29 A.2d 775 | Conn. | 1942
The plaintiff brought this action to recover for injuries suffered by a fall which, as she claimed, was caused by stepping into a depression in a sidewalk in the defendant town as she was walking along it. She died and the administrator of her estate was substituted as plaintiff. From a judgment in his favor the town has appealed. The action was based on nuisance. The trial court's findings as to the circumstances of the plaintiff's fall and that it was due to her stepping into the depression are supported by evidence sufficient to meet the standard of proof in a civil action, that is, proof which produces "a reasonable belief of the probability of the existence of the material facts." Esserman v. Madden,
This condition did not constitute a nuisance per se. This exists where there is a condition which is a nuisance in any locality and under any circumstances. 39 Am. Jur. 291. Such a nuisance as regards the use of land seldom, if ever, occurs; the same conditions may constitute a nuisance in one locality or under certain circumstances, and not in another locality or under other circumstances. To constitute a nuisance in the use of land, it must appear not only that a certain condition by its very nature is likely to cause injury but also that the use is unreasonable or unlawful. Hoadley v. Seward Son Co.,
The defendant also claims that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, by reason of her own contributory negligence. The trial court found that she was not guilty of contributory negligence, but, even if she had been, that this would not defeat her cause of action because the nuisance was one created by positive acts of the agents of the town, and did not arise merely because of neglect on its part. We have no need to consider whether the court could reasonably reach the first conclusion because its second was undoubtedly sound.
In the argument, defendant's counsel stated that there was some misunderstanding at the bar as to the meaning of the term "absolute nuisance" as used in our opinions and the effect of a finding of the existence of such a nuisance as regards contributory negligence. The words quoted were used in the opinion of the *510
New York Court of Appeals, speaking by Cardozo, C.J., in McFarlane v. Niagara Falls,
Apart from nuisances which have their origin in accident, nuisances resulting in personal injury fall into three general classes. Beven, Negligence (4th Ed.), p. 426, note. One class included nuisances which result from conduct which is in itself a violation of law, and as to them it has been held on high authority that contributory negligence is not a defense; Delaney v. Philhern Realty Holding Corporation,
In Hoffman v. Bristol, supra, the nuisance claimed consisted of the erection of a diving board in a bathing pond above water so shallow as to make diving from *512
it dangerous; the defendant intended to produce the very conditions which were found to be a nuisance; and we held the nuisance to be an absolute one, although, no doubt, had the action been against an individual, negligence apart from nuisance might have been the basis of recovery. See Skelly v. Pleasure Beach Park Corporation,
On the other hand, the street sweeper involved in Warren v. Bridgeport, supra, operating on a foggy *513
night on a city street against traffic with but one light visible might have been found to constitute a nuisance grounded on negligence, because the fault lay, not in its operation at night on a city street, but in a failure to take precautions against dangers arising out of the particular circumstances surrounding that operation. The distinction is also brought out in Parker v. Hartford,
It should be noted that we are here considering contributory negligence alone. As pointed out in the *514
Hill case (p. 364), even as against an absolute nuisance assumption of risk may be a defense; and, as we said in the Hoffman case (p. 393), a plaintiff may be barred of recovery by "fault so extreme as to be equivalent to invitation of injury or, at least, indifference to consequences." See Worth v. Dunn,
The sidewalk here in question was in the very condition when the plaintiff fell in which it was intended to be constructed, and the fault therein did not arise from any lack of due care in the method of construction. The nuisance was an absolute nuisance and the trial court was correct in its ruling that contributory negligence would not be a defense.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.