200 A. 343 | Conn. | 1938
The substituted complaint alleges that the plaintiffs are the owners of certain docks, piers, buildings, franchises, rights and privileges located on and appurtenant to the Stamford canal and turning basin. The canal is a public, navigable waterway under the jurisdiction of the federal government and with the turning basin at its upper end has been used by the plaintiffs and their predecessors in title for over fifty years in their operations as common carriers engaged in interstate commerce. A brook or natural watercourse empties into the basin at its northeasterly corner. This brook and its tributaries have been largely confined to culverts and drains where they flow through the defendant city. Connected therewith are certain storm water sewers constructed by the defendant for the purpose of caring for surface water, including a large eight foot drain which empties into the basin about eight hundred feet north of the entrance from the canal to the basin. Large quantities of silt, sand, filth, mud and leaves collect on the streets of Stamford, are washed into these brooks and drains, are discharged by them into the canal and basin and, by the action of the tides, are washed to and fro so as to fill up the basin and render it unfit for navigation. As a result, the plaintiffs have been put to large expense for dredging. The operation of the plaintiffs' boats has been imperiled by these unlawful acts which constitute a private and public nuisance.
The defendant answered, denying all the allegations *344
in the complaint which alleged that the plaintiffs had been injured by debris being carried into the canal and basin by the drains and sewers, and also pleading a special defense. While inartificially drawn, this set up three defenses: That the acts complained of were performed in the exercise of the defendant's governmental functions; that any debris which found its way into the drains and sewers did so by reason of acts of God beyond the control of the defendant; and that any filling up of the canal and basin was caused by persons, circumstances or conditions unknown to the defendant and beyond its control. The plaintiffs demurred to this special defense, in so far as it purported to set up a defense that in performing the acts described in the complaint the defendant was carrying out a governmental function and also in so far as it purported to set up a defense that the injuries to the plaintiffs were the result of acts of God beyond the control of the defendant. The demurrer was overruled on the authority of Lovejoy v. Norwalk,
As pointed out by the defendant, it is under a legal obligation to maintain its highways in a reasonably safe condition for public travel; Bartram v. Sharon,
The demurrer admitted any facts provable under the special defense. Cashman v. Meriden Hospital,
The laudable attempt of the plaintiffs to present the issue as one of law must fail for the reasons stated. Although the ruling on the demurrer unnecessarily went to the merits of the defense, since it reached the correct result, it must stand.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.