Lambert v. City of New Haven

30 A.2d 923, 129 Conn. 647, 1942 Conn. LEXIS 283
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 28, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 30 A.2d 923 (Lambert v. City of New Haven) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lambert v. City of New Haven, 30 A.2d 923, 129 Conn. 647, 1942 Conn. LEXIS 283 (Colo. 1942).

Opinion

Ells, J.

This is an action brought by a pupil of a public school conducted by the city of New Haven for damages resulting from an injury sustained in falling on an inside stairway of the school building. The complaint alleges various acts of negligence on the part of the defendant city. There is no claim of nuisance. Upon the facts stated in the complaint there was no liability on the part of the city of New Haven, but it did not claim immunity upon the ground that it was engaged in a governmental duty. The case *649 was therefore tried as a negligence action, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff and the defendant has appealed.

It is the settled law of this state that a municipal corporation is not liable for negligence in the performance of a governmental function. Under any ordinary circumstances, for it to compensate one injured by such negligence might well be to use public funds and impose a burden upon its taxpayers for an unlawful purpose, which it has no right to do. New London v. Brainard, 22 Conn. 553, 556; Gregory v. Bridgeport, 41 Conn. 76, 86; Hoyle v. Putnam, 46 Conn. 56, 61. Certainly none of its officers would have power to waive the right of a municipality to any immunity from liability which the law gives it, in the absence of special authority given them by the city. Nicholaus v. Bridgeport, 117 Conn. 398, 401, 167 Atl. 826. It was stated in the oral argument that the city was insured against liability of this nature, but/ if so, that would almost of necessity mean the use of money of the city to pay the premiums for such insurance, which would be open to the objections we have stated; and it would be. a doubtful policy to sanction generally the voluntary incurrence of liability by municipalities in such a case in reliance upon insurance, in view of the fact that recovery under such policies might be defeated because of a failure to comply with their terms. The question is not, however, before us on this record, has not been argued and as in any event a new trial must be ordered we leave it with this comment.

The finding, with certain corrections we have made in it, may be summarized as follows: It had snowed during the night, and there was some snow in the schoolyard on the morning in question. Certain selected children acted as monitors, and it was their duty to preserve order among their schoolmates. The *650 plaintiff, a yard monitor in the boys’ yard, entered the building through the boys’ entrance some time between 8:30 and 8:40 o’clock and went up the seven-step stairway. An inside monitor, stationed at the top, asked him to get the children remaining in the yard to come into the building. The plaintiff descended the stairway between 8:40 and 8:45, and upon reaching the second step from the bottom slipped on hard-packed snow and fell. Customarily two heavy corrugated steel mats were placed at the foot of the stairway, one in front of and adjacent to the other, each mat being about five feet long and three feet wide. A principal purpose of so maintaining the mats was to allow boys entering the building in the wintertime to scrape the snow from their shoes so as not to track it onto the stairs. The mats were not there on the morning in question. The large number of boys who entered promptly upon the ringing of the first bell at 8:30 tracked snow onto the stairway and it soon became packed down and slippery in some places.

At the time the plaintiff fell, another monitor, with the permission of the school principal, was sweeping the stairway with a broom and removing snow tracked in by the boys from the yard, and had cleaned the top four steps, sweeping the loose snow and digging , the hard snow off with the end of the broom without great success. He was on the bottom step at the time of the fall, but intended to go back and remove the hard snow from the three bottom steps. He had gone into the principal’s office at about 8:35 and suggested to him that it might be advisable to remove the snow from the steps and was told to do so. The principal had gone to the head of the stairs at about 8:33 and had seen melting snow on the tread of some of the steps, and should have seen that the mats were miss *651 ing. There is no finding that the boy who was sweeping the stairs was negligent in the performance of the duty he was undertaking.

The court concluded that the principal was negligent in commissioning the monitor to clean the steps. That the monitor assumed the performance of this duty would not relieve the defendant of its primary responsibility to keep them reasonably safe for the use of its pupils. Hurlburt v. Sherman, 116 Conn. 102, 106, 163 Atl. 603; Reardon v. Shimelman, 102 Conn. 383, 386, 128 Atl. 705. If a landowner leaves it to someone else to take precautions in such a situation, it is ordinarily just as though he were himself acting, and the question is, did what was done amount to reasonable precaution, whoever was the actor? In this case the principal did delegate to the monitor the duty of cleaning the stairs. As is conceded in the plaintiff’s brief, the city would be entitled to the benefit of anything he did. If what he did amounted to the exercise of reasonable care there would be no liability on the city. Kristiansen v. Danbury, 108 Conn. 553, 559, 143 Atl. 850; Sellew v. Middletown, 121 Conn. 331, 333, 185 Atl. 67. There is no finding that the acts of the boy did not amount to the exercise of reasonable care, or that any adult would have done a better job. In the absence of such a finding the city is not liable in this aspect of the case.

The city could act only through agents or instrumentalities. It is not and hardly could be found that it was the duty of the principal himself to sweep the steps. Reasonable care would require that the principal make reasonable use of such faciliites as were reasonably at his disposal to remedy the defect after it became or should have become known to him. Bjorkman v. Newington, 113 Conn. 181, 184, 154 Atl. 346. The only thing, aside from commissioning the *652 boy to act, that the record at all suggests might have been done was that the principal should have sent word to the janitor to see to the condition. But there is no finding that, had he done so, the janitor could have been reached and could: have, in the exercise of reasonable care and celerity, remedied the trouble before the boy slipped. Hence, if there was negligence in this respect, there is a lack of any finding that it was a cause of the injury. “An act or omission can hardly be regarded as the cause of an event which would have happened if the act or omission had not occurred.” Shaughnessy v. Morrison, 116 Conn. 661, 666, 165 Atl. 553.

It is further claimed by the plaintiff that the principal was negligent in that he permitted an unreasonable length of time to elapse, after he knew or should have known of the presence of the packed snow, before the monitor had been commissioned to sweep the steps.

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Bluebook (online)
30 A.2d 923, 129 Conn. 647, 1942 Conn. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lambert-v-city-of-new-haven-conn-1942.