103 A. 654 | Conn. | 1918
The complaint in this case was demurred to upon the ground that it appeared that no sufficient notice descriptive of the plaintiff's injuries, and of the time, place and cause of their occurrence, was given as required by § 2020 of the General Statutes as amended by Chapter 168 of the Public Acts of 1909. The notice in question, signed by the plaintiff, reads as follows: —
"South Manchester, Conn., Oct. 2, 1915.
Town of Manchester, South Manchester, Conn.
I hereby give you notice that on Tuesday evening, September 28th, while walking along the sidewalk or sidepath on the north side of Hartford Road near the James Loomis place, so called, I stepped into a gully which I am informed has been in existence at that place *553 for several months, and sustained a fall. By reason of the fall I suffered severe sprains and one or more of the ligaments of my foot were broken. I am now under the care of Dr. Rice. I intend to claim damages therefor."
We may assume that there was but one sidewalk on the north side of the Hartford Road; therefore the notice necessarily implies that the place of the accident was upon the sidewalk on the north side of this Hartford Road. After this follows the statement that the plaintiff was injured near the James Loomis place. It does not appear that there was another person by that name thereabouts. The defect is described as a gully in the sidewalk which, it is indirectly stated, had been in existence for several months. Such a defect could have been easily identified, unless we are to assume that there were several such defects in that immediate vicinity. Thus we have the four facts which identify the place of the injuries, the name of the road, the side of this road, that it was near the residence of a certain individual, and a gully in the walk which had been in existence for months. This indicates clearly enough the place of the accident.
Counsel for the defendant contend that the cause of the accident is not stated in the notice with reasonable clearness. The substance of the statement upon this subject is that the plaintiff was injured by stepping into a gully in the sidewalk by reason of which she sustained a fall. These facts were sufficient to direct the attention of the town with reasonable certainty to the cause of the accident so that an intelligent investigation could be made by the officers of the town. This satisfied the spirit and purpose of the statute. Delaney v. Waterbury Milldale Tramway Co.,
The notice attacked states that as a result of the accident the plaintiff suffered severe sprains, one or *554
more of the ligaments of her foot were broken, and that she was under the care of Dr. Rice. The defendant urges that this part of the notice is vague and uncertain. The purpose of such a notice is not to allege all the circumstances necessary to support an action, but to give to the municipality a general description of the injuries complained of. This has been done in the present case.Cassidy v. Southbury,
The notice is not full and complete as to the time of the accident, but not so indefinite as to render it absolutely invalid. It is dated October 2d 1915, which was Saturday. It is stated that the plaintiff was injured on Tuesday evening, September 28th. An examination of the calendar shows that September 28th, 1915, was Tuesday. The notice should be interpreted as a whole, and when this is done its natural and ordinary meaning is that it related to an occurrence which happened four days before the date of the notice. Judicial notice takes the place of proof, and as a means of establishing facts it is superior to evidence. Thayer's Cases on Evidence (2d Ed.) 20, 21. Courts take cognizance as to the coincidence of the days of the week with the days of the month, and of the days of the month with those of the year, and an almanac may be referred to in this connection. 1 Chamberlayne on Evidence, §§ 704, 727. When this notice is so considered in its entirety, it is hardly conceivable that any person in the exercise of ordinary care and intelligence could have been misled as to the date of the accident because the notice failed to directly state that it occurred in 1915. In reaching the conclusion that this notice was not defective, we have considered a statute relating to this subject, enacted in 1917, which contains these provisions: "No notice given under the provisions of this section [General Statutes, § 2020] shall be held invalid or insufficient by reason of an inaccuracy in describing the injury, or in stating the *555
time, place or cause of its occurrence, if it appear that there was no intention to mislead or that such town, city, corporation or borough was not in fact misled thereby." Public Acts of 1917, Chap. 66. This Act applied to pending cases and took effect upon its passage, which was March 28th, 1917. The record discloses that the decision by the court below upon the demurrer interposed by the defendant was rendered July 17th, 1917, about four months after this statute took effect. This Act, although retroactive, did not affect rights, but did embrace the mode of redress. The latter may properly be kept open for modification by statute.Atwood v. Buckingham,
It does not appear that the Act of 1917 was brought to the attention of the Superior Court, nor that it was relied upon by the plaintiff. "It was, however, the law of the land, which the parties and the court were conclusively presumed to know. Errors arising from the absence of actual knowledge in such a case are always the subject of review." Cunningham v. Cunningham,
The omission to state in the body of the notice the year when the accident occurred does not warrant the defendant's claim that the notice was absolutely defective on this account. When the notice is read as a whole, as it should be, it cannot be fairly said that it now appears that there was any intention to mislead the town as to the time when this accident occurred, or that the town was in fact misled thereby.
There is error and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.