DocketNumber: No. CV 93 347385
Citation Numbers: 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 3648
Judges: DOWNEY, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 3/25/1998
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
This is an action brought pursuant to General Statutes, Section 13-149, to recover damages for injuries sustained by plaintiff, Shirley Carey, in a fall allegedly caused by the defective condition of the defendant's sidewalk.
Plaintiff's Amended Complaint is in two counts. The First Count alleges breach of the defendant's statutory duty under General Statutes, Section
The Second Count alleges that as a result of the defendant's breach of said statutory duty, plaintiff Edward Carey suffered a loss of consortium
Plaintiffs' Complaint was filed in this court returnable June 3, 1993. Subsequently, the defendant filed its Answer, denying any wrongdoing and by way of Special Defense (As to Count Two), alleging that plaintiffs' claims under that count are barred by General Statutes, Section
On or about August 7, 1991, shortly before noon, plaintiff Shirley Carey left her place of employment and drove to Adriana's Restaurant and Pizza, on Grand Avenue in he City of New Haven. She intended to purchase pizza for herself and her colleagues. On arrival at Adriana's, Mrs. Carey parked her vehicle in the restaurant's parking lot and proceeded on foot toward the front entrance of Andriana's. Walking on the public sidewalk, as she CT Page 3650 approached the front entrance of Adriana's, plaintiff fell and sustained injury, including a fracture to her right wrist. She required medical treatment and at trial submitted medical bills in the amount of twenty six thousand, nine hundred ($26,900.00) dollars, and a medical doctor's aggregate permanent partial disability rating of ten (10) percent of her right master upper extremity.
Under the common law, municipalities enjoyed immunity for injuries caused by defective highways, Martin v. Plainville,
There is no claim here of actual knowledge by the defendant of the defect complained of. The plaintiffs claim defendant had constructive notice of said defect. In support of their claim, plaintiffs cite testimony by Shirley Carey regarding her prior observations of the sidewalk as well as photographs of the sidewalk in front of Adriana's, taken shortly after Mrs. Carey's fall.
Whether a municipality is to be charged with constructive notice depends upon the circumstances, regard being had to the nature of the defect, whether palpable and manifestly dangerous or otherwise, the place, the extent of the use of the highway, and the time the defect had existed, Matchulot v. Ansonia,
The notice must be of the particular defect that caused the injury, Falkowski v. MacDonald,
Plaintiff Shirley Carey testified that just prior to her fall, as she approached, "with extreme caution," the front entrance of Adriana's, she noticed in her path what she described as a hole and that to avoid stepping into said hole she stepped to her left and stepped into a second hole, which she hadn't seen, and that this caused her to fall. CT Page 3652
In support of their claim of constructive notice, plaintiffs rely on certain testimony of Mrs. Carey as well as photographs of the sidewalk in front of Adriana's, taken shortly after Mrs. Carey's fall. (Plaintiffs' Exhibit A through E). Mrs. Carey testified that she made several trips to Adriana's in the year prior to her fall, and had noted that "the sidewalk was in very poor condition. It had a lot of cracks and holes and was pitted." Her knowledge of the dangerous condition of the sidewalk caused her, she testified, to approach with extreme caution on the day of her fall. This is the only evidence offered to establish the length of time the defect had existed. This description of the sidewalk's condition does not establish with sufficient particularity the defect or defects which allegedly were the proximate cause of the plaintiff's injury. What plaintiff testified caused injury to Mrs. Carey was not "the sidewalk" stretching past the front of Adriana's but rather two holes or depressions in a section of the pavement adjacent to the front right corner of the building (as one faces the front entrance). This is best seen in plaintiff's Exhibit B. Plaintiff, Mrs. Carey never claimed to have noticed these two holes or depressions prior to August 7, 1991 and her testimony is insufficient to establish the length of time these two particular defects existed.
The photographs are offered to establish that "the subject sidewalk was manifestly dangerous." The photographs show a stretch of sidewalk in some state of disrepair but nothing so palpable or manifestly dangerous as to support a finding of constructive notice. Again, plaintiff's exhibit B, taken looking west on Grand Avenue, shows the two holes complained of some
The court concludes the plaintiffs have failed to establish, by a fair preponderance of the evidence, that the defendant had notice, actual or constructive, of the defect or defects complained of.
Judgment, accordingly, may enter for the defendant.
By the Court
Downey, J. CT Page 3653
Lukas v. City of New Haven , 184 Conn. 205 ( 1981 )
Meallady v. City of New London , 116 Conn. 205 ( 1933 )
Hornyak v. Town of Fairfield , 135 Conn. 619 ( 1949 )
Porpora v. City of New Haven , 119 Conn. 476 ( 1935 )
Carl v. City of New Haven , 93 Conn. 622 ( 1919 )