326 A.2d 848 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1974
The plaintiff, administrator of the estate of the decedent, Rodney A. Plourde, brought this action against The Hartford Electric Light Company and Northeast Utilities Company, alleging that the current transmitted on lines supported by a high tension electric tower maintained by the defendants, caused the decedent's death and that the defendants, thereby, are liable for the decedent's loss of enjoyment of his normal life and life's activities and the funeral expense incurred by the estate. While both counts of the complaint, to which certain amendments have been made, claim that the decedent's death was proximately caused by the defendants' negligence, it is further alleged that the electric current, as maintained by the defendants, constitutes an agency which is "inherently dangerous and intrinsically dangerous and ultra hazardous." The complaint against the Northeast Utilities Company *193 has been withdrawn. The defendant, The Hartford Electric Light Company, has demurred to both counts of the complaint to the extent that the complaint seeks to impose upon this defendant liability without fault based upon the plaintiff's contention that the agency maintained by this defendant is inherently dangerous and ultrahazardous.
A demurrer properly may be addressed to counts in a pleading insofar as such counts allege facts which are insufficient to support a particular cause of action contained within the counts. Practice Book § 106. A demurrer addressed to an entire count which contains a valid cause of action cannot be sustained. Rossignol v. Danbury School of Aeronautics,Inc.,
The defendant, The Hartford Electric Light Company, demurs to the cause of action which would impose liability without fault on the grounds that (1) the doctrine invoked by the plaintiff is not supported by facts which necessarily must be pleaded and (2) the transmission of electricity, as alleged in the complaint, is not, as a matter of law, intrinsically dangerous and ultrahazardous, because it does not necessarily and obviously expose others to harm irrespective of due care.
The first ground of the defendant's demurrer can be disposed of quickly because its brief and oral argument reveal that essentially its technical attack amounts to a claim that certain language fromCaporale v. C. W. Blakeslee Sons, Inc.,
The second ground of the defendant's demurrer goes beyond any claimed technical defect in the pleading by arguing that as a matter of law the transmission of electricity by high-tension wires is not intrinsically dangerous and ultrahazardous. A complaint is tested on demurrer by the facts provable under its allegations. Benson v. HousingAuthority,
There is no direct authority in this state which has conclusively categorized generated electricity on high-tension lines for the purpose of deciding whether such an agency or instrumentality is ultrahazardous and inherently dangerous. The Supreme Court in McAdam v. Central Ry. Electric Co.,
A demurrer is the proper remedy before trial by which to determine whether the allegations of the complaint state a good cause of action, and if the demurrer is sustained, the time, effort and expense of a useless trial are saved. Rutt v. Roche,
Accordingly, the demurrer of the defendant, The Hartford Electric Light Company, is sustained insofar as both counts of the complaint purport to impose liability without fault upon this defendant because the agency maintained and operated by it is inherently dangerous, intrinsically dangerous, and ultrahazardous.