DocketNumber: No. CV90 0032598S
Citation Numbers: 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 503
Judges: FLYNN, J.
Filed Date: 1/23/1998
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
Before the court are post verdict motions filed by the plaintiff to set aside the verdict, for new trial or additur and the defendants' motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
Because the jury could have reasonably reached the decision it did and no injustice was done, all such motions are denied.
Some discussion of the procedural history of the case is necessary. This is a wrongful death action brought under §
The plaintiff's decedent, Gregory Brown, committed suicide utilizing a shotgun, and the action before the court was brought by his fiduciary against four police officers who responded to a complaint of a possibly suicidal person at the home address of the deceased. The evidence was in conflict as to whether the police officers knew that the person who had called a fire department emergency line had identified Gregory Brown as the person contemplating suicide. The jury could have found that Gregory was a latchkey child who was left alone from the time he arrived home from school until the time a parent returned home. He had experienced continuing difficulties in school and his parents suspected a report card had been forged to make it appear his grades were passing when in fact he was flunking. It turned out their suspicions were right. Gregory was sent to school and his parents let it be known that they would check on the authenticity of the reported grades that day with school CT Page 506 personnel. Young Gregory learned in school that his fraud would be reported to his parents. After dismissal of students because of the end of the school day, Gregory Brown told neighborhood friends he was considering suicide rather than face parental discipline. One of them called a fire department emergency line telling the fire dispatcher that he feared his friend Gregory Brown was going to take his life. The caller's name and telephone number could not be confirmed by the police, although they attempted to do so. Ultimately, the call was routed through another fire dispatcher to a police dispatcher and to three different policemen. What was lost in the translation was at issue. In any event, police investigated. They did not call a parent or take other means to protect his life. They concluded Brown was the victim of a hoax call. That was in part based on his calm demeanor, cooperative attitude and denial that the family kept any firearms, although there were guns and ammunition all over the house. After they left the premises, Gregory Brown killed himself with a shotgun, leaving behind a suicide note.
While municipal employees generally have qualified immunity from tort liability for the performance of discretionary acts, an exception has been recognized where the circumstances have made it apparent to the employee that the failure to act would be likely to subject an identifiable person or narrow class of persons to imminent harm. Burns v. Board of Education,
The imminent harm exception is the only exception which seems pertinent since no other exception to the general qualified immunity accorded to such officers is invoked by the complaint. All parties in their briefs conceded this was the issue.
The court excluded evidence in limine of matters which might have been revealed by further investigations or searches because the determination of the imminent harm to identifiable person exception to governmental immunity must be judged on what was apparent and readily seen by the defendant officers, not on what was not so-visible. Burns, supra.
The municipal officer is immune for discretionary actions taken in good faith except where circumstances he has seen or heard have made it apparent to him that some identifiable person or class of persons is in imminent peril if he or she fails to act. "Apparent" is defined in the New College Edition of theAmerican Heritage Dictionary of the English Language as "(1) CT Page 507 readily seen, open to view, visible; (2) readily understood or perceived, plain or obvious."
After careful review of the many appellate decisions in this area of the law, the court is convinced that this interpretation based on the ordinary meaning of "apparent" is consistent with the various opinions which set out the governmental immunity doctrine and the exceptions which the law draws to its application.
As creatures of the state, towns and cities have no sovereign immunity from suit. Murphy v. Ives,
In determining a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a motion to set aside the verdict, the court must look to the evidence and view it most favorably to the nonmoving party in determining whether the jury could have reasonably reached the result that it did.
Here, the police officers testified that they had a duty to protect people who were suicidal from themselves if they saw they were in danger of imminently harming themselves. How far to investigate a complaint is a matter of police discretion and necessarily so. If the police were to employ exhaustive investigations in every complaint as a bureaucratic technique to avoid all future criticism or liability, the cost in intrusion on civil liberties would be intolerable in a free society. In this case, the liability pled was that resulting when police fail to act when it is apparent to them that failure to act would subject an identifiable person to imminent harm. If proved, it can result in civil liability of municipal police officers even for discretionary acts. Sestito v. Groton, supra,
If Brown's name as the potential suicide was told to a defendant policeman and he didn't listen to or appreciate what was said or a shotgun or a butt part of it sufficient to identify it was there in the closet and Hosey ignored it, these facts were apparent to those individual police officers, nonetheless, by being readily visible or readily understood.
Conversely, of course, there was evidence that they had no such knowledge and there was nothing there to be seen. But those were jury issues which the jury could have resolved in the plaintiff's favor. CT Page 510
The court, therefore, agrees with the defendants that the defendants are chargeable with what was actually known to them but disagrees that that is where the matter ends because it holds they were also chargeable with knowledge of things said to them or which they looked at and did not take reasonable cognizance of. A police report which was prepared the day after the death by Sgt. Dooling, in referring to events when they first arrived at the Brown house, stated in part: "Officer O'Keefe was on the phone with headquarters attempting to obtain additional information. The only information obtained was the name Greg Brown." When asked what he meant by that, the following exchange occurred:
"A. Okay, this information was relayed to me by Officer O'Keefe. The information about Greg Brown was the fact that at this point we're looking into who made the phone call. So the information received was possibly Greg Brown could have made the phone call from that residence.
Q. So your testimony was that O'Keefe told you that Greg was identified as a suspect from headquarters?
A. I don't know where he got that information from. I assume it was from headquarters.
Q. Well, based on your report, where do you think that information came from? I mean you wrote ``he was on the phone with headquarters attempting to obtain additional information. The only information was the name Greg Brown.' Greg Brown, that name came from headquarters. Didn't it?
A. That came from Officer O'Keefe.
Q. Who told you he got it from headquarters?
A. I believe he was on the phone with headquarters at the time."
Additionally, the jury could have determined that there was knowledge that a young boy was found at the house who turned out to be age 13 and that the call to the fireman had been made by a person estimated to be 14 or 15 years old who described the person in danger as a friend. CT Page 511
There was also testimony from Mr. Douglas Brown, father of the deceased, that a long gun was kept in a bedroom closet which Officer Hosey said that he looked into. Douglas Brown also testified that one who looked into the closet could see the butt of this shotgun beneath hanging clothes. A part of certain things can be so distinctive and essential so as to identify the whole. As one who sees only an elephant's trunk around a corner knows there is an elephant there, so an exposed shotgun butt is an essential part of the weapon, unique enough to alert the observer that a gun was present.
There was evidence before the jury from which it could have concluded that failure to act on the policemen's part would subject an identifiable person, Gregory Brown, to imminent harm, and that their failure to call parents or otherwise protect him from harm was a proximate cause of death. Under our applicable law it is enough if such a municipal officer is a substantial factor in causing harm and a cause in fact. The plaintiff need not prove a defendant was the only cause of injury or damage.Coburn v. Lenox Homes, Inc.,
The court therefore denies the defendants' motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
The court will now turn to the plaintiff's motions addressed to what it alleges was the legal inadequacy of the verdict amount rendered. The plaintiff's post verdict motions attack the award of only $1.00 in compensatory damages.
The jury was charged on nominal damages without exception an follows:
"Because you have found liability already, meaning that there has been a finding by you that there has been an invasion of the decedent's rights by the acts or omissions of the defendants, if you should find that the plaintiff has not proved he suffered any actual damages, such a finding would not end the matter because this is one of those cases where the law provides what are sometimes called, more or less actually, nominal damages. From the mere invasion of the decedent rights, the law would import some damages to him.
If you do not find proven any substantial damages but you do find there is an invasion of the plaintiff's rights, it is your CT Page 512 duty to bring in a verdict for the plaintiff stating some nominal sum, for example, one dollar, as the amount which he should recover. By so doing, you will determine the rights of the parties which in this kind of case is important."
In a death case brought under §
The court will first address itself to the funeral expenses. The plaintiff claimed no damages for the funeral bill, offered no evidence of it, and therefore this item of damage was not in the case.
The court charged on the second element of destruction of life's activities. To prove this element of damages, the plaintiff was required to establish that the deceased engaged in life's enjoyable activities and the probable span of future life over which they would be lost. Sims v. Smith,
The jury was also charged about the third statutory damage element consisting of loss of net earning capacity after allowance for taxes and cost of his own maintenance from the age of 18 for the probable duration of his life. The jury could have reasonably considered he suffered from self-destructive tendencies and that the plaintiff had not proved he would live to be 18, much less beyond it. Because the plaintiff's expert admitted taking no account of the particular situation of the deceased's malaise or poor school performance or other pertinent aspects of Gregory Brown's life, the jury was not bound by the opinions of the expert. There is a relation between the education level one attains and the likely future earnings of such a person. The evidence in this case could have reasonably left the jury in serious doubt that the deceased would graduate from elementary school much less high school, college or graduate school. The jury could also have reasonably concluded that his probable future life expectancy had he not died by his own hand was not proved. Jurors therefore could have reasonably concluded that the plaintiff had not proved this element of damages.
The court charged out of the jury's considerations any consideration of the fourth statutory element, namely damages for CT Page 514 conscious pain and suffering prior to death. The only evidence was that the deceased had used a shotgun to blast away a substantial part of his cranium and brain and that death was therefore instantaneous, and devoid of conscious pain and suffering.
Finally, as to the last element of damages, the plaintiff urges that the $1.00 awarded for the death itself is insufficient as a matter of law. He points out that Rhode Island's Wrongful Death Statute, Title 10, Chapter 7, Section 2 provides that in any death case where liability is found the damages shall be "not less than $100,000.00." Connecticut has no such statutory minimum. Until enactment of the present death statute, Connecticut's statutory scheme put a dollar ceiling on recovery, but never provided for a Rhode Island type floor. T. Koskoff,"Stare Decisis — And The Rule in Death Cases," 31 Conn. B.J. 315, 317 (1957). Our Supreme Court has observed that "assessing damages for wrongful death defies any precise mathematical computation." Floyd v. Fruit Industries,
For all of these reasons, the court finds that the jury could have reasonably and justly reached the result that it did in determining that although the plaintiff has proved the defendants were a proximate cause of Gregory Brown's death by failing to call his parents or otherwise act to prevent it, the plaintiff had not proved resulting damages.
The plaintiff's motions for additur, new trial, and to set aside the damages verdict are denied.
Flynn, J.
Coburn v. Lenox Homes, Inc. , 186 Conn. 370 ( 1982 )
McKirdy v. Cascio , 142 Conn. 80 ( 1955 )
Tango v. City of New Haven , 173 Conn. 203 ( 1977 )
Sestito v. City of Groton , 178 Conn. 520 ( 1979 )
Sims v. Smith , 115 Conn. 279 ( 1932 )
Floyd v. Fruit Industries, Inc. , 144 Conn. 659 ( 1957 )
Waldron v. Raccio , 166 Conn. 608 ( 1974 )
Shore v. Town of Stonington , 187 Conn. 147 ( 1982 )