The defendant sent notice of the claim letter to its insurance agent who in turn filed a form with the carrier which indicated the date of injury — July 6, 1999. Still within the 90-day period, the plaintiff sent a letter to the insurance carrier which again identified the date of injury and gave a general description of the injuries by attaching to the correspondence a copy of a "discharge summary" from the hospital that treated the injured child.
First, it should be noted that the "Notice" provided to the defendant through the August letter is inadequate under the statute. As indicated, it does not disclose the date of injury, the fact of injury or describe the injury. The plaintiff cannot seriously contest and the If court will not cite to the numerous appellate authorities to the effect that if this is all the notice the defendant received, §
But the plaintiff claims that within the 90-day period all the requisite information, absent in the August letter, was, in fact, sent to the defendant's insurer at the direction of the defendant.
This court wrote Martinez v. City of Meriden, 1995 WL 670093, which given the foregoing facts can be said to bar the granting of the motion. However, a recent appellate court case must be analyzed. Fields v.Housing Authority,
The Fields court directly analogized its interpretation of the notice requirements of §
Although the Fields case does not appear to be factually explicit on this question the court will accept the plaintiff's construction of the case that, in fact, the necessary written notice required under §
But frankly what is implicit in Fields leads this court to believe its approach in Martinez was incorrect. That is, Fields, as a predicate to its whole discussion, assumed that written notice to the chairman or secretary of the housing authority was required for the action to continue to be viable — that is why in lieu of such notice having been given it had to analyze whether "actual notice" by way of oral notice to housing authority employees or waiver of this requirement by the defendant's insurance carrier could be a substitute for the written notice requirement of the statute.
In this case, the August letter to the defendant clearly did not provide adequate written notice of all the statutorily referred to factors in §
This is a harsh result and difficult to accept especially in light of the fact that there is no hearing mechanism provided where, for example, the plaintiff in a situation such as this would have the burden of showing (1) that actual notice was provided; and (2) the provision of actual notice did not in any way harm the interests of the municipality. That allocation of burdens of proof would seem to protect any justifiable interest a municipality would have in protecting the integrity and purposes of the notice requirements under statutes of this type. But neither statute or case law provide for such a solution so despite its prior ruling in Martinez the court feels constrained by the necessary implications of appellate authority to grant the motion to dismiss the §
The nuisance count must also be dismissed in light of the explicit ruling of the court in Sanzone v. Board of Police Commissioners,
Corradino, J.
