Moleske v. MacDonald

146 A. 820, 109 Conn. 336, 1929 Conn. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 13, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 146 A. 820 (Moleske v. MacDonald) 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
Moleske v. MacDonald, 146 A. 820, 109 Conn. 336, 1929 Conn. LEXIS 87 (Colo. 1929).

Opinion

Haines, J.

The assignments of error all relate to a single question, well stated by counsel for the plaintiff-appellant, as follows: “Whether the statutes impose on the Highway Commissioner the duty of maintain *338 ing sidewalks on trunk line highways lying within highway limits, the neglect to perform which renders him liable in damages.”

For the purposes of this appeal, the conceded facts are, that on October 1st, 1928, about seven o’clock in the evening, the plaintiff, while walking on a sidewalk on the southerly side of Main Street in East Haven, fell and was injured, by reason of the defective and dangerous condition of the sidewalk which was of tar, very old, worn, broken and cracked. This defective condition had existed for a long time prior to the plaintiff’s fall. It is also conceded that Main Street is a trunk line highway over which the defendant in his capacity of State highway commissioner has jurisdiction, as a representative of the State. The appellant claims, in effect, that this jurisdiction is all inclusive, from fence line to fence line, while the appellee says it is inclusive only so far as the purpose and intent of our State highway legislation requires.

Appellant bases this action upon the Public Acts of 1925, Chapter 263, § 47, reading as follows: “Any person injured in person or property through the neglect or default of the State or any of its employees by means of any defective road or bridge which it is the duty of the highway commissioner to keep in repair, . . . may bring a civil action to recover damages sustained thereby against the highway commissioner.”

For the purpose of legal definition the word “road,” like the word “street,” has often been held to include sidewalks and that meaning has been given it in decisions by this court under General Statutes, § 1414, where the term “defective road or bridge” also appears —a statute imposing liability upon municipalities from which they would otherwise be exempt on principles of governmental duty. Keating v. New London, *339 104 Conn. 528, 113 Atl. 536; Frechette v. New Haven, 104 Conn. 83, 96, 132 Atl. 467; McGar v. Bristol, 71 Conn. 652, 42 Atl. 1000; Cusick v. Norwich, 40 Conn. 375; Manchester v. Hartford, 30 Conn. 118. While this is true and the word is often used to designate the entire space between the fence lines, it is also often used in a more restricted sense, as applying only to that portion actually used for vehicular traffic.

“In constructing sidewalks it is more convenient to place them within the lines of the highway, and so when laid they form a part of the highway. But the power and duty of building and maintaining highways does not necessarily include the duty of building and maintaining sidewalks. The construction of a sidewalk, like the establishment of a building line, may well be independent of the construction of a street, and in most cities sidewalks, because they are more closely related to the adjoining land and serve more directly the use of that land, are made the subject of separate rules and are constructed in pursuance of separate authority.” State v. McMahon, 76 Conn. 97, 105, 55 Atl. 591.

From this and many other illustrations which could be given it is apparent that the term “road” is a comprehensive one, and the sense in which it is employed is determinable from the intent and purpose of the statute in which it appears.

•Turning then to the statute in question—Public Acts of 1925, Chapter 263, § 47—we inquire what purpose was intended by the legislature by its enactment.

Primarily, the governmental duty of building and maintaining public highways rests upon the State itself, but it may delegate this duty to agents of its own designation. Under this power, in 1672, the duty was placed upon the towns by statute, save where it belonged to certain particular persons, and so it has *340 remained. Acts, 1672, p. 7; Acts, 1750, p. 17; General Statutes, Rev. 1875, p. 231, §1; General Statutes, Rev. 1888, §2666; General Statutes, Rev. 1902, § 2013; General Statutes, Rev. 1918, § 1407. A similar policy is observable in relation to the construction and maintenance of sidewalks in towns and the duty is imposed upon each town as to sidewalks within its own limits. General Statutes, §§450, 451, 452; Hartford, Private Acts, Vol. 6, p. 314, Vol. 9, p. 626, Vol. 17, p. 790; New Haven, Private Acts, Vol. 5, p. 597, Vol. 17, p. 220, Vol. 18, p. 500; New London, Private Acts, Vol. 1, pp. 431, 439, Vol. 5, p. 105; Middletown, Private Acts, Vol. 1, p. 398. This duty was placed upon the town of East Haven, in which is the sidewalk in question, by Special Acts of 1915, Chapter 114, §§ 9, 15,18.

The Act upon which the case of the appellant rests —Public Acts of 1925, Chapter 263, changes the long-established policy of our State, and provides for state aid to towns in the construction of certain public highways under prescribed conditions and for the construction and maintenance by the State of certain roads, as a part of a state trunk line system theretofore established by the State. The State highway commissioner in addition to his powers and duties in connection with such roads, is authorized to “lay out, alter, construct or reconstruct, maintain or repair, widen or grade any highway whenever, in his judgment, the interest of the State shall so require.” (§25.) Save as to certain regulations relative to traffic and use, he is given “exclusive jurisdiction over all highways laid out, constructed, reconstructed or maintained by him, and shall have the same powers relating to the trunk line and state aid system of highways as are given to the selectmen of towns, the mayor and common council of any city and the warden *341 and burgesses of any borough.” (§28.) He is charged with the maintenance of trunk line and state aid highways “except as otherwise provided by law.” (§30.) He is given power over grades, location of trolley rails, fixing of boundaries, provision for gutters and drains, purchase of necessary lands and other powers having for their obvious purpose the service of vehicular traffic upon the main arteries of travel throughout the State. The relation of this purpose to the use and regulation of motor vehicles is obvious. The authority to “regulate shows, processions, assemblages, traffic or parades in streets and public places,” etc., given to towns by the Public Acts of 1921, Chapter 400, § 60, is specially reserved to the towns by § 28 of the Act of 1925 which we are considering. A careful study of the entire chapter discloses nowhere any expressed intent to limit the power of towns over the public highways where its exercise will not interfere with the construction and maintenance of the more important roadways for modern travel through and about the State designated as state aid or trunk line highways, and so far as the whole or any part of such highways are needed in the construction and maintenance of a public highway, the commissioner is vested with a legal discretion to take and use them therefor.

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Bluebook (online)
146 A. 820, 109 Conn. 336, 1929 Conn. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moleske-v-macdonald-conn-1929.