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(LLOYD
ALFRED |
PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
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(NICHOLAS
BURGOS |
DEFENDANT |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 215 of 1978
October 31st, 1980.
Barrington-Jones, J.
Mr. W.
P. Elrington, for the Plaintiff.
Mr. Dean Lindo, for the Defendant.
Damages
- Personal injuries - Dispute in evidence of Plaintiff and
Defendant as to events leading up to Plaintiff's injuries
- Irreconcilable evidence - Court unable to arrive at any
definite conclusion how Plaintiff sustained injuries - Application
for damages, dismissed.
J
U D G M E N T
It is
common ground in this case that the Plaintiff entered the
Defendant's premises known as the Nueva Ola Club in the Orange
Walk District between 6:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. on the night of
the 10th September, 1978; and that he later emerged from those
premises and made his way to the Orange Walk Hospital where
he was admitted.
On the
11th September, the Plaintiff was transferred to Belize City
hospital with a history of gunshot injuries to the left eye
and injury to the right hand. X-rays revealed that he had
multiple pellets to the left side of the eyeball and frontal
region of scalp, as well as compound fractures and laceration
of the index and middle fingers of the right hand. It transpired
that the left eye was required to be removed, but the surgeon
managed to save the Plaintiff's index finger but the middle
finger was amputated. Three pellets were also removed from
his scalp. The Plaintiff recovered from his injuries having
lost his left eye and middle finger of the right hand and
now suffers from a partial loss of the functions of the left
index finger. The Plaintiff was in hospital from the 10th
September, until the 18th October, 1978, when he was discharged.
As to
what happened in the Nueva Ola Club to cause these frightful
injuries there is much dispute. The Plaintiff's version is
that after ordering a plate of rice and beans the Defendant
said in Spanish words which the Plaintiff understood to mean
"I am going to kill this nigger". The Plaintiff
said that there was another man at the bar when he went in
and that later when the Defendant took out his shotgun the
Defendant's wife came from the rear of the premises and urged
him not to use it. The Plaintiff said the Defendant then shot
him when he (the Plaintiff) was in front of the bar with his
hands in front of his face. He said that he fell to the ground
and was then hauled into the yard, and later he got up and
managed to make his way to the hospital where he was admitted.
The Defendant's
version is so very different that it might be thought to refer
to a totally different incident. Be that as it may, the Defendant
says that the Plaintiff came into the Club and started to
laugh and that after he had stopped laughing the Plaintiff
asked if he (the Defendant) realized that he was the one who
had broken into (the Defendant's) place several times; and
continued
.. "the tennis shoes that I am wearing
come from this place." He said that the Plaintiff then
said: "Not only will I rob you I am going to beat you
also." The Defendant said that there was no one else
in the Club at any time during the incident. The Defendant
said that he noticed that the Plaintiff had a pint bottle
in his left hand, and that he then grabbed another pint bottle
from the bar with his right hand; and that the Plaintiff then
rushed at the Defendant behind the bar. The Defendant said
that he looked around for something to defend himself with,
and reached for a shotgun under the counter and that as he
was doing this the Plaintiff also grabbed at the gun and that
there was a struggle and the gun went off and the Plaintiff
dropped behind the counter. The Defendant said that the Plaintiff
then got up and ran out of the side door of the Club and that
was the last he saw of him.
The circumstances
after the incident are curious for it seems that the Defendant
made no attempt to call the police; and it was suggested to
me that the Plaintiff had not been anxious to give any details
as to how he had sustained his injuries when he was interviewed
by the police later that night. It also transpired that the
police did not interview the Defendant until some five days
after the incident.
From the
evidence it became clear that there had earlier been criminal
proceedings concerning this incident and Counsel referred
to the preliminary inquiry held into this matter. However,
Mr. Elrington asked that I should not refer to the proceedings
in the preliminary inquiry, and I have not done so; but I
would remark that his request has only made it more difficult
for me to assess the veracity of the evidence both of the
Plaintiff and the Defendant for I have thus had no opportunity
to compare what was said in those proceedings with the evidence
which was given before me here.
It therefore
come to this, the evidence given by the Plaintiff and the
Defendant, without any other witnesses, is so diametrically
opposed and so totally irreconcilable in any material particular
to such an extent that I am quite unable to find on a balance
of probabilities the circumstances in which the Plaintiff
sustained his injuries in the Nueva Ola Club on the night
of the 10th September, 1978.
It therefore
follows that the Plaintiff's claim must fail and the Action
is accordingly dismissed.
I make
no order as to costs.
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