219 Conn. 641 | Conn. | 1991
In this action the plaintiff, Gloria Cook, conservatrix of Dorinda Leonard, sought damages from the defendant town of Litchfield for personal injuries sustained by Leonard on October 3, 1986, when the vehicle she was driving went off a town road and struck a telephone pole.
In her appeal from the judgment, the plaintiff raises only a single issue, whether § 52-557n eliminates the common law action for an absolute nuisance created by positive acts of a municipality upon a public highway and makes § 13a-149 the exclusive remedy against a municipality for any injury caused by a defective highway. Having concluded recently in Sanzone v. Board of Police Commissioners, 219 Conn. 179, 592 A.2d 912 (1991), that § 52-557n bars any action based upon a defective highway that has not been brought pursuant to § 13a-149, we hold that a common law action for nuisance is barred by § 52-557n and affirm the judgment striking the complaint.
In Sanzone we held that the proviso in § 52-557n (a) (1) that “no cause of action shall be maintained for damages resulting from injury to any person or property by means of a defective road or bridge except pursuant to section 13a-149” applied to “the entire content of subdivision § 52-557n (a) (1), not merely subdivision (a) (1) (C),” to which its application was clearest. (Emphasis added.) Id., 190. Subdivision (a) (1) (C) of § 52-557n relates expressly to a common law nuisance
In Sanzone we also considered the effect of the savings clause, “[ejxcept as otherwise provided by law,” with which § 52-557n (a) (1) begins. The plaintiff relies primarily on this clause in arguing that common law nuisance actions are not affected by the statute. We concluded in Sanzone that this provision was not intended “to preserve without modification all existing law, common and statutory, including such actions for positive nuisance,” (emphasis in original) because “[t]he legislature could not have intended the general language of the introductory clause to swallow up and nullify the section’s other provisions.” Id., 191. We held that the meaning of the word “law” in the savings clause must be limited to state and federal statutes and did not include the common law. Id., 191-92.
The judgment is affirmed.
The original complaint alleged negligence against James F. Turner, the owner of the vehicle that Dorinda Leonard had been driving, and also against the town of Litchfield. At the time the motion to strike was granted, the complaint had been amended to remove the allegations of negligence against Turner, although he was referred to as a “defendant” and the file does not contain a withdrawal of the action against him. The original allegations of negligence against the town of Litchfield had also been converted to allegations of nuisance based upon the facts set forth in the original complaint.