Belardinelli v. Pinewood Lake Ass'n, No. Cv87 0239891 S (Apr. 8, 1993)
This text of 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 3419 (Belardinelli v. Pinewood Lake Ass'n, No. Cv87 0239891 S (Apr. 8, 1993)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Therefore, the decisive question of law on this branch of the case is whether the motorman, under all the circumstances disclosed by the evidence, was under any legal obligation to keep a reasonably careful lookout for possible drunken men lying on the trolley track.
We think he was. The rule that the owner of property is not ordinarily bound to anticipate and provide for, or look out for, the presence of trespassers, is founded on the legal assumption that trespassers will not ordinarily he there. 1 Street, Foundations of Legal Liability, p. 155 note. But if the owner or his servants know that the presence of trespassers is to be expected, then the common obligation of exercising reasonable care gives rise to the correlative duty of taking such precautions against injuring trespassers as a reasonable foresight of harm ought to suggest.
Defendants point out that Morin v. Bell Court Condominium Assn., Inc.,
Whether the defendants Roehrich are chargeable with knowledge of trespassers, whether they had dangerous conditions on their property and what would be reasonable care under the circumstances present genuine issues of material fact for the trier. The motions for summary judgment are denied. CT Page 3421
E. EUGENE SPEAR, JUDGE
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