision with this vehicle, the plaintiff testified that he swerved further left onto a lawn, where the front end of his car struck a group of three trees prior to coming to a stop.
The defendant testified as follows: Upon coming to a stop at the stop sign, she looked right, (the direction from which the plaintiff’s car was approaching) saw
An independent witness, the driver of the car proceeding south on Flanders Road which was north of the intersection at the time of the collision, viewed the entire incident. She testified that she saw the defendant’s vehicle “creeping very slowly” onto Flanders Road, and she estimated that upon impact the defendant’s car was a foot to a foot and one-half across the center line into the northbound lane. The witness was unable to estimate the speed of the plaintiff’s vehicle at the trial, and did not remember estimating its speed to the investigators who contacted her after the accident. On cross-examination, however, in response to defense counsel’s query concerning her statement, made to an investigator, that the plaintiff was travel-ling at forty-five miles per hour, the witness responded, “[i]f I said 45, then that’s what I felt it was then, but I just don’t recollect.”
The defendant’s son, a rear seat passenger in the defendant’s vehicle at the time of the accident,
4
saw the plaintiff’s car prior to impact and estimated its
The investigating police officer, who arrived at the scene shortly after the accident, testified that in his opinion the collision occurred in the northbound lane of Flanders Road. He reached this conclusion based on a patch of dirt, which the officer attributed to the collision. The patch was approximately five feet in length and in the area of the center line of Flanders Road. The majority of this dirt was in the northbound lane, although some of the dirt was in the southbound lane as well.
The final witness to testify at the trial was the defendant’s expert, a consulting automotive engineer. Defense counsel, after showing the witness photographs of the parties’ vehicles which revealed the damages to each car, proceeded to ask a hypothetical question. Instructing the witness to assume that the plaintiff’s vehicle was proceeding north on Flanders Road, and that the defendant’s vehicle was proceeding to make a right hand turn onto Flanders Road from Pattonwood Drive, and that the two cars came together somewhere on Flanders Road near the center line, which resulted in the damages to each vehicle as shown in the photographs, defense counsel asked the witness his opinion concerning the nature or character of the collision which occurred between the two automobiles. A series of objections by the plaintiff’s counsel concerning an improper foundation for the hypothetical question followed, to which defense counsel responded by asking the witness to assume the additional factors which
The expert witness testified that in his opinion the impact was
“a
side scraping action on the side of the [plaintiff’s vehicle] across the left front fender tip end of the [defendant’s vehicle].” He described the damage to the defendant’s vehicle as “superficial,” and characterized the side damage to the plaintiff’s vehicle (discounting the damages applicable to the frontal collision with the trees) as resulting from the kind of impact that would cause “the car to rock on its suspension just away from that side. It would not cause the wheels to lose tracks with the road. There’s not that much energy in the collision to cause it to go out of control.” Moreover, in the expert’s opinion, upon impact
On appeal, the plaintiff first assigns as error the trial court’s charge to the jury regarding proximate causation.
7
In presenting this argument, the defendant
Although the defendant offers considerable authority in an effort to attack the continuing validity of
Mahoney,
under the circumstances of this case we need not reach this issue. “In considering
Mahoney
v.
Beatman,
supra, it must be remembered that in that case the court was the trier of facts and that the discussion concerning the substantial factor test was predicated on the facts found.”
Busko
v.
DeFilippo,
The issue of proximate causation is ordinarily a question of fact for the trier.
Tetro
v.
Stratford,
The plaintiff’s exception to the charge is predicated on his contention that should the jury find that the defendant encroached over the center line, any activity on the part of the plaintiff, provided he remained in the northbound lane, would constitute merely a “condition” and not a cause of the accident. Such an argument oversimplifies our law of negligence and proximate causation and ignores the myriad of factual circumstances under which these legal principles may be established. In the present case the defendant pleaded, by way of a special defense, excessive speed, failure to apply brakes and failure to keep a proper lookout.
“The court correctly charged that the violation of the statute, although negligence per se, had to be proven to be a substantial factor in causing the plaintiff’s damages before [he] could recover.”
Busko
v.
DeFilippo,
supra. On the basis of the subordinate facts recited above, it is readily apparent that reasonable minds could differ on the issues of negligence and causation. Whether the defendant encroached upon the northbound lane of Flanders Road while making her turn, and the speed of the plaintiff’s vehicle, were both hotly contested issues of fact. The verdict was a general one. Unlike a case tried to the court, where a motion to articulate can be utilized to determine the reasons behind the court’s decision, we can only “speculate” as to how the jury concluded. See
Fox
v.
Mason,
supra,
The plaintiffs second assignment of error concerns the testimony of the defendant’s expert witness. The plaintiff does not challenge the qualifications of the expert, but bases his argument on the witness’ response to the hypothetical question offered by defense counsel. He avers that the hypothetical question contained unwarranted assumptions while omitting essential facts, and that therefore a proper foundation had not been established which would justify opinion testimony thereon. See
Stephanofsky
v.
Hill,
The determination of the admissibility of a hypothetical question rests within the sound discretion of the trial court.
Duley
v.
Plourde,
In the present case the record reveals that defense counsel proffered the hypothetical question in a manner consistent with the evidence previously presented. Moreover, in response to specific objections by the plaintiffs counsel, defense counsel added further assumptions which were in harmony with both the disputed and undisputed facts. See footnote 5, supra. Although the plaintiff underscores an omission concerning the plaintiffs attempt to “squeeze” to the right prior to the collision, and characterizes the statement that the plaintiff was traveling in a “generally northerly direction” as an “unwarranted assumption,” we are not prepared to construe these factors as rendering the question “so lacking in material, relevant and essential facts”;
State
v.
Gaynor,
Little need be said relative to the plaintiffs final claim that the trial court erred in refusing to set aside the verdict. “There is no demonstration on the record before us that the jury were swayed by prejudice, passion, mistake or corruption.”
Fox
v.
Mason,
supra, 489. It is the province of the jury to determine the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be accorded their testimony.
Kubeck
v.
Foremost Foods Co.,
As revealed by the conflicting evidence recited above, in the present case the issues of negligence and proximate causation were hotly contested questions of fact. The jury, in determining the facts and the reasonable inferences therefrom, could reasonably conclude as it did.
See State
v.
Wilson,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The defendants included the automobile operator, Janet Richey, and the automobile owner, Robert J. Richey.
Question: “And could you tell the jury and the Court why you never applied your brakes, if you know?
Answer: “Well, the reason I didn’t apply my brakes is because I had no conception of anybody coming on my side of the highway. I’m minding my own business going down the highway and this woman comes right—and hits me. I’m not expecting anything like that to happen, so I didn’t apply the brakes, no.”
Because of a knoll on Flanders Road to the south of the intersection, the defendant estimated that when she looked right or in a southerly direction up Flanders Road she could see approximately 500 feet.
At the time of the accident the defendant’s son was sixteen years old.
The plaintiff’s counsel first objected regarding the lack of information concerning the relative speed of each vehicle, and their respective weights. Defense counsel subsequently instructed the witness to assume that the defendant’s car was travelling at approximately five miles per hour, and that the plaintiff’s vehicle was travelling between twenty-five and forty-five miles per hour. The witness was then asked whether he knew the approximate weights of the types of cars (make, model and year) involved in the collision. He responded affirmatively, and was instructed to take these factors into consideration.
In response to subsequent objections by the plaintiffs counsel concerning the number of occupants in each vehicle, their respective weights and the weather conditions at the time of the accident, defense counsel instructed the witness to make further assumptions on these points.
Plaintiffs Counsel: “Well I object, your Honor, for all the reasons I’ve stated.”
The Court: “Do you want to voir dire the witness?”
Plaintiffs Counsel: “Not really, your Honor. I just don’t feel that at this particular point, in view of the testimony and the information that he’s been provided with, that he’s really in a position to give an answer that would have any validity in court here today.”
The Court: “Well, ultimately it’s the jury’s determination as to the weight they would give even an expert’s opinion. However, under the circumstances I’m going to allow him to answer.”
In pertinent part, the court charged the jury as follows:
“I’ve given you a statement as to the law concerning negligence. It’s the doing of something which a reasonably prudent person would not have done under like circumstances, insofar as I have referred to common law allegations of negligence, or it may be an omission to do that which a reasonably prudent person would have done under similar circumstances. In other words, the law requires that operators of motor vehicles use reasonable care under all of the circumstances. Reasonable care is the care of a reasonably prudent person. I emphasize the phrase ‘reasonably prudent person.’ Care must be proportionate to the danger. You inquire what is the conduct of the parties and what were the circumstances and what ought the defendant as a reasonably prudent person, or the plaintiff as a reasonably prudent person, to have done under the circumstances. The ultimate test of the existence of a duty to use reasonable care is to be found in the foreseeability that harm may result if that care is not exercised. By that it is not meant that one charged with negligence must be found actually to have foreseen the probability, or that the particular injury resulted was foreseeable, but the test you should apply is would the ordinary reasonably prudent man in the position of the defendant or the plaintiff, knowing what he knew or should have known, anticipate that harm of the same general nature as that actually suffered was likely to happen. And you would apply that standard to the conduct of both parties in this particular situation. Now, in addition to that common law concept of negligence, I have indicated to you there are so-called statutory negligence which consists of a violation of any statute which prescribed a rule of conduct to be followed by a person under the circumstances. And I’m going to go over each of the allegations of negligence with you in the complaint and tell you whether this is to be measured by the statute itself or whether it’s to be measured by a reasonably prudent man, the conduct of a reasonably prudent man under those circumstances. Because if a statute says you must do something or not do something, if you do it and you’re not supposed to do it, or you don’t do what you’re supposed to do, it is negligence, but that is only part of the equation of fault as I explained to you. It’s not enough just to find negligence, so-called negligence in the air. You must find that that negligence was a substantial factor in producing the injuries and losses claimed. Causation is part of it. A person could fail to stop at a stop sign, for instance, go through the stop sign and make a turn, be completely in
General Statutes § 14-230, entitled “Driving in right hand lane,” states: “Upon all highways, each vehicle shall be driven upon the right, except (1) when overtaking and passing another vehicle proceeding in the same direction, (2) when overtaking and passing pedestrians, parked vehicles, animals or obstructions on the right side of the highway, (3) when the right side of a highway is closed to traffic while under construction or repair, (4) on a highway divided into three or more marked lanes for traffic, or (5) on a highway designated and signposted for one-way traffic. Any vehicle proceeding at less than the normal speed of traffic shall be driven in
Our conclusion with respect to the propriety of the charge should not, however, be construed as an implicit approval of the charge as a whole. Ordinarily, issues not raised in the trial court will not be considered on appeal. E.g.,
DeLouise
v.
Clarke,
