Gladwin v. Hotel Bond Co.

110 A.2d 486, 19 Conn. Super. Ct. 105, 19 Conn. Supp. 105, 1954 Conn. Super. LEXIS 106
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1954
DocketFile 93863
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 110 A.2d 486 (Gladwin v. Hotel Bond Co.) 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
Gladwin v. Hotel Bond Co., 110 A.2d 486, 19 Conn. Super. Ct. 105, 19 Conn. Supp. 105, 1954 Conn. Super. LEXIS 106 (Colo. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Molloy, J.

Helen Gladwin and Ellis Gladwin are husband and wife and were joined as parties plaintiff in this action. By agreement of counsel Ellis Glad-win was dropped as a party. Of the original defendants all were dropped except Frank Zazzaro, d.b.a. Tri Street Parking, and Lyman Fladger and Herman H. Cion, d.b.a. Bond Plaza Parking. So the action proceeds against these named defendants.

On the evening of March 25, 1952, the plaintiff, Helen Gladwin, in company with her husband and another couple, was planning to have dinner with them at Adajian Restaurant on Asylum Street, Hartford. Her husband drove the car with his passengers *107 from Ford Street into the parking lot, hereafter known as lot 2, operated, under lease, by defendants Fladger and Cion, and which is adjacent to the rear of buildings facing Pearl Street and on the north side thereof. To the north of this parking lot and adjacent thereto is the parking lot, hereafter known as lot 1, operated, under lease, by the defendant Zazzaro, with the driveway from Asylum Street opposite the Bond Hotel. The boundary line running east and west between the two parking lots was not marked by any fence or other permanent demarcation, but lengthy pieces of timber or logs were lying on the ground at irregular intervals along said boundary line. They were dark in color and not readily distinguishable from the ground on which they rested; indeed they were invisible to a casual passerby, in the dark or dim light. Exhibit A, a map, and the photos of the area, exhibits D, E, F, FF, and Gr, and exhibits 1, 2, 3 and 4, portray very well the locus involved, the true boundary line, the use made of the timbers, particularly the irregular line of the timbers as in exhibits 1 and 4.

At the time in question, the easterly half of the east-west boundary line referred to was dark, as the lots were provided with a single dim light located near the old trailer shown in the exhibits. Lot 2 was filled with cars parked closely together. One row of these cars faced north with their front tires up against the aforesaid timbers, lying along the boundary line. One and a half to two feet of the forward parts of this front row of ears extended over the timbers already hidden in the darkness and shadow of the closely parked cars.

Upon leaving the plaintiff’s car, the plaintiff and her party proceeded to make their way directly north in the direction of Asylum Street over the boundary line and over the Zazzaro lot 1, adjacent to Asylum Street. It was the shortest way to get to Asylum *108 Street and one of the routes customarily used by patrons of both parking lots to reach Asylum Street. The plaintiff was unaware. of the presence of the timbers in her path. She was in the lead. When she reached one of the timbers, unseen by her, her feet struck against it and she was caused to fall over the timber and to the ground. From this fall she received painful, severe and permanent injuries.

The conclusion, in the court’s mind, is irresistible that the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence; that the course she took and her manner of proceeding between the cars and directly toward Asylum Street was quite natural and reasonable, the conduct of a reasonably prudent person. Indeed, her party was directed by the attendant of lot 2 to take the course she did. It is the further firm conclusion of the court that there was negligence in the use of the timbers under the circumstances and in the manner they were used, particularly in the night season, and that that negligence was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s fall and her consequent injuries. The troublesome question, however, is whether the judgment should be against Zazzaro, alone, or against Fladger and Cion, alone, or against the owners of both lots. The court is inclined to the belief that judgment should be against the operators of both parid ng lots.

The position of the defendants Fladger and Cion is that the fall occurred on the land of Zazzaro, the claim being that the timbers, at the time in question, were north of the true boundary line, and therefore Zazzaro, being the possessor and in control of that land, is solely liable. The contention of the defendant Zazzaro, in short, aside from the claim of no negligence on his part and of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff, is that she had no legal right upon Ms lot, and therefore there is no liability. It seems to the court that the question is not that simple.

*109 The plaintiff seeks recovery against the defendants Fladger and Cion on the ground that she was a business visitor or invitee on their premises; that the timber causing the fall was on land in their possession and control, and they owed the duty to be accorded a business visitor or invitee; that they knew or should have known that the presence of the timber involved an unreasonable risk to the plaintiff; and that they took no steps to remedy the condition or to warn the plaintiff thereof.

The plaintiff’s claim of liability on the part of Zazzaro is based on the belief that she was also a business visitor on his land; that the timber was lying on land in his possession in violation of the duty he owed her as a business visitor; that the liability of Fladger and Cion does not preclude liability also on Zazzaro; that the timber involved an unreasonable risk to the plaintiff; that he took no steps to remedy the situation or to warn the plaintiff thereof; and finally, that Zazzaro is liable even if the plaintiff be deemed to be merely a gratuitous licensee.

For several years before Zazzaro leased, on November 8,1951, parking lot 1, it was leased to Fladger and Cion. During these several years parking lot 2 was also leased to Fladger and Cion, so that they operated both lots as a single parking area extending in an L-shape from Ford Street to the section facing Asylum Street opposite the Hotel Bond. During these years there was no dividing line between the two lots, although the title to the land was in differ ent owners. Cars, parked on what later became parking lot 1, often departed by traveling over what later became parking lot 2; and cars parked on lot 2 often departed over what became lot 1. Similarly with passengers, going from or coming to their cars on either lot, they crossed over the other lot. After Zazzaro leased lot 1, to all appearances the two parking lots were but one. Fladger and Cion continued to operate *110 under the name of “Bond Plaza Parking”; a sign to that effect facing the entrance on Ford Street; and Zazzaro began operating lot 1 under the name of “Tri Street Parking.” The free movement of vehicles over both lots was made possible by the operators of the lots in that at the southwest corner of lot 1 and at intervals north thereof, ample space was left between the timbers for such vehicular ingress and egress.

The practice of vehicular and pedestrian traffic over each others’ lot and the accommodation of each of the parldng lots to the uses of the other were not prohibited, indeed they were permitted and consented to. It was the well-known practice. This was, of course, for the common interest and mutual advantage of the operators of both lots. This was the situation on March 25,1952, the date of the plaintiff’s fall. All the operators knew of the practice of vehicular and pedestrian travel over their lots.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 A.2d 486, 19 Conn. Super. Ct. 105, 19 Conn. Supp. 105, 1954 Conn. Super. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gladwin-v-hotel-bond-co-connsuperct-1954.