|
(ORLANDO
PELAYO
( |
PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN |
(AND
( |
|
|
(CHARLES
ESCOBAR |
DEFENDANT |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 11 of 1982
28th September, 1983
Rajasingham, J.
Mr. Hubert
E. Elrington for the Plaintiff.
Mr. Glenn Godfrey for the Defendant.
Damages
- Sufficiency of Evidence - Balance of Probabilities - Insufficiency
of evidence to prove case.
J
U D G M E N T
The Plaintiff's
claim is for damages in a sum of $950 being the cost of replacement
of a tinted glass pane in his door which he says was broken
by the Defendant by firing at it with a pellet gun. The pane
in question appears from photographs to have a hole drilled
through it which implies that, as the Plaintiff stated, it
must have been hit with a high velocity projectile because
otherwise the glass would have shattered on impact. The Defendant
denies that he caused the damage.
The Plaintiff
stated that he saw the Defendant and his son shooting crabs
with a handgun which fired pellets, and which the Plaintiff
purported to identify as a Crosman vacuum gun. He says he
saw the Defendant point it in the direction of his house and
fired it and heard his ground floor door pane hit. Upon examination
it was found to have a hole in it. He complained to the Police
and they viewed it and recommended to the Defendant that he
settle the matter. The Defendant appears to have considered
an out of Court settlement, but decided against it. His evidence
is that although he and his son were shooting crabs, his son
in the front yard and he in the back yard, the gun was never
fired in the general direction of the Plaintiff's house. The
Defendant called Corporal Watler who investigated the matter
and his evidence is that when the Plaintiff complained, he
did not say he saw the Defendant shoot towards his house,
but did say he thought it could have been the Defendant who
did it. This is a material contradiction of the evidence of
the Plaintiff, because in this Court the Plaintiff claims
he actually saw the Defendant fire the gun at his door. The
Defendant admits he owns a Daisy handgun which gas-fires pellets.
The Plaintiff himself admits that a Daisy pellet gun could
not cause this damage in this fashion. However, for some reason
the Defendant at first said he had not decided whether he
should produce the gun and then, after a three-month adjournment,
produced a Daisy gun. I cannot help wondering whether the
gun is not a substitute, although Corporal Watler said it
was the same gun produced in the Magistrates Court. Unfortunately,
this identification was not questioned even though Watler
did not purport to identify it by make, let alone number.
The gun produced in Court is a Daisy gas-fired pellet gun
and, even according to the Plaintiff, "such a gun cannot
damage a quarter inch pane of glass".
I am afraid
that since the Plaintiff, although he said in evidence that
the gun was a Crosman, did not challenge the identification
of "C.E. 2" by Corporal Watler that that was the
Defendant's gun which was produced by the police in the Magistrates
Court as being the gun involved in the offence, he cannot
now be heard to say that this gun could have caused the damage;
he himself said it could not. The Crosman gun as portrayed
in "C.E. 1" and the gun "C.E. 2" are so
similar that the Plaintiff could very easily be mistaken about
the make since he saw it in the hand of the Defendant at 40
feet at about 5.15 or 5.45 in the evening.
I am distinctly
unhappy with the Defendant's evidence and am inclined to believe
it to be untrue in several places. The Defendant said he himself
shot the gun in the backyard and permitted his eight year
old son to shoot it in the front yard adjoining a road on
which, according to his own Counsel, children often played.
I do not believe him but that is insufficient to establish
the Plaintiff's case even on a balance of probabilities. The
Plaintiff has to establish that it was this Defendant and
not his son that fired the particular shot that damaged his
door pane because his Action is against the Defendant personally.
Even if I disbelieve the Defendant when he says he did not
shoot in the front yard, it would not suffice; I would have
to have evidence on which I can go further and hold that it
was this Defendant who fired the particular shot. In view
of the evidence of Corporal Watler, I am afraid I do not feel
I can so hold. There is therefore insufficient evidence for
me to hold that the Plaintiff has proved his case, although
it is possible that that is how the damage to his door was
caused. On a balance of probabilities, the Plaintiff must
fail on the evidence before me.
I dismiss
the Plaintiff's Action. I make no order as to costs.
----------OO----------
|