Judges: Wheeler, Maltbie, Haines, Hinman, Banks
Filed Date: 6/28/1927
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The appeal is from the sustaining of the demurrer for the reason that the complaint alleges that no written notice of the injury, and the nature and cause thereof, and the time and place of its occurrence, was given by the plaintiff to the defendant until May 2d 1926, and the injury plaintiff is alleged to have suffered occurred on January 19th, 1926. General Statutes, § 1414, prescribes that before an action can be brought against a city for injuries suffered from a defective highway, written notice of the injury shall be given within sixty days thereafter. The giving of this notice is expressly made a condition precedent to the right of action given by the statute. Forbes v.Suffield,
The same interpretation of the statute must have followed had the notice not been given within sixty days after he had become aware of the injury. Paragraph six of the complaint alleges that the plaintiff on January 19th stumbled over the projection of a flagstone upon the sidewalk and fell causing her to suffer an internal injury so that it resulted in her giving birth prematurely to a child who died as a result of the miscarriage. The internal injury is alleged to have been "a condition which could not at that time be determined." Counsel for the plaintiff assumes that the date of the miscarriage and the attendant shock is the beginning of the running of the sixty-day notice. The complaint does not so allege. When the internal injury could have been determined is not alleged. It may have been determined, or been capable of being determined, at any time after the day of the fall, January 20th; if so, the sixty-day period would *Page 396 have begun from that date, and the plaintiff, by not having given the notice until May 2d 1926, as the complaint alleged, would not have given the statutory notice within the prescribed period. If the complaint had alleged that the internal injury suffered in consequence of her fall was not known to the plaintiff, and could not have been known to her until the time of the miscarriage, the question which plaintiff's counsel assumes would be before us.
The complaint does not allege that the plaintiff gave the required notice within sixty days from the time she knew or ought to have known of the internal injury. Whether or not the sixty-day period begins to run from the date of the injury, regardless of whether it were known, or ought to have been known to the plaintiff, we do not consider or determine, since the record does not involve it.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.