199 A.2d 343 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1964
This is an action seeking money damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligent operation of a motor vehicle. The complaint alleges that the defendant motor vehicle was a family car and specifies, among other allegations, that the defendant operator "operated said automobile when it was not equipped with *184 brakes adequate to safely control its movement and when said brakes were not in good and sufficient working order, and when said brakes did not comply with the requirement of the statute." The answer admits the agency of the defendant operator but denies the specifications of negligence and alleges no knowledge or sufficient information to form a belief as to plaintiff's alleged injuries. Contributory negligence is not alleged in defendants' answer.
The plaintiff has moved for a summary judgment, interlocutory in character, on the issue of liability alone. Practice Book, 1963, § 304. The affidavits filed establish that the plaintiff was seated in a vehicle which was stopped for a red traffic light when the vehicle in which he was riding was struck by the defendants' vehicle. The defendant operator filed a motor vehicle report admitting that her brakes were defective. Her affidavit recites: "As I approached the intersection there was a red light and cars stopped waiting for the red light. I put my foot on the brake, but nothing happened." There is also in the police report evidence of an admission that the day before the accident she had to pump the brakes to stop.
Extensive changes in our summary judgment procedure became effective November 1, 1963. Practice Book, 1963, §§ 297-305. The function of the new rules is to provide a simple and expeditious method of putting an end to litigation where there is not a genuine issue as to the material facts. Our practice in this field is now similar to that provided under Rule
Although the pleadings join issue on the specifications of negligence, the affidavits and other proof clearly show a violation of General Statutes §
The defendants claim that on the issue of liability some injuries must be shown. There appears to be a genuine issue in this case as to the injuries of the plaintiff. Our rules of practice provide for a severance of the liability issue from the issue of damages. Practice Book, 1963, § 304. Since any summary judgment on liability that may be granted at this time will be interlocutory in character, an adequate remedy will remain to the defendants on the issue of damages. To go into the issue of injuries now, under the circumstances of this case, would be to defeat the purpose of the rules. Attempts to thwart the growing practice of severing the issue of liability from the issue of damages in appropriate negligence cases have not been successful. See Hosie v. Chicago N.W. Ry. Co.,
A summary judgment for the plaintiff, interlocutory in character, may enter on the issue of liability alone against the defendants. An immediate hearing before a jury is ordered to determine the amount of damages.