DocketNumber: No. LPL-CV-97-0345566S
Citation Numbers: 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 8609
Judges: LAGER, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 7/27/1998
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
In counts seven and eight, the plaintiffs seek to recover in nuisance for the minor's personal injuries resulting from his exposure to lead (count seven) and the parents' expenses related to the minor's personal injuries (count eight). The defendants have moved to strike these counts.1
The complaint alleges the following: The defendants Robert and Linda Gottlieb owned, operated, controlled and maintained a dwelling and leasehold interests therein located at 345 Grovers Avenue in Bridgeport, Connecticut (¶ 1). The plaintiffs Mary and Steven MacLeod began residing in the premises as tenants in July 1993. The minor plaintiff John MacLeod has resided there since his birth on October 24, 1995 (¶ 3). During the time that the minor plaintiff lived at 345 Grovers Avenue, the interior and exterior surfaces were covered with lead-based paint, some or all of which was cracked, chipped, blistered, flaking, loose or peeling and was being released into the environment (¶ 5). The minor child was exposed to, ingested, inhaled and absorbed lead CT Page 8610 and lead-based paint, the source of which was lead-based paint found in the environment of the dwelling, and, as a result, he suffered personal injuries (¶¶ 6-9). The defendants were responsible for renting, managing, operating, maintaining, repairing and controlling the premises (¶ 4). The defendants controlled the painting and upkeep of the interior and exterior surfaces of the premises (¶ 10).
The plaintiffs claim they have properly pled a cause of action in absolute nuisance because the complaint alleges the four elements of nuisance2 and that the defendants controlled the painting and upkeep of the interior and exterior surfaces of the premises. The court disagrees that the allegations of the complaint support a claim for absolute nuisance. Moreover, on policy grounds, the court is reluctant to recognize a cause of action in absolute nuisance under the facts as alleged for fear of opening a "back door" to holding landlords strictly liable for lead-based paint hazards in contravention of the holding in Gorev. People's Savings Bank,
To be actionable, absolute nuisance requires that the defendants act intentionally "to bring about the conditions which are in fact found to be a nuisance." Beckwith v. Stratford,
Having concluded that the seventh and eighth counts are premised on negligent conduct, the next question is whether these counts sufficiently allege a negligent nuisance. "The same CT Page 8611 considerations affecting negligence apply to a nuisance arising out of negligence." Noebel v. Housing Authority,
Finally, the defendants have maintained that a tenant cannot bring a claim of nuisance against his landlord. Bentley v.Dynarski,
"A private nuisance is an invasion, usual nontrespassory, of CT Page 8612 the private use and enjoyment of land. Typical examples would be smoke, fumes, dust, vibration or noise produced by a defendant on his own land and impairing the use and enjoyment of neighboring land. The recognition of nuisance as a tort goes back at least to the thirteenth century and the old assize of nuisance that protected the interest in the quiet enjoyment and use of land." F. Harper, F. James, O. Grey, I The Law of Torts, § 1.23, p. 1:89 (3d ed. 1996). Historically, the tort of nuisance functioned to prevent an owner or occupier of land from engaging in activities within the boundaries of his property that are harmful to the property interests of his neighbors. Thus, the typical case of private nuisance involves interference with the plaintiff's interest in his land or his enjoyment of his land as a result of the defendant's unlawful or unreasonable use of his land. See, e.g., Filisko v. Bridgeport Hydraulic Co.,
The historical roots of common law nuisance as a tort against land are often forgotten, particularly as litigants seek to expand claims of nuisance to encompass personal injury claims arising out of negligence. In rejecting such an effort, our Supreme Court remarked: "Nuisance is a word often very loosely used; it has been not inaptly described as ``a catchall of ill-defined rights.'" Gonchar v. Kelson,
Over the years, the Supreme Court has had a number of opportunities to consider the distinction between liability in nuisance and negligence. In the landmark case of Webel v. YaleUniversity,
The Webel Court specifically referred to a case before it in 1937, Wolfe v. Rehbein,
More recently, in Schiavone v. Falango,
The common thread in Webel, Wolfe, and Schiavone is that the injured plaintiff either did not have an interest in the land or had not been damaged in his use or enjoyment of the land and, therefore, had no actionable claim in nuisance, a tort founded on injury to land.4 However, since the tort of negligence is not dependent on the nature of the plaintiff's interest in the premises and does not require any damage to land or its use or enjoyment, a logical conclusion to be drawn from these cases is that the tort of negligence provides the remedy when the tenant's claim is for damages for personal injury sustained as a result of a defective condition within the landlord's control.5
A second line of cases also supports the conclusion that negligence, not nuisance, provides the remedy for personal injuries sustained by a tenant due to a defective condition appurtenant to the demised premises. This line also begins withWebel and ends with the Supreme Court's relatively unequivocal pronouncement in Bentley v. Dynarski, supra,
In DesMarchais v. Daly,
In Collette v. Piela, supra,
The common thread of these cases is that while a landlord may be held liable for personal injury to his tenants caused by structural defects, the landlord's liability is not absolute but must be based on knowledge of the defect or notice of it from the tenant. The requirements of actual or constructive notice and proof of control over the defect, except for those structural defects actually or constructively known to the landlord that a tenant cannot reasonably discern, are the hallmarks of landlord premises liability law. See Gore v. People's Savings Bank, supra,
Thus, contrary to the Superior Court authority relied on by the plaintiffs,6 our Supreme Court has been unwilling to allow a tenant to proceed against a landlord in nuisance when the tenant claims personal injury caused by a defective condition which is deemed a structural defect. In this case, the conditions alleged to have existed during the entire time that the minor plaintiff resided at the premises — cracked, chipped, blistered, flaking, loose or peeling lead-based paint — can be characterized as such a structural defect and certainly would have been obvious to the plaintiffs upon reasonable inspection. Negligence, as pleaded in counts one through four, provides the appropriate remedy for the minor plaintiff's alleged personal injuries. This conclusion is consistent with authority and with the Supreme Court's position in Gore v. People's Savings Bank, supra,
For all the reasons stated in this memorandum, the CT Page 8615 defendants' motion to strike counts seven and eight is granted.
LINDA K. LAGER, JUDGE
Ayala v. B & B Realty Co. , 32 Conn. Super. Ct. 58 ( 1974 )
Collette v. Piela , 141 Conn. 382 ( 1954 )
Gesswin v. Beckwith , 35 Conn. Super. Ct. 89 ( 1978 )
Filisko v. Bridgeport Hydraulic Co. , 176 Conn. 33 ( 1978 )
Desmarchais v. Daly , 135 Conn. 623 ( 1949 )
Webel v. Yale University , 125 Conn. 515 ( 1939 )
Douglass v. 95 Pearl Street Corporation , 157 Conn. 73 ( 1968 )
Bentley v. Dynarski , 150 Conn. 147 ( 1962 )
Schiavone v. Falango , 149 Conn. 293 ( 1962 )
Noebel v. Housing Authority , 146 Conn. 197 ( 1959 )
Wolfe v. Rehbein , 123 Conn. 110 ( 1937 )
Beckwith v. Town of Stratford , 129 Conn. 506 ( 1942 )