Norman v. Distasio, No. Cv-96-0389982s (Jun. 15, 2001)

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 7538
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJune 15, 2001
DocketNos. CV-96-0389982S, CV-97-0403677S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 7538 (Norman v. Distasio, No. Cv-96-0389982s (Jun. 15, 2001)) 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.

Bluebook
Norman v. Distasio, No. Cv-96-0389982s (Jun. 15, 2001), 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 7538 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
After the parties waived their jury trial election, these cases, which were consolidated for trial because they arose from the same incident, were tried to the court. There is no question that the plaintiffs, Uriah Norman and David McGregor, sustained serious personal injury as a result of being involved in an accident on August 14, 1995. These cases are concerned with whether there is any liability on the part of the defendants, Thomas Donovan, Sr., Thomas Donovan, Jr. and Kenneth Distasio, to compensate the plaintiffs for those injuries. The plaintiffs have failed to persuade the court, by a fair preponderance of the evidence, that the defendants are liable for the injuries the plaintiffs sustained.

I. Facts
The court finds the following facts based on the credible evidence:

On August 14, 1995, the plaintiff Uriah Norman ("Norman"), then 14 years old, and the plaintiff David McGregor ("McGregor"), then 13 years old, were involved in a serious accident when, at the intersection of Second Avenue and White Street in West Haven, Connecticut, a motorcycle that Norman was operating and on which McGregor was a passenger went through a stop sign at a high rate of speed and collided with a motor vehicle that had the right of way. Both plaintiffs were thrown from the CT Page 7539 cycle and sustained serious injuries as a result.

Earlier that day, Norman had invited McGregor to go for a ride with him to the beach in West Haven from their home neighborhood in New Haven, Connecticut. Norman was operating an off-road motorcycle ("cycle") which was registered to the plaintiff Thomas Donovan, Sr. and operated off-road by his son, the defendant Thomas Donovan Jr. The cycle had been reported stolen on July 15, 1995. On the day of the accident, the investigating officer observed that the ignition on the cycle was hot wired and it had a partial plate.

Norman got the cycle from another youth in his neighborhood. He had it approximately one to two weeks before the accident. When Norman got the cycle it was not running and he fixed it up. He did not have a key for the cycle and he had to push start it in order to run it. In order to operate the cycle, Norman needed to reach the handlebars, which were at his waist level, so that he could clutch with his left hand and operate the throttle and hand brake with his right hand. He had to lean forward to operate the cycle because the handlebars were too far away from him.1 When the cycle was at a stop, he had to place both feet on the ground so that the cycle would not tip over.

On August 14, 1995, Norman, who had been to the beach in West Haven one time previously, missed a turn and was operating the cycle on Union Avenue, having turned left onto it from Center Street. As it turned out, the defendant Thomas Donovan, Jr. ("Donovan") lived at 221 Union Avenue and was standing outside his home talking to two friends, the defendant Kenneth Distasio ("Distasio") and a former defendant Richard Cuomo ("Cuomo"), who were both inside Distasio's Suzuki jeep. As the cycle took the turn from Center onto Union, Donovan heard it and then recognized it as the one that had been stolen from his home about a month before. He ran into the street yelling, "That's my bike, that's my bike," and waving his hands. McGregor and Norman did not recall hearing what McGregor was yelling at them.

When he saw Donovan waving at him and yelling, rather than slowing down or stopping Norman became scared and accelerated the cycle. Even though he did not hear what Donovan was yelling, Norman felt something was going to happen to them as soon as he saw Donovan in the street. He felt he was in danger because "it was strange for us to be in West Haven . . . with a bike."2 Shortly thereafter, Donovan threw a blue recycling bin at the cycle which struck McGregor in the leg, but caused him no injury. Norman continued to accelerate as he proceeded down Union. Donovan returned to the jeep and asked Distasio to follow the cycle, which Distasio did.3 As he drove off, an empty trash can became caught under the front end of the jeep. CT Page 7540

Union Avenue is a one-way street which has stop signs at each intersection between Donovan's house and its end at White Street. Norman, who was travelling at a high rate of speed, did not stop at the stop signs located at Main Street, Brown Street or White Street. Distasio stopped at each of those stop signs. At the intersection of Brown and Union, an independent witness observed both the cycle and the jeep. She saw the cycle go through the intersection at a high rate of speed without stopping. When she first observed the cycle, the jeep was between a half block and a block behind it. The jeep came to a full stop at the intersection of Brown and then stopped a second time, as Cuomo got out to remove the trash can. When the jeep resumed proceeding down Union, the witness observed the cycle turning east onto White Street. The cycle did not slow, either when it went through the intersection at Brown or on its way down Union. The cycle took a left at Union and White.

According to McGregor, Norman was operating the cycle at about 40 miles per hour. At one point, the cycle hit a bump in the road on Union and McGregor almost fell off. Although he saw the jeep behind them on Union, the last time McGregor saw the jeep was when they went through the intersection of Brown without stopping. When the cycle took the turn onto White Street, he looked back and could not see the jeep behind them. Once the cycle was proceeding on White Street, McGregor didn't look back again.

On White Street, Norman again failed to stop at the stop signs although McGregor stated he slowed slightly before the stop sign at the intersection of White and Second Avenue.4 Another independent witness, who was travelling southbound on Second Avenue, with the right of way, brought her vehicle to a full stop at the intersection with White because she heard and then saw the cycle approaching the intersection at a high rate of speed and believed it was not going to stop. She observed the cycle go through the intersection and collide, in the middle of the intersection, with a vehicle travelling northbound on Second Avenue that had the right of way. Norman and McGregor were thrown from the cycle and the cycle actually landed underneath the front end of the witness' stopped southbound vehicle. After checking on her infant daughter, who was in a car seat, the witness backed her vehicle off the cycle. Once she completed that task, she observed the jeep at the scene and saw one of its occupants get out and pick up the cycle by the handlebar. Before the jeep arrived on the scene, two women, one of whom came from a house across the street, had gone to assist the boys in the road.

The closest the jeep was to the cycle at any point was about a half block. Once the cycle turned onto White, the jeep was no longer following it. Distasio and Cuomo testified that they lost sight of the cycle some CT Page 7541 time after the intersection of Union and Brown and they did not see the cycle at Union and White. Their testimony was consistent with McGregor's recollection that he did not see the jeep when Norman took the left from Union onto White.5

Assuming that the jeep was heading in the direction of New Haven, Distasio took a left onto White Street and proceeded slowly down it at between 10 and 15 miles per hour, looking into driveways.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 7538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norman-v-distasio-no-cv-96-0389982s-jun-15-2001-connsuperct-2001.