12 Conn. Supp. 321 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1944
This action is brought to recover damages *322 for personal injuries sustained by reason of the fact that the plaintiff was struck in the face by a discus thrown by a person not a party to this action in a public park maintained by the defendant. The action sounds in nuisance, the allegation in the complaint being that "in allowing and permitting the game of discus throwing in a public park without any supervision and at a place where young children were apt to be, with the likelihood that injury would result to innocent passersby from such an inherently dangerous game, the defendant was guilty of creating and maintaining a nuisance." To the complaint the defendant has set up by way of special defense the defense of governmental immunity and to that defense this demurrer is directed.
In ruling on this demurrer it is necessary to have in mind the distinction between absolute or positive nuisances on the one hand and nuisances created or maintained by mere negligence on the other. Beckwith vs. Town of Stratford,
It is true that it is stated in the opinion in Hoffman vs. Cityof Bristol,
Again in Parker vs. City of Hartford,
It, of course, must be recognized that there is a tendency to limit as far as possible the rather harsh doctrine of governmental immunity. It likewise is true that the Connecticut Supreme Court of Errors has never had occasion to decide the exact question here presented. However, it is firmly established in our law that a municipality is not liable for the negligence of its agents in the performance of a governmental function, and logic leads irresistibly to the conclusion that where negligence of an agent of a municipality is the real cause of a plaintiff's injuries, such plaintiff is barred from recovery whether the negligence has operated directly to cause the injuries or has operated through failure to prevent or abate an inherently dangerous condition. If contributory *324 negligence is a defense to a cause of action sounding in nuisance when the nuisance is one resulting solely from a failure to exercise due care, as is conceded in the Beckwith case supra, there is no logical escape from the conclusion that governmental immunity is also a good defense in such an action brought against a municipality.
For the foregoing reasons the demurrer is overruled.