38 Conn. App. 355 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1995
The plaintiffs appeal following the trial court’s entry of summary judgment on behalf of the defendants in this personal injury action. The plaintiffs claim that the trial court improperly concluded that there were no material facts in dispute and that the defendants were entitled to judgment as a matter of law. We agree.
The following facts are taken from the trial court’s memorandum of decision on the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The plaintiff Rosina Gambardella allegedly sustained injuries as the result of a fall on a defective sidewalk. Her husband, James Gambardella, allegedly suffered a loss of consortium as a result of his wife’s injuries. The plaintiffs fled a complaint against the defendants, Randy Kaoud, Abraham Kaoud, Fred Kaoud and Carpet Galleries, Ltd.
The first three counts of the complaint allege causes of action against the three Kaoud brothers. The first count alleges that the plaintiff wife’s injuries resulted
Following discovery, and after the pleadings were closed, the defendants moved for summary judgment on the first six counts of the complaint. In support of this motion, the defendants argued that the plaintiffs had failed to allege that the defendants had created any defects in the sidewalk and that as abutting landowners the defendants had no duty to the plaintiffs for injuries caused by defects they had not created in the town’s sidewalk. The trial court, in its memorandum of decision, agreed with the defendants. The trial court found that the plaintiffs’ revised amended complaint failed to allege any affirmative acts by the defendants that created the unsafe condition of the sidewalk and granted summary judgment on the negligence counts. In addition, the trial court granted summary judgment on the nuisance counts on the basis of its conclusion that the allegations of the plaintiffs’ complaint were insufficient for failure to allege a positive act.
The plaintiffs concede that as a general matter the defendants had no duty to the plaintiffs to maintain the sidewalk in a safe condition, and that the ordinance does not impose such a duty. See Wilson v. New Haven, supra, 213 Conn. 280. The plaintiffs argue, however, that the allegations of their complaint satisfy an exception to the general rule, in that abutting property owners can be held liable in negligence or public nuisance for injuries resulting from an unsafe condition of a public sidewalk caused by positive acts of the defendant.
In their complaint, the plaintiffs alleged, inter alia, that their injuries were caused by the defendants “in that said defendants caused and/or did allow sand, sticks, and debris to accumulate on said walkway, thereby covering and concealing from view the cracked surface thereof. . . .”
The only evidence produced in connection with the plaintiffs’ allegations that the defendants’ had actively caused the unsafe condition of the sidewalk was in the form of affidavits submitted by the defendants. In these
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
The town of Hamden, where the sidewalk on which the plaintiff wife fell was located, is also a defendant in this action. The motion for summary-judgment was filed only by the Kaoud brothers and Carpet Galleries, Ltd., and we refer to them as the defendants in this appeal.
The remaining counts of the complaint were directed against the town of Hamden and are not at issue in this appeal.
The plaintiffs argue that the trial court improperly granted summary judgment on their public nuisance claims because, by ruling on the sufficiency of the complaint, it treated the defendants’ motion for summary judgment as a motion to strike. We commend both parties for briefing this issue fully. We determine, however, that we need not reach the issue of whether the defendants’ motion for summary judgment was in reality a cloak for a motion to strike; a motion to strike would not lie in this case since the allegations in the complaint were sufficient to allege a public nuisance.
In paragraph three of each count of their complaint the plaintiffs alleged: “The injuries and losses were caused by the negligence of the defendants in one or more of the following ways: A. in that the area was multi-angled, uneven, cracked, and in a state of disrepair so that it rendered pedestrian traffic hazardous and dangerous; B. in that said defendants caused and/or did allow sand, sticks, and debris to accumulate on said walkway, thereby covering and concealing from view the cracked surface thereof; C. in that said conditions had existed for an unreasonable period of time, yet no measures had been taken to remedy and correct the same; D. in that defendants in the exercise of reasonable care and inspection should have known of these conditions and should have remedied the same yet this they failed to do; E. in that said defendants failed to maintain said walkway in a safe and convenient condition for the use of the public in violation of § 96.04 of the Hamden Code of Ordinances . . . .”
We note, as conceded by the plaintiffs, that the only positive act alleged is that of subparagraph (B). Thus, our opinion addresses the claimed impropriety of summary judgment only in connection with this allegation.