Escourse v. 100 Taylor Avenue, LLC ( 2014 )


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    TEANNA ESCOURSE ET AL. v. 100 TAYLOR
    AVENUE, LLC, ET AL.
    (AC 35054)
    DiPentima, C. J., and Gruendel and Beach, Js.
    Argued January 9—officially released June 10, 2014
    (Appeal from Superior Court, judicial district of
    Fairfield, S. Richards, J. [motion to strike]; Sommer, J.
    [motion for judgment, judgment].)
    Paul L. Brozdowski, for the appellants (plaintiffs).
    M. Jeffry Spahr, deputy corporation counsel, and
    Scott R. Ouellette, for the appellee (defendant city of
    Norwalk).
    Opinion
    BEACH, J. The plaintiffs, Teanna Escourse, through
    her parents and next friends, and her parents, Gillian
    Escourse and Christopher Fearon, individually, appeal
    from the judgment of the trial court rendered in favor
    of the defendant city of Norwalk (city).1 The plaintiffs
    claim that the court improperly granted the city’s
    motion to strike their public nuisance claim. We affirm
    the judgment of the trial court.
    The following undisputed facts and procedural his-
    tory are relevant to our resolution of the plaintiffs’
    claims. The plaintiffs commenced the present action
    on June 22, 2011. This action arises from an incident
    that allegedly took place at approximately 12:30 a.m.
    on January 1, 2011, when Teanna Escourse, then sixteen
    years old, was struck by a hit and run driver while she
    was walking along the shoulder of Taylor Avenue in
    the southbound lane of travel in front of 100 Taylor
    Avenue in Norwalk.
    The operative complaint is the plaintiffs’ fourth
    amended complaint. It alleged that on January 1, 2011,
    Teanna Escourse ‘‘was forced to enter the southbound
    lane of traffic because the sidewalk area and the shoul-
    der of the roadway were obstructed with snow due to
    a severe storm that ended more than four days before
    on December 27, 2010, and the actions and omission
    of the [city] . . . .’’ The fourth count, the subject of
    this appeal, asserted a claim of public nuisance against
    the city.2
    As against the city, the plaintiffs alleged the following:
    ‘‘The incident and resulting injuries alleged herein were
    due to the intentional acts of the [city] . . . its agents,
    servants and employees, in creating a public nuisance
    pursuant to [General Statutes §] 52-557n (a) (1), in one
    or more of the following ways:
    (a) In that the [city] plowed the snow that had accu-
    mulated on Taylor Avenue onto the sidewalk abutting
    100 Taylor Avenue, thereby rendering the sidewalk
    impassible to pedestrians;
    (b) In that the [city] removed and/or plowed the snow
    that had accumulated on Taylor Avenue in such a man-
    ner as to obstruct, impede and endanger public use of
    the sidewalk abutting 100 Taylor Avenue;
    (c) In that the [city] removed and/or plowed the snow
    that had accumulated on Taylor Avenue in such a man-
    ner as to render the sidewalk abutting 100 Taylor Ave-
    nue impassible to pedestrians;
    (d) In that the [city] failed to properly and safely
    remove and/or plow the snow that had accumulated on
    Taylor Avenue without obstructing, impeding and/or
    endangering public use of the sidewalk abutting 100
    Taylor Avenue; and
    (e) In that the [city] failed to properly and safely
    remove and/or plow the snow that had accumulated on
    Taylor Avenue without rendering the sidewalk abutting
    100 Taylor Avenue impassible to pedestrians.’’ The com-
    plaint also alleged causation, damages, and notice pur-
    suant to General Statues § 7-465.3
    The city moved to strike the plaintiffs’ public nui-
    sance claim,4 arguing that the plaintiffs’ exclusive rem-
    edy as to the city was an action pursuant to General
    Statutes § 13a-149. By way of an order and memoran-
    dum of decision dated May 31, 2012, the court, S. Rich-
    ards, J., relying on Himmelstein v. Windsor, 
    304 Conn. 298
    , 
    39 A.2d 1065
    (2012), granted the city’s motion to
    strike and subsequently rendered judgment in favor of
    the city on the stricken claim.5 This appeal followed.
    The plaintiffs contend that the court improperly con-
    cluded that their exclusive remedy against the city was
    an action pursuant to § 13a-149 and improperly granted
    the city’s motion to strike their nuisance claim. The
    plaintiffs argue that their ‘‘nuisance claim is not about
    the condition of the highway due to the negligence or
    neglect by the city, but rather, it alleges an intentional
    affirmative act by the city which contributed to the
    condition of the sidewalk abutting 100 Taylor Avenue
    and created a public nuisance.’’ The city maintains that
    the plaintiffs’ exclusive remedy for personal injury
    related to a sidewalk blocked by snow is a defective
    highway claim under § 13a-149. The city further con-
    tends that § 52-557n (a) (1) (C) bars the plaintiffs’ nui-
    sance claim because that section expressly provides
    that § 13a-149 is the plaintiffs’ exclusive remedy for
    injuries resulting from a defective road or bridge, and
    Teanna Escourse’s injuries are alleged to have been
    caused by a defective road and/or sidewalk. The city’s
    argument is that the plaintiffs’ claim functionally alleges
    a defective sidewalk, and, therefore, no action may be
    maintained except pursuant to § 13a-149, subject to its
    sole proximate cause limitation, regardless of whether
    the defect was a public nuisance created by an affirma-
    tive act of the city.
    ‘‘The purpose of a motion to strike is to contest . . .
    the legal sufficiency of the allegations of any complaint
    . . . to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Fort Trumbull Con-
    servancy, LLC v. Alves, 
    262 Conn. 480
    , 498, 
    815 A.2d 1188
    (2003). ‘‘In reviewing the sufficiency of the allega-
    tions in a complaint, courts are to assume the truth of
    the facts pleaded therein, and to determine whether
    those facts establish a valid cause of action. . . . [I]f
    facts provable in the complaint would support a cause
    of action, the motion to strike must be denied. . . .
    Thus, we assume the truth of both the specific factual
    allegations and any facts fairly provable thereunder.
    . . . Moreover, [w]hether a highway is defective may
    involve issues of fact, but whether the facts alleged
    would, if true, amount to a highway defect according
    to the statute is a question of law [which may be deter-
    mined on a motion to strike]. . . . Because a motion
    to strike challenges the legal sufficiency of a pleading
    . . . and, consequently, requires no factual findings by
    the trial court, our review of the court’s ruling [on a
    motion to strike] is plenary.’’6 (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) Kumah v. Brown, 
    307 Conn. 620
    , 626, 
    58 A.3d 247
    (2013).
    In reviewing the plaintiffs’ claims, we consider princi-
    ples of state and municipal immunity and liability as
    they relate to injuries caused on or near a roadway. ‘‘It
    is well established law that the state is immune from suit
    unless it consents to be sued by appropriate legislation
    waiving sovereign immunity in certain prescribed cases
    . . . . The state legislature . . . possesses the author-
    ity to abrogate any governmental immunity by statute
    that the common law gives to the state and municipali-
    ties. . . . Indeed, this is what the legislature did in the
    area of highway defects when it enacted the state and
    municipal highway liability statutes. The state, which
    ordinarily would not be liable, permitted itself, as a
    matter of grace, to be sued under the express conditions
    of [§ 13a-144]. Therefore, because the state has permit-
    ted itself to be sued in certain circumstances, [our
    Supreme Court] has recognized the well established
    principle that statutes in derogation of sovereign immu-
    nity should be strictly construed. . . . Accordingly, the
    only avenue through which a plaintiff, injured by means
    of a highway defect on a state road, may seek recovery
    from the state is through an action brought pursuant to
    § 13a-144.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks
    omitted.) Himmelstein v. 
    Windsor, supra
    , 
    304 Conn. 307
    .
    ‘‘Furthermore, our legislature has established general
    principles of municipal liability and immunity, provid-
    ing that political subdivisions of the state may be sued
    for creating or participating in the creation of a nui-
    sance. General Statutes § 52-557n (a) (1) (C).7 The
    municipal liability statute also specifically provides,
    however, that ‘no cause of action [in nuisance] shall
    be maintained [against a municipality] for damages
    resulting from injury to any person or property by
    means of a defective road or bridge except pursuant
    to section 13a-149.’ . . . General Statutes § 52-557n
    (a) (1) (C). Therefore, although ‘[l]iability in nuisance
    can be imposed on a municipality . . . if the condition
    constituting the nuisance was created by the positive
    act of the municipality’; Wright v. Brown, 
    167 Conn. 464
    , 470, 
    356 A.2d 176
    (1975); if the injury complained
    of was caused by a highway defect on a town road, the
    plaintiff’s only recourse against the town is to pursue a
    claim under § 13a-149.’’ (Emphasis in original; footnote
    added.) Himmelstein v. 
    Windsor, supra
    , 
    304 Conn. 308
    ;
    see also Kumah v. 
    Brown, supra
    , 
    307 Conn. 627
    . Addi-
    tionally, because ‘‘[t]he highway defect statute, § 13a-
    149, is a legislative exception to the immunity that
    municipalities enjoyed at common law . . . as such,
    [it] must be strictly construed.’’ Read v. Plymouth, 
    110 Conn. App. 657
    , 663, 
    955 A.2d 1255
    , cert. denied, 
    289 Conn. 955
    , 
    961 A.2d 421
    (2008).
    Section 13a-149 provides in relevant part: ‘‘Any per-
    son injured in person or property by means of a defec-
    tive road or bridge may recover damages from the party
    bound to keep it in repair. . . .’’8 ‘‘[A] highway defect
    is [a]ny object in, upon, or near the traveled path, which
    would necessarily obstruct or hinder one in the use of
    the road for the purpose of traveling thereon, or which,
    from its nature and position, would be likely to produce
    that result.’’ 9 (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Him-
    melstein v. 
    Windsor, supra
    , 
    304 Conn. 309
    . Further-
    more, ‘‘a highway is defective within the meaning of
    § 13a-149 when it is not reasonably safe for public travel,
    and the term public travel refers to the normal or rea-
    sonably anticipated uses that the public makes of a
    highway in the ordinary course of travel.’’ (Internal quo-
    tation marks omitted.) Cuozzo v. Orange, 147 Conn.
    App. 148, 157, 
    82 A.3d 647
    (2013), cert. granted in part
    on other grounds, 
    311 Conn. 914
    , 
    84 A.3d 881
    (2014).
    ‘‘The duty of the municipality to use reasonable care
    for the reasonably prudent traveler . . . extends to
    pedestrian travel as well as to vehicular traffic . . . .’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Bellman v. West
    Hartford, 
    96 Conn. App. 387
    , 394, 
    900 A.2d 82
    (2006);
    see also Himmelstein v. Windsor, 
    116 Conn. App. 28
    ,
    37, 
    974 A.2d 820
    (2009) (‘‘to fall within the ambit of
    §13a-149, a person must simply be on the highway for a
    legitimate purpose connected with travel and the defect
    need not be on the actual traveled portion of the high-
    way’’), aff’d, 
    304 Conn. 298
    , 
    39 A.3d 1065
    (2012). Our
    Supreme Court has construed the word road or high-
    way, as used in § 13a-149, to include the shoulders of
    the roadway as well as sidewalks. Bellman v. West
    
    Hartford, supra
    , 395 (‘‘[t]he term sidewalk is meant to
    apply to those areas that the public uses for travel’’
    [internal quotation marks omitted]); Himmelstein v.
    
    Windsor, supra
    , 
    304 Conn. 309
    (term highway also
    extends to ‘‘[t]he shoulders of a highway, [which] while
    not designed for ordinary . . . traffic, are intended for
    use when need arises’’ [internal quotation marks
    omitted]).
    Sidewalks can be considered defective for the pur-
    poses of § 13a-149 by reason of snow and ice. See, e.g.,
    Mausch v. Hartford, 
    184 Conn. 467
    , 469–70, 
    440 A.2d 157
    (1981); Monteiro v. East Hartford, Superior Court,
    judicial district of Hartford, Docket No. CV-94-0534950-
    S (January 12, 1995) (
    13 Conn. L. Rptr. 285
    , 287) (accu-
    mulation of snow and ice on sidewalk amounted to
    highway defect).
    ‘‘[T]he manner in which a defect is created in and of
    itself has no bearing on . . . liability under the statute.
    Rather, it is the existence of the defect and the . . .
    actual or constructive knowledge of and failure to rem-
    edy that defect that are of primary importance in making
    out a prima facie case of . . . liability . . . . Indeed,
    this court previously has concluded on several occa-
    sions that a municipality may be liable under the appli-
    cable highway defect statute despite the fact that the
    defect was created by the negligence of a third party
    . . . . Because there exists a statutory duty to maintain
    highways such that they are safe for ordinary use, liabil-
    ity under the highway defect statutes is premised on
    the existence of and the failure to remedy a defect,
    rather than on negligence in creating or allowing a nui-
    sance or other obstruction to present a danger to travel-
    ers.’’ (Citations omitted; emphasis omitted; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Himmelstein v. 
    Windsor, supra
    , 
    304 Conn. 314
    –15.
    The plaintiffs argue that the court erred in concluding
    that their claim against the city was a public highway
    defect claim which must be brought, if at all, as an
    action under § 13a-149, because (1) their claim is not
    about the ‘‘condition of the highway due to the negli-
    gence or neglect of the [city], but, rather the intentional
    affirmative acts of the [city] which contribute[d] to the
    condition of the sidewalk abutting 100 Taylor Avenue
    . . . and created a public nuisance’’ and (2) § 95-10 of
    the Norwalk City Code operates such that the city is
    not the party bound to keep the roadway in repair;
    therefore, their cause of action is in nuisance, not under
    § 13a-149.10 We disagree.
    The plaintiffs’ first contention is that a public nui-
    sance claim may be brought independently of § 13a-
    149. Our resolution of this claim is governed by the
    language of § 52-557n (a) (1). Section 52-557n (a) (1)
    (C) provides that a municipality does not enjoy immu-
    nity from a claim of nuisance, but immediately modifies
    the provision by stating that ‘‘no cause of action shall
    be maintained for damages [arising from a defective
    road] except pursuant to section 13a-149.’’ (Emphasis
    added.) See also Himmelstein v. 
    Windsor, supra
    , 
    304 Conn. 308
    . Therefore, under § 52-557n (a) (1), we first
    must determine whether the plaintiffs’ claim is a claim
    for damages against a municipality ‘‘resulting from
    injury to any person or property by means of a defective
    road . . . .’’ General Statutes § 52-557n (a) (1) (C). If
    the answer is yes, then the party seeking relief is bound
    to pursue such relief pursuant to § 13a-149.
    It is clear from the facts alleged in count four of the
    plaintiffs’ fourth amended complaint that the plaintiffs’
    claim is one for damages against a municipality
    resulting from an injury to a person by means of a
    defective road. First, count four is a claim for damages
    against a municipality—that is, the city. Second, count
    four is a claim for damages resulting from bodily injuries
    allegedly sustained by Teanna Escourse. Third, count
    four is a claim for damages resulting from bodily injuries
    allegedly sustained by Teanna Escourse by means of a
    defective road. There is no question that the alleged
    bodily injuries occurred on a municipal road—that is,
    the sidewalk, shoulder, or roadway of Taylor Avenue.
    Similarly, there is no question that the allegation is that
    the road was defective—our courts have held that the
    presence of snow and ice is a defect. See Mausch v.
    
    Hartford, supra
    , 
    184 Conn. 469
    –70. Furthermore, in
    count four, the plaintiffs alleged that Teanna Escourse’s
    injuries were due to the city’s conduct surrounding
    snow removal on the municipal road, which ‘‘interfered
    with the right of the public including the plaintiff to use
    the sidewalk abutting 100 Taylor Avenue.’’ We therefore
    conclude that § 52-557n (a) (1) requires the plaintiffs
    to seek relief, if at all, pursuant § 13a-149 for their claim
    against the city in count four of their fourth amended
    complaint.
    The plaintiffs’ second contention is that the city was
    not the party bound to maintain the sidewalk, and, thus,
    an action arising from a defect on that sidewalk does
    not fall within the ambit of § 13a-149. The argument is
    that General Statutes § 7-163a allows municipalities to
    shift liability arising from the failure to remove ice and
    snow from sidewalks to abutting landowners, and the
    city has done so in this case by enacting § 95-10 of the
    Norwalk City Code.11 If liability and the responsibility
    to remove ice and snow had been shifted, the argument
    goes, then the city was not the party charged with main-
    tenance. It thus would not be an entity to which § 13a-
    149 by its terms applies; see General Statutes § 13a-149
    (‘‘[a] person . . . may recover damages from the party
    bound to keep [the defective road] in repair’’); and an
    action in public nuisance could then be brought inde-
    pendently of § 13a-149.
    The argument encounters two insurmountable obsta-
    cles. First, as noted previously, § 52-557n (a) categori-
    cally establishes that no claim alleging personal or
    property damage by means of a defective sidewalk may
    be brought against a municipality except pursuant to
    § 13a-149. By itself, the statutory mandate is dispositive.
    Second, liability for nuisance created by a municipal-
    ity does not appear to have been shifted to the abutting
    landowner in any event. Section 7-163a, which allows
    municipalities to shift liability and responsibility for
    removing snow and ice to abutting landowners, specifi-
    cally provides that regardless of generally shifting liabil-
    ity, the ‘‘municipality shall be liable for its affirmative
    acts with respect to such sidewalk.’’ The city, then, was
    not authorized to shift liability as to nuisance.12
    We therefore conclude that the trial court properly
    determined, as a matter of law, that the specific allega-
    tions set forth in count four of the plaintiffs’ fourth
    amended complaint sounding in nuisance fall within
    the province of § 13a-149. Because § 13a-149 was the
    exclusive remedy available to the plaintiffs, count four
    was legally insufficient, and the court correctly granted
    the city’s motion to strike.
    The judgment is affirmed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    100 Taylor Avenue, LLC, Christopher Condors, and Gennaro Cappuccia
    were also defendants in this action, but are not involved in this appeal.
    2
    The first, second, and third counts asserted claims of negligence against
    private property owners. The first count asserted a cause of action against
    the defendant 100 Taylor Avenue, LLC, the owner of the property abutting
    the southbound lane of traffic on Taylor Avenue, for, inter alia, failing ‘‘to
    make the public sidewalk abutting the premises safe and convenient for
    pedestrians by removing the snow that had accumulated on the sidewalk
    as required by, and in violation of, § 95-10 of the Norwalk City Code . . . .’’
    The second count asserted a cause of action in negligence against the
    defendant Gennaro Cappuccia, the owner of an apartment building with a
    parking lot located directly across the street from 100 Taylor Avenue, for,
    inter alia, ‘‘plow[ing] the snow that had accumulated on his property across
    the street into the southbound lane of traffic on Taylor Avenue, the south-
    bound shoulder of the roadway, and onto the sidewalk abutting 100 Taylor
    Avenue, thereby rendering the sidewalk impassible to pedestrians . . . .’’
    The third count asserted a cause of action in negligence against the
    defendant Christopher Condors, the owner of a commercial building located
    at 97 Taylor Avenue with ‘‘a parking lot located across the street from 98
    Taylor Avenue, and diagonally across the street from 100 Taylor Avenue’’
    for, inter alia, ‘‘plow[ing] the snow that had accumulated on his property
    across the street into the southbound lane of traffic on Taylor Avenue, the
    southbound shoulder of the roadway, and onto the sidewalk abutting 100
    Taylor Avenue, thereby rendering the sidewalk impassible to pedestrians’’
    and removing ‘‘the snow that had accumulated on his property in such a
    manner as to obstruct, impede, and endanger the public use of the sidewalk
    abutting 100 Taylor Avenue . . . .’’
    The fifth count, brought by Teanna Escourse’s parents, asserted a claim
    against all of the defendants for medical expenses.
    3
    The plaintiffs attached a copy of a ‘‘Notice of Claim pursuant to [General
    Statutes] §§ 7-465 and 13a-149’’ to their second amended complaint, filed
    August 15, 2011.
    4
    We note that the city also moved to strike the parents’ derivative claim
    for medical expenses.
    5
    The court also rendered judgment in favor of the city on the parents’
    derivative claim.
    6
    ‘‘A motion to strike . . . admits all facts well pleaded; it does not admit
    legal conclusions or the truth or accuracy of opinions stated in the plead-
    ings.’’ (Emphasis omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Mora v. Aetna
    Life & Casualty Ins. Co., 
    13 Conn. App. 208
    , 211, 
    535 A.2d 390
    (1988). ‘‘In
    ruling on a motion to strike, the court is limited to the facts alleged in the
    complaint.’’ Gordon v. Bridgeport Housing Authority, 
    208 Conn. 161
    , 170,
    
    544 A.2d 1185
    (1988); see also Alarm Applications Co. v. Simsbury Volunteer
    Fire Co., 
    179 Conn. 541
    , 549–50, 
    427 A.2d 822
    (1980) (motion to strike ‘‘is
    to be tested by the allegations of the pleading demurred to, which cannot
    be enlarged by the assumption of any fact not therein alleged’’ [internal
    quotation marks omitted]).
    7
    General Statutes § 52-557n (a) (1) provides in relevant part: ‘‘Except as
    otherwise provided by law, a political subdivision of the state shall be liable
    for damages to person or property caused by . . . (C) acts of the political
    subdivision which constitute the creation or participation in the creation
    of a nuisance; provided, no cause of action shall be maintained for damages
    resulting from injury to any person or property by means of a defective
    road or bridge except pursuant to section 13a-149.’’
    8
    General Statutes § 13a-149 provides: ‘‘Any person injured in person or
    property by means of a defective road or bridge may recover damages from
    the party bound to keep it in repair. No action for any such injury sustained
    on or after October 1, 1982, shall be brought except within two years from
    the date of such injury. No action for any such injury shall be maintained
    against any town, city, corporation or borough, unless written notice of
    such injury and a general description of the same, and of the cause thereof
    and of the time and place of its occurrence, shall, within ninety days there-
    after be given to a selectman or the clerk of such town, or to the clerk of
    such city or borough, or to the secretary or treasurer of such corporation.
    If the injury has been caused by a structure legally placed on such road by
    a railroad company, it, and not the party bound to keep the road in repair,
    shall be liable therefor. No notice given under the provisions of this section
    shall be held invalid or insufficient by reason of an inaccuracy in describing
    the injury or in stating the time, place or cause of its occurrence, if it appears
    that there was no intention to mislead or that such town, city, corporation
    or borough was not in fact misled thereby.’’
    To recover under § 13a-149, a plaintiff ‘‘must prove, by a fair preponder-
    ance of the evidence, (1) that the highway was defective as claimed; (2)
    that the defendant actually knew of the particular defect or that, in the
    exercise of its supervision of highways in the city, it should have known of
    that defect; (3) that the defendant, having actual or constructive knowledge
    of this defect, failed to remedy it having had a reasonable time, under all
    the circumstances, to do so; and (4) that the defect must have been the
    sole proximate cause of the injuries and damages claimed, which means that
    the plaintiff must prove freedom from contributory negligence.’’ (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Nicefaro v. New Haven, 
    116 Conn. App. 610
    , 613,
    
    976 A.2d 75
    , cert. denied, 
    293 Conn. 937
    , 
    981 A.2d 1079
    (2009).
    9
    A highway defect is distinguishable from ‘‘those objects which have no
    necessary [connection] with the road bed, or the public travel thereon, and
    which may expose a person to danger, not as a traveler but independent
    of the highway . . . . [I]f there is a defective condition that is not in the
    roadway, it must be so direct a menace to travel over the way and so
    susceptible to protection and remedial measures which could be reasonably
    applied within the way that the failure to employ such measures would be
    regarded as a lack of reasonable repair.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation
    marks omitted.) Sanzonne v. Board of Police Commissioners, 
    219 Conn. 179
    , 202, 
    592 A.2d 912
    (1991).
    10
    ‘‘The statutory provisions of § 13a-149 have two components that must
    be met in order to trigger its application: (1) the plaintiff must have sustained
    an injury by means of a defective road or bridge and (2) the party whom
    the plaintiff is suing must be the party bound to keep [the location where
    the injury was sustained] in repair.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Novicki v. New Haven, 
    47 Conn. App. 734
    , 739–40, 
    709 A.2d 2
    (1998). ‘‘Owner-
    ship of the property does not establish liability under § 13a-149 . . . .
    Rather, it is the governmental entity charged with the duty . . . to keep
    [the property] in repair . . . or the party bound to keep [the property] in
    repair . . . on which the [statute] impose[s] liability under certain circum-
    stances.’’ (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 742. The
    plaintiffs stress the second component, arguing that in this case, the
    city was not the party bound to keep the location where the injury occurred
    in repair because § 95-10 of the Norwalk City Code shifted the duty, and
    liability, of keeping the sidewalk clear of snow and ice to the abutting
    property owner.
    11
    Section 95-10 of the Norwalk City Code provides: ‘‘A. The provisions
    of Section 7-163a of the Connecticut General Statutes are hereby adopted
    and are set forth in Subsections B, C, D and E hereof.
    ‘‘B. Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 13a-149 of the Connecticut
    General Statutes or any other general or special act, the City shall not be
    liable to any person for injury to person or property due to the presence
    of ice or snow on a public sidewalk unless the City is the owner or person
    in possession and control of land abutting such sidewalk, other than land
    used as a highway or street, provided that the City shall be liable for its
    affirmative acts with respect to any such sidewalk under its possession
    and control.
    ‘‘C. The owner or person in possession and control of land abutting a
    public sidewalk shall have the same duty of care with respect to the presence
    of ice or snow on such sidewalk toward the portion of the sidewalk abutting
    his property as the City had prior to the effective date of this chapter and
    shall be liable to persons injured in person or property where a breach of
    said duty is the proximate cause of said injury.
    ‘‘D. No action to recover damages for injury to person or property caused
    by the presence of ice or snow on a public sidewalk against a person who
    owns or is in possession and control of land abutting a public sidewalk
    shall be brought but within two years from the date when the injury is
    first sustained.
    ‘‘E. Whenever the public sidewalk shall be wholly or partially covered by
    snow or ice, it shall be the duty of the owner or person in possession and
    control of land abutting a public sidewalk to cause such sidewalk to be
    made safe and convenient by removing the snow therefrom within the first
    six hours of daylight immediately following the accumulation of such snow
    thereon or, in the case of ice, by covering the same with sand or other suitable
    material within the first six hours of daylight following the accumulation of
    such ice, and then renewing such treatment as often as may be necessary
    to keep such sidewalk safe and convenient. In case of the failure or neglect
    of the owner or person in possession and control of land abutting the public
    sidewalk to comply with this subsection, the Director may cause the same
    to be done, and the expense thereof shall be collectible from the person so
    failing or neglecting, in an action of debt brought in the name of the City
    under this section. Any person who fails or neglects to comply with this
    subsection shall also be liable for a penalty or fine in an amount established
    in accordance with § 90-4, Approval of rates and fees.’’
    12
    Although it might be argued that an obligation not to cause a defect by
    affirmative act is different from the ordinary obligation to keep a sidewalk
    reasonably free from ice and snow, the effect is the same with respect to
    the application of § 13a-149: either way, a defect has been created.