360 A.2d 907 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1976
To this action sounding in strict products liability in tort, the defendants have proffered, succinctly stated, the following special defenses: (a) The plaintiff's injuries were caused by his own negligence;1 (b) the plaintiff assumed the risks *82 inherent in his using the equipment;2 (c) the plaintiff himself was misusing the article involved — lawn equipment.3
The Gordian knot, pleadingwise, which this court is required to untie, has its origin in the fact that the wording of the first special defense and the phraseology of the third special defense are quite similar. Conceding that the first special defense, contributory negligence, is unsound in a strict tort liability action, the defendants have now withdrawn that defense. The plaintiff contends that since the third special defense is merely a reiteration of the first special defense, it is likewise invalid and that, therefore, his demurrer thereto should be sustained.
"Similar" means having general likeness although allowing for some degree of difference. McLaughlin
v. Poucher,
While it may rightfully be maintained that a failure to exercise due care, the orthodox contributory negligence defense, does not relieve a defendant of liability in the present type of action, nevertheless "the kind of negligence which consists of proceeding voluntarily to encounter a known unreasonable danger and which tends to overlap the defense of assumption of risk, will relieve the defendant of liability." Prosser, Law of Torts (4th Ed.) § 102, p. 671, and cases cited therein. "Defendants have achieved somewhat greater success with the argument that the plaintiff's use of the product with notice of its defect constituted a bar to recovery. Thus, a defense to a strict products liability in tort action has been sustained or regarded as sustainable under the circumstances of a number of cases. . . ." Note, "Strict Products Liability — Defenses," 46 A.L.R.3d 240, 245.
Under the artful allegation set forth in the third special defense, that averment is legally sufficient as a basis for the presentation of proof that the plaintiff's conduct was so extreme as to be equivalent to an invitation of injury and thus to preclude recovery. See Beckwith v. Stratford,
Obviously at this state of the proceedings the court cannot determine whether the alleged misuse of the equipment is in the category of wilful or reckless misconduct or an invitation of injury or whether the misuse, if any there was, involved a garden variety type of negligence which would not insulate the defendants from liability. Therefore, the court has deemed it justifiable to adopt the procedure sanctioned in Carabetta v. Meriden,
The plaintiff has also demurred to the second special defense, that purports to advance a defense of assumption of risk, on the ground that an allegation that "the plaintiff was aware or should have been aware of the perils and damages to which he was exposed" as a matter of law does not plead the defense of assumption of risk. The plaintiff insists that the danger must actually be known to the injured party. We disagree.
A defendant must prove that a plaintiff comprehended or as a reasonable person ought to have comprehended the nature and extent of the peril to which he was exposed and that he therefore continued to expose himself to it. Paul v. Paul, *85
The demurrer to the second and third special defenses is overruled.