The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages from the town of Portland, or in the alternative, the state highway commissioner, for injuries sustained in a fall allegedly caused by an accumulation of snow and ice. At the conclusion of the evidence, both defendants made motions for directed verdicts. The court granted the motion of the town of Portland, but denied that of the state highway commissioner. Following a jury verdict for the plaintiff, the named defendant, hereinafter called the defendant, moved to set aside the verdict. The court denied the motion and from the judgment the defendant appealed to this court.
The complaint against the highway commissioner alleged a cause of action under the so-called defective highway statute. General Statutes § lSa-144. 1
The jury reasonably could have found the follow *297 ing facts: On February 14,1963, the plaintiff parked her automobile perpendicular to the sidewalk located in front of 285 Main Street (route 17A) in the town of Portland, in an area generally used for public parking. The plaintiff alighted from her car, walked toward the sidewalk, and, when she had reached a point approximately nineteen inches from the sidewalk, she was caused to fall due to an accumulation of unsanded snow and ice. Having walked very carefully, the plaintiff was in no way contributorily negligent. The area where the plaintiff fell is approximately thirty-four feet wide, is composed of dirt and grass, and is situated between the paved highway and the sidewalk. Vehicles travel over the grassy area and park all the way up to the sidewalk where two-hour parking is not only permitted but invited by parking signs placed there by the state. Boute 17A is a paved state highway and was maintained at the time of the accident by the state highway commissioner. While the plaintiff fell within the boundaries of the state right-of-way line, the locus of the fall was about thirty-two feet from the edge of the paved state highway. A large tree was located approximately thirty-three inches from the sidewalk at the locus of the fall. There were no street or driveway encroachments onto route 17A for 200 feet south of the point of the fall or ten to fifteen feet north of that point. The ice on which the plaintiff fell was two to four inches thick and was at least two weeks old. In February, 1963, the state had at its disposal equipment capable of plowing, sanding and breaking up ice.
Although the defendant is the state highway commissioner, this action is, in effect, one against the state as a sovereign.
Donnelly
v.
Ives,
Section 13a-144 authorizes civil suits against the sovereign for injuries caused by “the neglect or default of the state ... by means of any defective highway ... in the state highway system.” This statute affords a right of recovery similar to that against the municipalities under § 13a-149 and is subject to the same limitations.
2
Pape
v.
Cox,
129
*299
Conn. 256, 259,
The state is not an insurer of the safety of travelers on the highways which it has a duty to repair. Thus, it is not bound to make the roads absolutely safe for travel.
Chazen
v.
New Britain,
In the ease at bar, the plaintiff left the paved portion of the state highway and drove onto what is essentially a thirty-four foot wide dirt and grass parking strip located between the paved portion of the highway and the sidewalk. After parking her car in this area she alighted from it and fell at a point approximately nineteen inches from the sidewalk to which she was walking. There was sufficient evidence to show that the ice was from two to four inches thick where the plaintiff fell and that the ice was at least two weeks old. There was no evidence that the state had at any time prior to this accident sanded or in any way employed such measures to remedy the hazardous condition.
‘This is not a situation where the plaintiff crossed an area not intended for pedestrian travel as in
Chazen
v.
New Britain,
The defendant’s principal contention is that while the plaintiff’s recourse is by an action brought under § 13a-144, the state’s duty regarding snow and ice is restricted to clearing the “traveled portion” of the highway under § 13a-93. 4 The defendant argues that the locus of the plaintiff’s fall was, as a matter of law, not within the “traveled portion” of the highway since the “traveled portion” consists only of the paved portion of the road and plaintiff fell thirty-two feet from the paved portion. The defendant assigned as error the failure of the court to define the meaning of “traveled portions of any completed highway” appearing in § 13a-93 and the court’s failure to explain its usage in context with the evidence introduced at the trial. Rather than *303 considering the locus as a matter of law, the court directed the jury to determine the question as one of fact. Having carefully analyzed § 13a-93 in relation to § 13a-144, we find the defendant’s contentions to be without merit for the reasons hereinafter set forth.
As we mentioned earlier, § 13a-144 affords a right of recovery from the state similar to that given by § 13a-149 against municipalities. The word “defect” and its adjective “defective” constitute the basis upon which liability rests under § 13a-144 and § 13a-149. In interpreting these words we said in 1872, in a case interpreting a predecessor to § 13a-149, that “[t]he statute provides that if any person shall receive any injury in his person or property by means of any defective bridge or road, the town &c. shall be liable. It is silent in regard to the mode by which the defective condition of the road shall have caused the injury, and we think it makes no difference in principle what that mode is.”
Young
v.
New Haven, 39
Conn. 435, 442; see
Bacon
v.
Rocky Hill,
Nor do we find that the enactment of § 13a-93 was meant to restrict the extent of the state’s duty concerning ice and snow. The predecessors to § 13a-93 authorized the state highway commissioner through either his department or through the town selectmen to clear snow off state roads at state expense. Section 13a-93 imposes a duty on the state to plow snow from the state highways but does not subject the sovereign state to tort liability to the public for the failure to do so. Nor does it restrict liability imposed by § 13a-144 when the alleged defect is ice and snow. If ice and snow are found by the trier of fact to be “defects” in the highway the defendant will be held liable even in the light of § 13a-93. Thus, as the defendant contends, the charge by the court to the jury was erroneous, but not for failing to define the meaning of “traveled portion” under § 13a-93, but rather, in mentioning that section in the first instance. The charge contained the bare language of § 13a-93 and reference to it was limited by pointing out that under the statute “the highway commissioner’s duty with regard to snow and ice is a very limited one.” When this is considered together with the court’s discussion of § 13a-144, it can be construed only as being favorable to the state. We find the error harmless.
*305
The defendant also claims that the plaintiff failed to introduce evidence from which the jury could find that the defendant had either actual or constructive notice of the alleged def ect and the expiration of a sufficient period of time after notice to remedy the situation. It is the settled law of our state that “[i]n a case seeking recovery for damage from defects in a highway, it is a prerequisite of liability that the authority charged with maintenance shall have had either actual notice of the defect or constructive notice through its existence for such a length of time that it would have been known in the exercise of reasonable care, and a reasonable opportunity afforded to remedy it.”
Shirlock
v.
MacDonald,
*306 The only testimony as to the length of - time the area had been in an icy condition was that of Alexander Chapman, a registered safety engineer. He testified on direct examination that on February 16, 1963, two days after the plaintiff sustained her injuries, he inspected the area and found that from the paved portion of the highway up to within one foot of the edge of the sidewalk was covered with rough ice. The ice had been formed from snow compacted by people walking on it and eventually turning to ice. The ice was old and varied in thickness from two to four inches, the four-inch thickness being particularly noticeable adjacent to the sidewalk. He further testified that it was his opinion that the i'ce was at least two weeks old. Having consulted weather reports issued by the United States government he found that in the two-week period just prior to the accident, there was not sufficient precipitation to have caused the forming of ice at least three to four inches thick in the area. He also concluded that the area was very hazardous for persons to walk. It was brought out in detail on cross-examination that on February 12, two days before the accident occurred, ninety-eight hundredths of an inch of precipitation had fallen. About 80 percent of this precipitation was rain and the rest was snow. This small amount, however, could not account for the two- to four-inch layer of ice. On redirect examination the witness stated that in bis opinion the ice had been there since the precipitation of February 12 and when asked by counsel whether the ice had been there prior to that time he answered: “I can’t say that, sir. I cannot say how much ice was there prior to the twelfth, because of the precipitation we have [sic] on the twelfth. This would — I now couldn’t tell you what ice was there prior to the *307 twelfth, or whether it was just snow and compacted snow.”
Whether or not the defect had existed for a length of time sufficient to constitute constructive notice is a question of fact for the jury and unless the period of time is such that but one conclusion could be found, its determination should be left to the trier.
Scoville
v.
West Hartford,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“[General Statutes] Sec. 13a-144. damages for injuries sustained on state highways or sidewalks. Any person injured in person or property -through the neglect or default of the state or any of its employees by means of any defective highway, bridge or sidewalk in the state highway system, or by reason of the lack of any railing or fence on the side of such bridge or part of such road which may be ¡raised above the adjoining ground so as to be unsafe for travel . . . may bring a civil action to recover damages sustained thereby against the commissioner . . . and the amount of the judgment rendered therein shall, upon the filing with the comptroller of a certified copy of such judgment, be paid by the state.”
As the defendant correctly notes, the parties -and the court refer to $5 13a-144 and 13a-93, approved June 6, 1963, which were in effect at the time this action was brought rather -than to their predecessors, 55 13-87 and 13-143, which were in effect at the time of the accident. Since the parties and the court proceeded -under the statutes in effect at the time the action was brought and the outcome -will not be affected in any way, we will also ¡refer to the statutes in effect at that time in this opinion.
“[General Statutes] Sec. 13a-149. damages for injuries by means of defective roads and bridges. Any person injured in person or property by means of a defective road or bridge may recover damages from the party bound to keep it in repair.”
We emphasize that our decision today does not hold that the state has the duty to guard against defects such 'as snow and ice anywhere within the state highway right-of-way line. Our holding is that under the particular circumstances of this case the proximity of the defect to the paved portion of the highway in conjunction with the fact that the locus of the fall was in an area where occupants of vehicles were invited by the state to park their cars for the purpose of walking from their cars to the stores in the vicinity warrants the conclusion that this defect was “in, upon, or near the traveled path” so as to “obstruct or hinder one in the use of the road for the purpose of traveling thereon”
(Chazen
v.
New Britain,
“[General Statutes] Sec. 13a-93. snow removal from state highways. The commissioner shall remove the snow from the traveled portions of any completed state highway when the accumulation thereof renders such highway unsafe for public travel.”
