160 A. 435 | Conn. | 1932
The plaintiff's son, a boy eight years of age, tripped over a wooden stake driven in the ground at or near the inner edge of the sidewalk on Draher Avenue in the defendant city and fell upon another stake similar to the one upon which he tripped, receiving injuries which ultimately, as claimed by the plaintiff, resulted in his death. The plaintiff in this action sought to recover his expenditures for medical aid and hospital bills and for loss of services of his son during his minority, as consequential damages. It was *109 conceded by counsel for the plaintiff, and the court so charged the jury, that there could be no recovery in this action upon the statutory right of action for damages resulting from a defect in the highway, and that the plaintiff could recover, if at all, only upon the ground that the stakes upon which his son fell constituted a nuisance in the highway. The jury, in answer to an interrogatory propounded by the court, found that the existing condition constituted both a nuisance and a defective highway, and awarded the plaintiff damages in the sum of $5000. The defendant assigns error in the court's denial of its motion to set the verdict aside, and in the charge to the jury. It contends that the complaint was based solely upon an alleged defect in the highway, that there was neither allegation nor proof of the existence of a nuisance, and that the court's definition of nuisance in its charge was indefinite and misleading.
The complaint alleges that employees of the defendant drove these stakes into the ground, and that they constituted an obstruction or defect in the highway and a nuisance. It set up in a single count two distinct causes of action, one under the statute for a defective highway, and one at common law for the creation of a nuisance. No question is raised as to the propriety of joining the two causes of action in a single count. The allegations of the complaint were sufficient to admit proof that the natural tendency of the acts complained of was to create danger and inflict injury, and thus constitute a nuisance as a matter of fact, and the specific allegation is made that they did create a nuisance.
As to the proof, there was evidence that sometime prior to the date of the accident the defendant, in preparation for the laying of a curbing in front of its school property on Draher Avenue, had caused two *110
wooden stakes to be driven into the ground at or near the inner edge of the sidewalk, which projected from six to eight inches above the level of the sidewalk. The stakes were of old two by four lumber of substantially the same color as the ground. About a week before the accident the defendant had decided to abandon laying the curb at that point, but the stakes were allowed to remain. It was not necessary to use stakes of this character for the purpose of laying the curbing, and it was not good workmanship to leave such stakes projecting above the ground. The jury could reasonably have found that, in placing stakes of that character in that location and allowing them to remain, the defendant unnecessarily exposed the plaintiff's son to injury, and that the stakes, under all the circumstances of the case, constituted a nuisance, as a matter of fact. That a municipality is liable for damages resulting from acts which it has directed to be performed, and which from their character or the manner in which they are executed will naturally create a nuisance, is settled by numerous decisions of this court. Colwell v. Waterbury,
The defendant's claim that the verdict should be set aside because the damages awarded indicate that it was the result of prejudice and sympathy on the part of the jury is without merit. The plaintiff's actual expenditure for medical care and hospital bills was $2850. In addition to this, the plaintiff was entitled to recover for the loss of his son's services during his minority. Such loss depends upon so many contingencies as to be incapable of definite ascertainment, and must ordinarily be left, upon the facts *111
proven, to the sound judgment of the jury. Jackiewicz
v. United Illuminating Co.,
The court told the jury that the term "nuisance" was not easy of definition, and to make its meaning clearer read from the opinion of this court in Burnham
v. Hotchkiss,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.