145 A. 644 | Conn. | 1929
The plaintiff offered evidence to prove that on December 7th, 1926, while she was walking on the sidewalk on the westerly side of Main Street in Bridgeport at a point near the corner of Elm Street and in front of a building occupied as a store by one Nothnagle, she slipped on ice and snow which had been permitted to gather and remain on the sidewalk, fell and was injured. No serious question is or can be made that, if the charge was free from harmful error, the evidence as to the facts was sufficient to justify the verdict which the jury rendered. Discussion may be confined to certain assignments pertaining to refusal to charge as requested and to the charge as given.
The street line in front of the building occupied by Nothnagle is six feet west of the west curb of Main Street, the distance between the west curb line and the building is 12.91 feet, and six feet west of the westerly street line is what is known as a building line. In the space between the street line and the building there is located a vault light, made of glass and iron, which extends across the entire front of the building. The *103 defendant claimed and offered evidence to prove that the plaintiff slipped and fell on the space outside and to the west of the westerly street line, between that line and the building, and requested a charge that if the jury found "that the plaintiff did not fall on the sidewalk proper, but on the . . . vault light or on any part of the so-called sidewalk outside the public highway boundary" their verdict should be for the defendant. The charge on this point was as follows: "The plaintiff claims that she fell in the space between the curb line and the street line. The defendant claims that she fell at a point west of the street line. . . . In considering the obligation of the defendant in this case you need spend no time in determining whether the plaintiff fell at a point east or at a point west of the street line of Main Street. The obligation of the defendant was the same for two reasons: First, the duty of the city of Bridgeport to use reasonable care in keeping all of its sidewalks reasonably safe for travel by pedestrians is commensurate with its right of control, and that extends to all sidewalks necessary for public convenience. A sidewalk and a street commonly used as such by the public for a course of years is none the less a sidewalk because it was planned and built by private enterprise. Second, an object or a state of things outside of the line of the street may render travel unsafe and make a city liable for an injury occasioned by it."
The first of the reasons so given had unmistakable reference to holdings in Manchester v. Hartford,
The same reasons appear to be applicable to the instant case. We can conceive of no measures of protection against snow and ice on the property of the abutting owner which the city could have taken, admissibly or reasonably, within the street limits, nor can we perceive any more right to remove it than these cases accorded the municipality to erect a railing or take other protective or remedial measures on private ground. The conditions disclosed by the finding do not constitute a common or public nuisance endangering public travel which the city might have the power to abate or cause to be abated, as such. Dunham
v. New Britain,
The cases which accord to a person injured by sources of danger on private property adjacent to public sidewalks the legal status of a traveler rather than a trespasser are not inconsistent with this view; on the contrary, they tend to indicate that liability arising from such defects as are here in question rests primarily *106
upon the person or corporation owning or controlling such abutting property instead of upon the municipality.Sedita v. Steinberg,
Stone v. Attleborough,
The finding in the present case is barren of any claimed facts tending to establish either dedication of construction, repair, or other exercise of physical control by the defendant city, over that part of the sidewalk situated west of the street line. Upon this finding the instruction under consideration was incorrect and the defendant was entitled, instead, to one in substantial accordance with its twentieth request to charge. It follows, also, from this conclusion, that the interrogatory, requested by the defendant, adapted to disclose the jury's finding as to whether the plaintiff fell within or outside the street line, should have been submitted.
The defendant assigns error in failing to charge, as requested, that if the jury found that the owner of the adjoining property had done all that reasonable *108
care required it to do under the circumstances and all that the city could have required it to do to make the sidewalk reasonably safe for travel, they should find that the city was not negligent. Instruction was given, and not appealed from, that "when it is shown that a property owner has done all that is necessary to make a sidewalk reasonably safe, either by clearing the walks from ice or snow, by sprinkling sand or ashes over the walk when recurring conditions of snow being tracked in from the roadways by foot passengers crossing the roadways adjacent to the scene of the alleged accident make it difficult to remove the ice or frozen and trodden snow, then the town or city may be considered to have used due care if you find that in all other respects it has used due care." We have recently had occasion to point out that the measures taken by the owner of property adjoining a public sidewalk toward cleaning it or otherwise safeguarding its condition avail to relieve the city of liability either if the walk was thereby rendered reasonably safe under all the circumstances and conditions surrounding the city, or if the act, had it been done by the city instead of the property owner, would have been sufficient to constitute reasonable care on the part of the city. Kristiansen v. Danbury,
The plaintiff claimed to have proved that the defendant *109
had permitted ice and snow "to gather and remain on the sidewalk for an unreasonable length of time." The trial court charged the jury concerning the effect, as to notice to the defendant city, of the existence of such conditions "for such a length of time that with reasonable diligence and care on the part of its officers it ought to have known of such defect." Without more, the "officers" as referred to might fairly be regarded as those of the street department, or similar immediate representatives of the city charged with a duty of remedying or reporting defects in the streets and sidewalks, and the charge in this respect held to involve no prejudice to the defendant. But after referring to the evidence offered by the plaintiff on this point, the charge continued: "It is your duty to determine if the plaintiff has proved by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the sidewalk in question . . . was defective by reason of snow and ice, and if it had been so for such a period of time that the city with competent officers and police department should have had notice of such condition." Notice to a policeman ordinarily is not notice to the municipality except where it is shown that he is charged with the duty of remedying or reporting defects. Cummings
v. Hartford,
The remaining reasons of appeal pertaining to the charge develop no prejudicial defects, and such other requests as the defendant was entitled to have granted were sufficiently acceded to.
There is error and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.