Kost v. Town of Litchfield, No. 052385 (Dec. 4, 1991)
This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 10485 (Kost v. Town of Litchfield, No. 052385 (Dec. 4, 1991)) 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 plaintiffs claim, inter alia, that the defendant has violated General Statutes
On November 14, 1991, the defendant filed a motion to strike the complaint on the grounds that it fails to allege that the town, by some positive act, drained any water into or opened any water course on the CT Page 10486 plaintiffs' land, and that it fails to lee that the damage complained of was unnecessary.
The motion to strike provided for in Practice Book 151-158. A motion to strike tests the legal sufficiency of a pleading and "admits all facts well pleaded" Ferryman v. Groton,
In its memorandum in support of its motion to strike, the defendant claims that the plaintiffs have not alleged that the defendant drained water onto the plaintiffs'' land or that any alleged damage was unnecessary. The defendants further claim that the plaintiffs' have failed to allege any facts in support of such claims. Consequently, the defendant states, the complaint should be stricken. The plaintiffs in their memorandum in opposition to the motion to strike, claim that the complaint does state an adequate cause of action pursuant to General Statutes 13a138.
General Statutes
(a) Persons authorized to construct or to repair highways may make or clear any watercourse or place for draining off the water therefrom into or through any person's land so far as necessary to drain to drain off such water and, when It is necessary to make any drain upon or through any person's land or the purpose named in this section, it done in such way as to do the least damage to such land.
(b) Nothing in this section shall be as construed as to allow the drainage of water from such highways into, upon, through or under the yard of any dwelling house, or into or upon yards and enclosures used exclusively for the storage and sale of goods and merchandise.
Id.
This section is, essentially, identical. to General Statutes 2134 (Revised, 1949). In accordance with General Statutes
In paragraph seven of their amended complaint, the plaintiffs have alleged that the defendant failed to discharge its highway surface drainage CT Page 10487 in a manner least damaging to the plaintiffs'' land. Indeed, the plaintiffs go on to list specific ways by which the defendant failed to comply with General Statutes
PICKETT, J.
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1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 10485, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kost-v-town-of-litchfield-no-052385-dec-4-1991-connsuperct-1991.