Brown v. Dooling, No. Cv90 0032598s (Jan. 23, 1998)

1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 503
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1998
DocketNo. CV90 0032598S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 503 (Brown v. Dooling, No. Cv90 0032598s (Jan. 23, 1998)) 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.

Bluebook
Brown v. Dooling, No. Cv90 0032598s (Jan. 23, 1998), 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 503 (Colo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON ALL PENDING MOTIONS POST VERDICT The sailor has the compass, Loran, the Southern Cross and the North Star to guide the ship. Jurors are asked to voyage upon seas just as stormy, but setting a course is less certain. When the summations and charge are said and done, the jury is left to its reason and common sense and the course to which honest deliberations direct it. In this case, presenting numerous questions of first impression, the jury's two verdicts showed a respect for the case presented, the law which governed and their oaths taken. The verdicts are therefore upheld by this court.

Before the court are post verdict motions filed by the plaintiff to set aside the verdict, for new trial or additur and the defendants' motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

Because the jury could have reasonably reached the decision it did and no injustice was done, all such motions are denied.

Some discussion of the procedural history of the case is necessary. This is a wrongful death action brought under §52-555 of the Connecticut General Statutes by the plaintiff Douglas Brown as administrator of the estate of his late son, Gregory, who died in 1984. Defendants are Sergeant Patrick Dooling, III, Lieutenant Henry Povinelli, and Officers Edward O'Keefe and Frank Hosey, all of whom were Milford policemen at the time of plaintiff's decedent's death. § 52-555 does not create a separate cause of action in the deceased's survivors, but permits a plaintiff's cause of action to survive after his death and adds injuries which proximately caused his death.McKirdy v. Cascio, 142 Conn. 80, 84, 111 A.2d 555 (1955). The case was first brought in the U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut. The federal court action was dismissed on June 20, 1989 with prejudice as to the civil rights claims but without prejudice as to any pendent state claims. The action was recommenced under Connecticut's Accidental Failure of Suit statute, § 52-592. However, no service of the writ was made CT Page 505 within the one year time period within which that statute requires such actions to be served. Instead, the plaintiff relying on a saving statute, Gen. Stat. § 52-593a, delivered the process to the sheriff on what the jury could have found was the last day for service and the sheriff then served the process within the statutorily required 15 days of receiving it on all four individual defendants. This court held at trial that Gen. Stat. § 52-593a applied to cases like this which are recommenced under the accidental failure of suit statute after having been dismissed without prejudice by a federal court, because § 52-593a is a remedial statute designed to toll the applicable statute of limitations if the process commencing or so recommencing the lawsuit was timely delivered to the sheriff. At an earlier time, the action against the City of Milford was struck by the court, McGrath, J., and the plaintiff did not replead within the time permitted by law and withdrew against the City of Milford immediately prior to the commencement of evidence. The case was then bifurcated and the jury rendered general plaintiff's verdicts against all defendants on liability only. The jury then heard evidence as to damages from the decedent's mother and an economic expert and awarded nominal damages of one dollar in favor of the plaintiff and against all defendants. The plaintiff now moves, pursuant to Practice Book § 320, to set aside the damage verdict, for a new trial and/or additur. The defendants, pursuant to Practice Book § 321, move to set aside the verdict, and notwithstanding the verdict, to render judgment in favor of the defendants in accordance with their motion for directed verdict.

The plaintiff's decedent, Gregory Brown, committed suicide utilizing a shotgun, and the action before the court was brought by his fiduciary against four police officers who responded to a complaint of a possibly suicidal person at the home address of the deceased. The evidence was in conflict as to whether the police officers knew that the person who had called a fire department emergency line had identified Gregory Brown as the person contemplating suicide. The jury could have found that Gregory was a latchkey child who was left alone from the time he arrived home from school until the time a parent returned home. He had experienced continuing difficulties in school and his parents suspected a report card had been forged to make it appear his grades were passing when in fact he was flunking. It turned out their suspicions were right. Gregory was sent to school and his parents let it be known that they would check on the authenticity of the reported grades that day with school CT Page 506 personnel. Young Gregory learned in school that his fraud would be reported to his parents. After dismissal of students because of the end of the school day, Gregory Brown told neighborhood friends he was considering suicide rather than face parental discipline. One of them called a fire department emergency line telling the fire dispatcher that he feared his friend Gregory Brown was going to take his life. The caller's name and telephone number could not be confirmed by the police, although they attempted to do so. Ultimately, the call was routed through another fire dispatcher to a police dispatcher and to three different policemen. What was lost in the translation was at issue. In any event, police investigated. They did not call a parent or take other means to protect his life. They concluded Brown was the victim of a hoax call. That was in part based on his calm demeanor, cooperative attitude and denial that the family kept any firearms, although there were guns and ammunition all over the house. After they left the premises, Gregory Brown killed himself with a shotgun, leaving behind a suicide note.

While municipal employees generally have qualified immunity from tort liability for the performance of discretionary acts, an exception has been recognized where the circumstances have made it apparent to the employee that the failure to act would be likely to subject an identifiable person or narrow class of persons to imminent harm. Burns v. Board of Education,228 Conn. 640, 645, 638 A.2d 1 (1994).

The imminent harm exception is the only exception which seems pertinent since no other exception to the general qualified immunity accorded to such officers is invoked by the complaint. All parties in their briefs conceded this was the issue.

The court excluded evidence in limine of matters which might have been revealed by further investigations or searches because the determination of the imminent harm to identifiable person exception to governmental immunity must be judged on what was apparent and readily seen by the defendant officers, not on what was not so-visible. Burns, supra.

The municipal officer is immune for discretionary actions taken in good faith except where circumstances he has seen or heard have made it apparent to him that some identifiable person or class of persons is in imminent peril if he or she fails to act.

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Bluebook (online)
1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-dooling-no-cv90-0032598s-jan-23-1998-connsuperct-1998.