60 A.2d 502 | Conn. | 1948
The plaintiff secured a verdict for damages resulting from personal injuries sustained as a result of a fail on a sidewalk in New Haven. The defendant claims that the defect was too slight to justify an award of damages and that in any event it was created and maintained by the state rather than by the city. Both questions are raised by the denial of the motion to set aside the verdict, and the second by a request to charge to the effect that the state and not the city was responsible. The only substantial dispute on the facts related to the place where the plaintiff fell. She testified, and the jury could have found, that her fall was caused by the defect described below.
Goffe Street in New Haven is a busy street located near the business center of the city. In 1926 a building at No. 111 was leased by the state for the *688 use of the motor vehicle department and has been occupied for that purpose ever since. In 1926 the state drilled a hole in the sidewalk one and five-eighths inches in diameter to hold a removable metal flagpole. This hole proved to be too near the curb, and another of the same size was later drilled a few inches farther from the curb. The first hole was not used after the second was made, and the flagpole was not in place on the date in question, March 11, 1946. On that date the plaintiff walked up the east sidewalk of Sperry Street and crossed Goffe Street from the south to the north; as she stepped from the street up to and upon the sidewalk the heel of her shoe caught in the first hole. She was thrown and injured. The hole was almost directly opposite the east sidewalk of Sperry Street.
An examination of the many Connecticut cases dealing with highway defects under General Statutes, 1420, shows that courts and juries have refused to hold municipalities liable for slight defects, but in only one case has such a defect been held too slight as a matter of law to form the basis of a judgment for the plaintiff. Older v. Old Lyme,
The defendant also claimed that the verdict should have been set aside because, on the undisputed evidence, the hole was made and maintained by the state and therefore the failure of the city to repair was not the sole proximate cause of the plaintiff's injuries, under the doctrine of Bartram v. Sharon,
This conclusion leaves the plaintiff without remedy, since she cannot sue the state without its consent. McManus v. Jarvis,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.