This аppeal raises the issue of whether a municipality must specially plead governmental immunity to merit its consideration as a defense to an action alleging the nеgligent operation of a city park.
In its answer the defendant admitted that it was a municipal corporation and denied the allegаtions relating to liability in the complaint. As a special defense, the defendant alleged that the plaintiff’s negligence was the proximate cause of his personаl injuries and damages. The defendant did not in its pleadings, or at trial, expressly raise governmental immunity as a defense.
Two days after the one-day trial, the court asked the plаintiff’s counsel in a letter, with a copy to defendant’s counsel, upon what theory of liability he was proceeding. The record does not indicate what precipitated the letter. After receiving a copy of the letter, counsel for the defendant requested counsel for the plaintiff to provide him with a copy of the plaintiff’s response to the court’s letter so that he would have an opportunity to address the issues raised in the response. Counsel for the plaintiff explained in a letter to the court
Upon receipt of that letter, the court requested counsel for the defendant to respond thereto. In complying with that request, the defendant for the first time expressly claimed that the defendant was not liable for any negligence in the operatiоn of a public park because it is a governmental function. The defendant further claimed that governmental immunity need not be raised in a special defense, which claim was countered by counsel for the plaintiff in a subsequent letter to the court.
In its memorandum of decision the trial court declined to consider the governmental immunity defensе because it was not pleaded specially. To allow the defendant to raise the defense after the trial had concluded, the court explained, would unfairly prejudice the plaintiff. The court further reasoned that if the defendant had been negligent in performing a ministerial act, then governmental immunity would not relieve it of liability, but the court did not expressly address whether the acts complained of were ministerial in nature. Finding that the defendant was negligent in not repairing the swing, or in failing to prevent the public from using it, when the defendant had constructive notice that one of the chain links was rusted and worn, the court awarded the plaintiff $2400 for his personal injuries and damages, plus costs. In its aрpeal the defendant claims that the court erred in not considering and upholding the defense of governmental immunity.
When governmental immunity is fully litigated at trial, and evidence material thereto is introduced without objection by the plaintiff, this court has held that the defense need not be raised as a special defense in the pleadings to permit its consideration.
O’Donnell
v.
Groton,
But for the post trial events in the present case, therefore, the court would not have been bound to consider the governmental immunity defense because it was not pleaded as a special defense and nothing in the record indicates that the plaintiff waived any objection he had to the defendant’s failure to comply with the requirement of pleading. A trial court may request counsel to clarify claims after the evidеnce is closed and arguments are completed, and is usually free to exercise its discretion in deciding whether to permit an amendment to pleadings submitted by counsel in response. See General Statutes §§ 52-128, 52-130; Practice Book §§108, 176;
Evans
v.
Byrolly Transportation Co.,
Whether the acts complained of in operating a city park were governmentаl or ministerial is a factual question which depends upon the nature of the act complained of.
Tango
v.
New Haven,
At triаl, the director of the New Haven parks and recreation department testified as to the operation
The case is remanded for further аrticulation of the trial court’s finding particularly in respect to whether the negligent acts were ministerial in nature and a ruling on the defendant’s defense of governmental immunity.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Praсtice Book § 164 provides: “No facts may be proved under either a general or special denial except such as show that the plaintiff’s statements of fact аre untrue. Facts which are consistent with such statements but show, notwithstanding, that he has no
Our holding on the extraordinary cireumstaneеs of this case does not lessen our disapproval of submission by parties of informal letter requests and pleadings that do not comport with the rules of practice. See, e.g.,
Kroop
v.
Kroop,
