The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for injuries which he sustained as a result of a fall on a public highway in the defendant city. The first count of his complaint is based on what is now General Statutes § 13-11, which provides for the recovery of damages by a person injured by means of a defective road. The second count is based on nuisance. The court rendered judgment for the defendant and the plaintiff has appealed.
Grand Street in the city of New Britain runs in un easterly and westerly direction. It is an ac *351 cepted street, although there is no record of the establishment of its street lines. A city block map, not intended to show these lines, indicates that the street is fifty feet wide. The paved surface for vehicular traffic is twenty-nine feet wide. There are no sidewalks or curbs in the area where the plaintiff fell. To the north and above the grade of Grand Street in this area, there is a public park. On a grassy embankment descending from the edge of the park to the street, there is a shallow concave trough or drain constructed of amesite about 34 inches wide and about 2.5 inches deep. The drain was made to carry surface water down the grade to a catch basin located at the edge of the street pavement. About five feet to the west of this drain, there is a parking space contiguous to the north edge of the paved surface of the street. Unmowed grass and weeds covered the space between the drain and the parking space. East of the drain, separated from the paved surface of the street by unmowed grass and weeds, there is a small area filled with cobblestones which are partially covered with amesite and which were placed there for drainage purposes and to prevent erosion. The paved surface of Grand Street and the parking space are maintained by the public works department of the city, while the park and the area to the north of the paved surface are maintained by the park department.
On July 14, 1956, about 12 o’clock noon, the plaintiff, who was not familiar with this section of New Britain, parked his car in the parking space. The passengers in his car got out and walked easterly along the paved surface of the street. The plaintiff left his car and started to walk easterly along the embankment and across the grass area. He stepped on the drain, his left leg buckled under him and he *352 fell to the ground, sustaining the injuries for which he has brought this action. The place where he fell was within the street limits. In taking the route he did, he chose to cross an area which was not intended for pedestrian travel. On these facts, the court concluded that the conditions existing on the street where the plaintiff fell did not constitute a defective road or a nuisance, and that the plaintiff himself did not exercise the care of a reasonably prudent person under the circumstances.
The plaintiff claims that the uncontradicted testimony of an expert witness was controlling on the court and that therefore certain facts should be added to the finding. A fact not contradicted does not necessarily become an undisputed fact which is required to be added to the finding. Practice Book § 397;
Corsino
v.
Grover,
The court found that the conditions existing in the street where the plaintiff fell did not constitute a defect under the statute. Such a defect has been defined as follows: “Any object in, upon, or near the traveled path, which would necessarily obstruct or hinder one in the use of the road for the purpose of traveling thereon, or which, from its nature and position, would be likely to produce that result, would generally constitute a defect in the highway.”
*353
Hewison
v.
New
Haven,
When our residential streets are laid out, it is common practice to provide space for purposes other than those of ordinary travel. These areas are still a part of the street, and the municipality is bound to use reasonable care to keep them in a reasonably safe condition for travelers, subject to the qualification that the duty resting on the city with regard to the maintenance of such areas and the duty resting on the traveler with regard to their use are quite different from the duties imposed with regard to a sidewalk or the traveled portion of the
*354
street. The general proposition that the public is entitled to the free use of any part of a public street must be accepted with the qualification that certain portions of the street may, for the benefit and convenience of the public, be devoted to purposes other than travel. When this is done with due regard to making the traveled part of the street reasonably safe, the result is to warn travelers to take the ways provided and to segregate from general travel use the parts reserved. Since it is not intended that there shall be travel on such areas, travelers who leave the way provided for them and attempt to cross such areas may not assume that the areas are free from danger or unusual conditions, as travelers may do in the use of the traveled way.
Corcoran
v.
New Haven,
The attempt of the plaintiff to walk through the weeds and tall grass across the embankment, instead of using the traveled way, was not necessarily negligence on his part. He was bound, however, to make a reasonable use of his senses to ascertain the conditions of the ground and the area over which he was passing. The court found that he did not exercise the care required of him under the circumstances. The fact that the alleged defective condition was in a part of the street which a pedestrian would not be likely to use was an important consideration.
Alston
v.
New Haven,
*355
Under the second count, the plaintiff sought recovery in nuisance. The essential element of nuisance is a continuing inherent or natural tendency to create danger and inflict injury.
Carabetta
v.
Meriden,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
