13 A.2d 581 | Conn. | 1940
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff was injured by reason of tripping over a bolt protruding from the planks of a bridge over a railroad track maintained and operated by the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Company, whom the defendant trustees represent. He sued the defendant city and the trustees for damages for the personal injuries suffered. A demurrer filed by the city was sustained and the plaintiff concedes that no liability could be established as to it. The defendant trustees, to whom we shall hereafter refer as the defendants, admit, on the other hand, that the responsibility for any defective condition on the bridge rested upon them by reason of the provisions of 3675 of the General Statutes, which requires railroad companies to keep in repair structures over their tracks at any highway crossing, including the planking or other surface material of a highway upon such a structure. The trial court concluded that the planked surface of the highway was in a dangerous and defective condition and in need of repairs; that ordinary and reasonable inspection would have disclosed this condition to the defendants; that they knew or in the exercise of reasonable care should have known of it; that they had a fair and reasonable opportunity to repair the planked surface of the highway prior to the time the plaintiff was injured; and that the sole cause of his injuries was the defective condition of the bridge. However, it also concluded that the only right of recovery which the plaintiff had proven was one under the provision of 1420 of the General Statutes, which authorizes a recovery by any person injured by reason of a defective road or bridge from the party bound to keep it in repair, and as the plaintiff had not given notice to the *560 trustees within sixty days from the occurrence of the injury, as required by the terms of that statute, he could not recover. The plaintiff maintains that in addition to the right to recover authorized by this statute, he was also entitled to claim damages for the negligence of the defendants at common law, and that it was sufficient to give notice of the injury, as he did within six months of its occurrence, as required by 6029 of the General Statutes as amended by 1684c of the Cumulative Supplement of 1935, in force when the injury occurred, which required notice within that time in case of a personal injury to or death of any person or injury to personal property caused by the negligence of a railroad company. The basic question involved in this appeal is, then, whether the plaintiff might recover against the defendants for their negligence in permitting the dangerous condition upon the bridge at common law so that the sixty-day notice required by 1420 would not be a condition precedent to the action.
The establishment and maintenance of public highways is a function of the state. Bartram v. Sharon,
Beginning about 1735 the General Court in a number of instances authorized individuals to build and maintain bridges, permitting them to charge tolls to travelers at specific rates or granting them tax exemptions as compensation for their performance of the duty. See, for example, 8 Col. Rec. 139, id. 471. No doubt as a result of this, the statute imposing upon towns the duty to maintain highways and bridges was, some time before 1769, amended by adding to the clause imposing the duty the words "unless . . . it belongs to any particular person or persons to maintain such bridge in any particular case" and by changing the portion of the statute imposing a liability for injuries suffered through the defect or insufficiency of any bridge or highway to impose the penalty upon the town or the person who ought to maintain the same. Statutes, Edition of 1769, p. 17. In subsequent years the Legislature placed the burden of constructing and maintaining bridges and highways or portions of them upon various bodies, as, for example, turnpike companies; Seidel v. Woodbury,
Where, however, the duty is imposed upon and *562
accepted by a private corporation as an incident to a franchise granted by the Legislature to it for its profit, a different situation is presented. It was early suggested in the case of a turnpike company that it might be liable for negligence in failing to keep in repair the highway in its charge. Goshen and Sharon Turnpike Co. v. Sears,
With our law in this condition, the case of Coburn v. Connecticut Co.,
It is true that in Lindblade v. United States Rubber Co.,
The plaintiff, then, was entitled to seek recovery from the defendant for a violation of its common-law duty to exercise reasonable care to keep the planking of the bridge in a reasonably safe condition. Drible v. Village Improvement Co.,
There is error; the judgment is set aside and the case remanded with direction to enter judgment for the plaintiff for such sum as he may prove himself entitled to recover.
In this opinion AVERY, BROWN, and JENNINGS, Js., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
Section 3675 of the General Statutes, 1930, is a survival in part of the statute of 1849 mentioned in Middletown v. New York, N. H. H.R. Co.,
Chapter 140 of the Public Acts of 1869 provided that no town should be liable for injury received on any highway by reason of any structure placed therein by any railroad corporation by authority of law but that damages therefor might be recovered in a suit against the company. This was embodied in 10 of Chapter 7, Title 16, General Statutes, 1875, page 232, which also contained the general provisions for recovery "from the party bound to keep [a road or bridge] in repair," now in 1420 of the General Statutes, but provided only for notice to a selectman of a town or the clerk of a city or borough. The additional *568 provision for notice to the clerk of a corporation was inserted by Chapter 105 of the Public Acts of 1883, which also provided that "when the injury is caused by a structure legally placed on such road by a railroad company, it, and not the party bound to keep the road in repair, shall be liable therefor," and this is still in 1420 of the General Statutes, 1930.
Therefore may it not reasonably be said, as it was in Shalley v. Danbury B. Horse Ry. Co.,
Section 6029 of the General Statutes, the other notice statute, originated as Chapter 176 of the Public Acts of 1895, and has always referred to actions for damages caused by negligence in the general sense. As already noted, the provision for notice to the corporation made liable under Chapter 140 of the Public Acts of 1869, was inserted in 1883 (Public Acts, Chapter 105) and long antedated the general railroad notice statute, 6029. This also may be taken as indicating *569 that what the Legislature had in mind in 1883 was the kind of notice provided in the same section to be given to a municipality in a case where it, instead, was liable.
Municipal liability for defective highways, caused by neglect of governmental duty, rests on statute alone; when that liability is transferred to a railroad company it should still be regarded as statutory, and subject to the same limitations (Lavigne v. New Haven, supra, 700) rather than relegated to common-law negligence. It seems to me that in Coburn v. Connecticut Co.,