372 A.2d 985 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1974
The first count of the writ alleges that on or about January 20, 1973, the plaintiff sustained injuries arising out of the intoxicated condition of two or three persons, names unknown. The complaint also alleges that, on or about that date, the defendant or its agents, as owners and operators of certain premises in Bristol, sold alcoholic liquors to those two or three persons and that, in consequence of the sale, they caused personal injuries to the plaintiff.
The allegations of the first count clearly attempt to impose liability on the defendant by virtue of the so-called dram shop act. General Statutes *406
§
The defendant's demurrer to the first count contends that the sixty-day notice is insufficient, under §
Claims under the dram shop act constitute a cause of action unknown to the common law. Pierce
v. Albanese,
Section
The purpose of the specific requirement as to the names of the purchasers of the liquor is to give the defendant such information as will assist it in its self-defense. Greenberg v. Waterbury,
The giving of a notice complying in all respects with the statute goes to the very existence of a valid cause of action on the first count. State v. AetnaCasualty Surety Co.,
It may be observed that this is not a case where the names of the individuals are in fact furnished, but are somewhat inaccurate, or misleading, in part or in whole. In the present situation, no information whatsoever was contained in the notice, relative to the names. The sixty-day notice was therefore invalid.
Accordingly, the defendant's demurrer to the first count is sustained.