Plaintiff sued the Town of Brattleboro after driving his car into an excavation on a Town street, and appeals from an order of the Windham Superior Court granting the Town’s summary judgment motion. We reverse and remand.
The accident occurred at the site where the Town was reinstalling a water service pipe, owned by a private business, at a lower depth to keep the pipe from freezing during the winter. In its ruling on the motion for summary judgment, the trial court characterized the work as road maintenance. The court concluded that even though “the road was excavated by the Town for purposes beneficial to and required by a private citizen . . . benefit to private landowners and advantages to privately
Plaintiff argues that the Town’s work was proprietary, not governmental, and, therefore, the Town was not shielded by sovereign immunity. In Dugan v. City of Burlington,
In Fuller v. City of Rutland,
Defendant contends that we should distinguish water services from sewer services, and that water services qualify as a governmental function. We see no reasoned basis to draw such a distinction and depart from our precedents, however, since the functional and economic nexus of each is indistinguishable. See Boguski v. City of Winooski,
Reversed and remanded.
