Lamberti v. City of Stamford

40 A.2d 190, 131 Conn. 396, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 292
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 30, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 40 A.2d 190 (Lamberti v. City of Stamford) 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
Lamberti v. City of Stamford, 40 A.2d 190, 131 Conn. 396, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 292 (Colo. 1944).

Opinions

Ells, J.

In so far as General Statutes, § 1420, applies to the facts of this case, it provides that any person injured by means of a defective road may recover damages from a municipality bound to keep it in repair, but that no action for any such injury shall be maintained unless written notice containing certain specified information shall be given to the city clerk “within ten days thereafter,” that is, within ten days after the occurrence of the injury. The question is whether a notice given on December 26 as to an injury sustained on December 15 satisfied the time requirement of the statute. The complaint alleged a fall on an icy sidewalk maintained by the defendant city on December 15 and the giving of the notice on December 26; the defendant demurred because it thus appeared that the notice was not given within the required time; the trial court sustained the demurrer, and the plaintiff, refusing to plead further, appealed to this court from the judgment rendered against her.

The plaintiff claims that the word “thereafter” was put into the statute for the purpose of giving the injured party ten full or clear days within which to give the notice before being barred of the right of recovery given by the same statute, and that, therefore, both terminal days should be excluded. It is well settled *398 that the day of the act from which a future time is to be ascertained is to be excluded from the computation. Austin, Nichols & Co., Inc. v. Gilman, 100 Conn. 81, 84, 123 Atl. 32; Weeks v. Hull, 19 Conn. 376, 381. The authorities are in conflict concerning the exclusion of the last terminal day, but the reasons for the divergent decisions are the varied circumstances of the cases and the differences in language of the statutes under consideration. The question in the instant case is answered by the very words of the statute. The word “within” is of controlling importance. It means “not longer in time than”; Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d Ed.); “not later than.” 69 C. J. 1315; 45 Words & Phrases (Perm. Ed.), p. 378. The word “within” is almost universally used as a word of limitation, unless there are other controlling words in the context showing that a different meaning was intended. Whitford v. Lee, 97 Conn. 554, 561, 117 Atl. 554. In O’Neil v. Boston, 257 Mass. 414, 415, 153 N. E. 884, the essential facts and the language of the statute were precisely the same as in the instant case. In computing the ten-day period, the day of the injury was excluded and the tenth day thereafter was fixed as the final day upon which valid notice could be given.

Excluding the date of the injury, the first full day of the period was December 16 and the tenth day was December 25. December 26 would be the eleventh day, and consequently the notice given on that day was not within ten calendar days.

The major question, and the only one considered by the trial court in its memorandum of decision, is whether the fact that December 25 was a legal holiday served to extend the time until the succeeding day. In Avery v. Stewart, 2 Conn. 69, it was held that where a promissory note,, not negotiable, was made *399 payable in sixty days from date, and the last day was a Sunday, a day on which payment could not legally be made, a tender on the Monday following was good. In Sands v. Lyon, 18 Conn. 18, a testator devised land to his son on condition that he should pay A $100 within one year next after the testator’s decease. The last day of the period was Sunday. We followed the decision in the Avery case, and said (p. 31): “The general rule on this subject, as there stated by Gould, J., is, that as Sunday cannot, for the purpose of performing contracts, be regarded as a day in law, it is, as to that purpose, to be considered as stricken from the calendar.” In Austin, Nichols & Co., Inc. v. Gilman, supra, 85, we quoted from Sommers v. Adelman, 90 Conn. 713, 714, 99 Atl. 50, as follows: “We have adopted the rule that where the last day of a period within which an act may be done, which may not be done on Sunday, falls upon such day, performance may be made on the following day.” In Alderman Bros. Co. v. Westinghouse Air Brake Co., 91 Conn. 383, 99 Atl. 1040, we were considering a statute which provided that a party wishing to take an appeal should, within one week after judgment, file a notice of appeal; we held (p. 385): “When the last day of the week period falls upon a holiday, a notice filed on the following day is seasonably filed. . . . The same rule governs in such case as in cases where the last day falls upon a Sunday, and for the same reason.” In neither of these latter cases did the statute under consideration provide for such an extension. Sommers v. Adelman, supra, is a similar case.

The legislature has designated certain days as legal holidays without stipulating in any general way what is the effect intended. General Statutes, § 6565. It must have intended to attach to those days the significance generally accorded a holiday in the civil law, *400 that is, it is a day on which the ordinary occupations are suspended, a day of exemption or cessation from work, a day of religious observance or of recreation or amusement. 29 C. J. 761; 40 C. J. S. 410; 29 Am. L. Reg. (n. s.) 137. When the legislature provides a time within which an act must be done, and the last day of the period allowed is a holiday, it becomes necessary to determine, as between the intent of the legislature expressed in that statute, and in the statute designating certain days as holidays, which shall prevail. Whether the act may be performed on the day succeeding the holiday is a matter of statutory construction. We do not have here a situation where the giving of the notice requires action only by the person injured or someone in his behalf. The giving of that notice involves a duty to receive it on the part of the proper municipal official. Certainly when the legislature declares a day to be a holiday, it means at least to free public officers from the obligation of keeping open their offices or attending to their duties on that day, and it might well be that on such a day the officer or officers of a municipality to whom, under the statute, notice must be given would be out of town and far away. The injured party could not safely leave the giving of notice to the last day if it is a holiday, or, if that day falls on Monday, to either the Sunday or succeeding holiday. Practically, where the last day of the period falls on a holiday, not to permit the notice to be filed on the succeeding day would be to cut down the time permitted for giving the notice from ten to nine days, or, if the holiday followed a Sunday, to eight days. We cannot believe that the legislature had such an intention. The situation falls fairly within the principle that, where there is a general provision and one addressed to a particular situation which may in certain circumstances *401

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Bluebook (online)
40 A.2d 190, 131 Conn. 396, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamberti-v-city-of-stamford-conn-1944.