2 Conn. App. 680 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1984
This is a negligence action in which the plaintiffs seek compensation from the defendants for damage to realty and personalty caused by fire.
The plaintiffs claim that the trial court erred in giving an instruction to the jury on the doctrine of intervening cause and in its instructions on the foreseeability of harm to the plaintiffs.
The first claim of the plaintiffs is that the trial court erred in charging the jury that “[t]he defendants claim, as I understand it, that the discharge of the fireworks was . . . an intervening cause between the bringing of them here in violation of the statute, if you find that there was a violation, and the fire.”
One of the allegations of the plaintiff’s complaint was that "the defendant, Grant Hamilton, possessed fireworks and brought them to Connecticut from out of state, in violation of Section 29-97 of the Connecticut General Statutes.”
The second claim of error of the plaintiffs is that the court instructed the jury that there was a foreseeability requirement for the jury to consider in its determination of proximate cause. The portion of the charge to which the plaintiffs excepted,
There is no error.
The plaintiffs are the owners of a home which was leased to the parents of the defendant Grant Hamilton. The other defendant, Brian Farrell, is a friend of Grant Hamilton. Both were minors on the date of the alleged negligence. The action was withdrawn as to a third defendant, and a summary judgment was rendered in favor of the parents of Grant Hamilton.
This appeal, originally filed in the Supreme Court, was transferred to this court. Public Acts, Spec. Sess., June, 1983, No. 83-29, § 2 (c).
The plaintiffs’ brief on page three states as a fact that the defendant Brian Farrell lit a firework which went under Grant Hamilton’s bed.
This instruction applies only to the defendant Grant Hamilton.
General Statutes (Rev. to 1981) § 29-97 is now § 29-357.
The plaintiffs excepted to the following portion of the charge: “The test which you should apply is this: Would the ordinary, reasonably prudent child of similar age, judgment and experience, being in the same position of the defendant, knowing what they knew or should have known, have anticipated that harm of the general nature as that suffered by the plaintiff was likely to result unless reasonable care was used.” The sentence immediately preceding this portion of the charge was: “The ultimate test of the existence of a duty to use reasonable care is to be found in the foreseeability that harm may result if that care is not exercised. By that is not meant that one charged with negligence must be found actually to have foreseen the probability of harm or that the particular injury which resulted was foreseeable.”