104 A. 164 | Conn. | 1918
The plaintiff's intestate was injured on July 15th, 1915, by falling over a telegraph pole which lay in the gutter near the curb of a sidewalk in a street of the defendant city of Waterbury.
The city supports its assignment of error for the denial of its motion to set aside the verdict against it, principally upon the ground that the plaintiff's intestate, by her own negligence, materially contributed to her injuries, since she should, in the exercise of reasonable care, have known of the existence of the pole and safely passed over it.
There was evidence from which the jury might reasonably have found that the plaintiff's intestate was walking at a reasonable gait, that it was raining slightly and the weather was misty. Under these circumstances, we think that even though the jury found she knew of the existence and location of this pole, she was not, as a matter of law, herself negligent in falling over it. The issue of contributory negligence was, under all the surrounding circumstances, one of fact for the jury to find. *666
The court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant Postal Telegraph-Cable Company, upon the second defense of its answer, the statute of limitations. The facts upon which this verdict was directed were these: This action was brought by writ dated October 4th, 1915, and came to trial in December, 1916. The Postal Telegraph Company was named as codefendant, but on the trial it developed that the owner of the pole was not this defendant, but was the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company. This company was subsequently, on December 15th, 1916, made a codefendant, and it appeared and pleaded among its defenses the statute of limitations, because the action against it was not begun within one year from the date when the plaintiff's intestate received her injuries. The direction of the verdict in favor of the Postal Telegraph-Cable Company, upon the ground stated in this defense, is the remaining reason of appeal requiring consideration.
The action by the plaintiff against this defendant was not begun within one year from the date when the plaintiff's intestate received her injuries, and under the statute (Public Acts of 1903, Chap. 149) the defense of the statute of limitations was good, and the verdict upon this ground in favor of this company properly directed.
The city of Waterbury contends that the effect of the court's action in directing this verdict was to deny the city its action over against this company. This cannot be true. The cause of action in the plaintiff's case against the city, or against the Telegraph-Cable Company, is a totally different action from that of the city against the Telegraph-Cable Company. The latter action had not accrued when the accident occurred. Until the final judgment was obtained by the plaintiff against the city, it could not have been known with certainty that the city would ever have a cause of action *667
over against the Telegraph-Cable Company. The statute of limitations, in the action by the plaintiff against this company, did not bar the action of the city against this company, since no statute of limitations as to this cause of action began to run in favor of the Telegraph-Cable Company until the final judgment against the city and the right of action over against the Telegraph-Cable Company accrued. The statute of limitations does not begin to run until the accrual of the action. Hull v. Thoms,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.