136 A. 872 | Conn. | 1927
The complaint alleges that there was a tree standing on land belonging to the defendant, the town of Plainville, adjacent to the traveled portion of Pine Street, a public highway in this town, and near the northerly boundary of the highway, and that the tree protruded over the traveled portion of the highway in such a manner as to endanger the safety of the traveling public; that while plaintiff's decedent was a passenger in an automobile driven by one Peter Mennone along this highway, without negligence on his part, the automobile ran into and against this tree and as a result the plaintiff's decedent, Rose Mennone, sustained injuries from which she subsequently died.
The defendant demurred to the complaint on the ground, among others, because it is not alleged that prior to the institution of the action written notice, in accordance with § 1414 of the General Statutes, was given defendant by plaintiff of an injury to his decedent by means of a defect in this road. If this action is one to recover damages for injury suffered by means of a defective highway, a failure to give the notice required to be given by this statute is fatal to the *63 maintenance of the action and the demurrer was properly sustained.
We give what we term an approximation to a definition of a defect in a highway, in Hewison v. NewHaven,
The plaintiff seeks to avoid this conclusion by construing the complaint as one to recover damages for injury suffered in consequence of the "negligence on the part of the defendant in creating and maintaining a nuisance." The defect complained of was a tree growing upon defendant's land in such proximity to the traveled portion of the highway that it protruded into the highway in such manner as to endanger the safety of the traveling public. The obligation of this defendant to maintain this highway was a governmental duty "`not imposed by the common law, but is wholly a creature of the statute.'" Bartram v. *64 Sharon,
A municipality upon which is imposed a public governmental duty is not liable for the nonperformance or negligent performance of such duty. Hewison v. NewHaven,
The complaint does not allege that the defendant was, in its ownership and use of the land upon which the tree is stated to have stood, acting without the scope of its governmental duty. Nor does it attempt to allege the resulting injury as caused by some direct or positive act on the part of the defendant not within the scope of its imposed governmental duty. In a case falling fairly within this principle, the municipality "becomes liable like any other wrongdoer for the resulting injury." Rudnyai v. Harwinton,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.