Jacko v. Bridgeport
This text of 213 A.2d 452 (Jacko v. Bridgeport) 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
The plaintiff's complaint is in two counts. The allegations of the first count are fundamentally framed to set forth a cause of action based on the so-called defective highway statute, General Statutes §
The defendant has denied the essential allegations of the plaintiff's complaint and has proffered four special defenses to both counts: assumption of risk; contributory negligence; governmental immunity; in a separate paragraph (No. 2), separate and distinct from the other pleaded defenses, the defendant has alleged that the "plaintiff's injuries . . . were caused by his own fault in that his conduct was such as to be equivalent to invitation of injury or, at least, indifference to consequence." the plaintiff insists that these defenses are inapplicable to the second count, it being his contention that this count sounds only in absolute nuisance, and he has demurred to them.
Even as against an absolute nuisance — a nuisance which is intentional in the sense that its creator intended to bring about the conditions found to *Page 75
constitute a nuisance — assumption of risk may be a defense. Beckwith v. Stratford,
While a municipality, in an action relating to an absolute nuisance, may not shield itself from liability on the basis of contributory negligence or governmental immunity (see Parker v. Hartford,
The allegations of the second count do not limit the plaintiff to proof of an absolute nuisance only. They are susceptible of a construction which would admit evidence tending to establish a cause of action for both an absolute nuisance and one arising from negligence. The defendant, therefore, was entitled *Page 76
to plead all the defenses to which the demurrer is addressed. If the evidence at the trial establishes the nuisance to be absolute rather than one arising in negligence, the court can take appropriate action relative to the nonapplicability of any of the defenses. However, until that contingency occurs, the defendant is entitled also to maintain its defenses not applicable to an absolute nuisance, i.e., contributory negligence and governmental immunity. Hoffman
v. Bristol, supra, 391; Aerotic Corporation
v. Greenwich,
The demurrer is overruled in toto.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
213 A.2d 452, 26 Conn. Super. Ct. 73, 26 Conn. Supp. 73, 1965 Conn. Super. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacko-v-bridgeport-connsuperct-1965.