58 A.2d 517 | Conn. | 1948
This is an appeal of the defendant from a judgment for the plaintiff. With such corrections as the defendant is entitled to have made in the finding, the facts may be stated as follows: On May 5, 1944, at about 1:30 p.m., the plaintiff, a woman sixty-eight years old, was walking on a public sidewalk of the defendant city. She was accompanying her daughter, who was pushing a light stroller in which was her small child. It was a bright sunny day. The plaintiff was walking in a normal manner with one hand on the stroller. She was wearing oxford shoes with a low wide heel. She caught her heel in a hole in the sidewalk and fell, sustaining severe injuries. The hole was about two and one-half inches wide and an inch or an inch and a half deep and was part of a crevice that extended across *452 the entire walk. The walk had been in substantially this condition for about five years and was in practically the same condition when later examined by plaintiff's witnesses. The side of the hole nearer the plaintiff as she approached it was about vertical and had a ragged edge. She had walked over the sidewalk before but had not noted its condition and did not see the hole at the time of her fall. There was nothing about the type of the defect that would cause her reasonably to anticipate its presence. The sidewalk was on the principal street of the defendant city and there was considerable traffic over it. The defect had continued such a length of time that reasonable inspection of the streets should have disclosed it to the defendant in reasonable time to have repaired it.
On these facts the trial court reached the conclusion that the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence; that the sidewalk was not reasonably safe; that it had not been reasonably safe for such a length of time as to give the defendant constructive notice of it; that the defendant had failed to perform its statutory duty to repair; and that its failure to do so was the sole proximate cause of the plaintiff's injuries.
Preliminary claims of the defendant are that the complaint is insufficient because it fails to allege that the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence, and that there was a variance between the allegations and the proof. No such claims were made before the trial court and we do not consider them here. Conn. App. Proc. 44; Hooker v. Hooker,
The defendant claims that the depression was too slight to constitute a defect such as a municipality would he responsible for. The trial court found that it was a hole and that it caused the plaintiff's fall through no fault of her own, and concluded that the sidewalk was not reasonably safe for public travel and was defective within the meaning of the statute. While the last two statements are part of the trial court's conclusions, they were in part, at least, based on the evidence, and we may resort to this to determine whether they were correct. Cumbo v. E. B. McGurk, Inc.,
The defendant claims that the facts do not support the conclusion that the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence, particularly because it appears that the plaintiff was walking uphill, behind a baby carriage which obstructed her vision and on a sidewalk with which she was familiar. The size of the baby carriage does not appear. The finding describes it as a "light straw stroller" and recites that there was nothing by way of warning in the locality to call attention to the defect. These findings are not attacked and are substantiated by the defendant's photographs, exhibits in the case, which indicate that at an angle the defect appears to be no more than a crack in the walk. "[The plaintiff] had the right to assume, until the contrary was evident or reasonably should have been evident to her, that the city maintained the walk in reasonably safe condition for the ordinary use of a pedestrian." Tuckel v. Hartford,
The only ruling on evidence necessary to discuss is the following. A witness testified that he had "recently" taken measurements of the defect. He *455
was asked to give them. The defendant objected on the ground that if the measurements had been taken recently the testimony would have no probative value. The objection was overruled but no answer to the question is noted. In its brief, the defendant seeks to add facts and circumstances apparently taken from the transcript of the evidence certified in support of its attack on the finding. Resort in this instance cannot be had to the evidence for the purpose of considering the ruling. Practice Book 359; Leahy v. Cheney,
A final claim of the defendant is that the judgment is excessive. The chief basis of the claim appears to be that the plaintiff has diabetes, her life expectancy is brief and she has no earning capacity. As the defendant itself points out, personal injury cases rarely afford a basis for the computation of damages by mathematical processes. Samaha v. Mauro,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.