Mirci v. Ford Motor Company, No. Cv96 05 55 55 (Jul. 23, 1998)
This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 7869 (Mirci v. Ford Motor Company, No. Cv96 05 55 55 (Jul. 23, 1998)) 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
In response to the defendant's objection, the plaintiff urges then as an alternative to her first basis that "she is seeking to have the court strike a defense which had previously been held by this court to be legally insufficient, and which has been declared by statute to be an invalid defense." Thus, according to the plaintiff, if the seventh special defense is considered to be an assumption of the risk defense, it is legally insufficient; in addition, if it effectively raises the same defense as the first special defense, it should likewise be stricken.
The court holds that the defendant's pleading of specifications of negligent conduct on the part of the plaintiff whether related to factors relevant to assumption of risk or not, should be set out in a single special defense. The court rules that where a defendant sets out factors relating to assumption of risk separately they can have no independent legal sufficiency from a comparative negligence defense already pled. The motion to strike is granted.
Doctrines of assumption of the risk, contributory negligence and last clear chance have been abolished by statute. SeeWendland v. Ridgefield Construction Services, Inc.,
It is axiomatic that a person in order to use reasonable care must make reasonable use of his or her senses and is required and held to see, hear, know and appreciate whatever facts a reasonably prudent person under the same circumstances would hear, note and appreciate. Tied to that proposition, is one that where the human activities of two persons juxtapose, each party has a right to assume that the other party in the matter will obey the rules of law and act reasonably and properly, making reasonable use of his or her own faculties. See Johnson v.Shattuck,
The purpose of a motion to strike is to contest addressed to a special defense is to test its legal sufficiency. Defendant's allegations which relate to the plaintiff's own negligence as a proximate cause of injuries which could bar or diminish recovery, have already been placed before the court in the first special defense and that is where any proper factual averments specifying the forms of the plaintiff's negligence relating to that comparative issue belong and should be combined.
The Court agrees with the plaintiff that the defendant is entitled to but one charge to the jury on the plaintiff's contributary comparative negligence and no more. The surplusage in the "belt and suspenders" seventh special defense could no CT Page 7872 independent legal sufficiency.
It is therefore struck.
FLYNN, J.
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