Perlstein v. Westport Sanitarium Co.

11 Conn. Super. Ct. 117, 11 Conn. Supp. 117, 1942 Conn. Super. LEXIS 106
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1942
DocketFile 62484
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 11 Conn. Super. Ct. 117 (Perlstein v. Westport Sanitarium Co.) 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
Perlstein v. Westport Sanitarium Co., 11 Conn. Super. Ct. 117, 11 Conn. Supp. 117, 1942 Conn. Super. LEXIS 106 (Colo. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Memorandum of decision on demurrer.

O’SULLIVAN, J.

The complaint is in three counts, to ■each of which, as well as to the prayer for relief, a demurrer has been addressed. The following allegations are common to all counts; the defendant operates a sanitarium in the Town of Westport for the treatment of persons suffering from mental -disorders. On June 17, 1939, Leo Perlstein, who was afflicted by suicidal impulses, entered the sanitarium as a patient. He was assigned to a room from which certain furnishings had not been removed. On the following day, making use of ■some of these articles, he hanged himself. About a year and ten months later, the plaintiff qualified as administratrix on liis estate.

In addition to the foregoing, the following appears: In the first count it is alleged that Perlstein, acting through his wife, had entered into an agreement, with the defendant whereby the latter undertook, for compensation, to safeguard him and prevent his carrying out any insane desire for self-destruction, which agreement was breached; in the second count, it is alleged that the defendant’s negligence in failing to keep Perl-.stein under proper supervision was the cause of his death; and in the third, that Perlstein was induced to become a patient by reason of certain representations made by the defendant to the effect that it was thoroughly equipped to insure his .safety from acts of his own violence and that these representations were false in fact and known to be so by the defendant.

Thus, the plaintiff is seeking to recover damages for the ■death of her intestate on the theory of (1) breach of contract, (2) negligence, and (3) fraudulent representations. The demurrer to the first count is short and it will do no harm to *119 spread it out so that we can see it. The defendant demurs, because:

“1. The alleged cause of action is within the provisions of 1430e of the General Statutes [Supp. 1939] and was not brought within the time limited, namely one year from the neglect or fault complained of.
“2. Said action is within the provisions of section 1680c of the General Statutes [Supp. 1935] and was not brought within one year from the date of the act or omission come plained of.
“3. No action lies at common law for damages resulting from death due to breach of contract.
“4. An action for damages resulting from death due to breach of contract does not survive.
“5. It fails to state a cause of action.”

The fifth ground may be ignored because of its generality. As to the third and fourth, they allege legal principles out of harmony with those settled by a recent case which holds that an action for death due to a breach of contract survives and that damages for the death are recoverable. Giambozi vs. Peters, 127 Conn. 380. The cited case overruled, if Porpora vs. New Haven, 122 Conn. 80, had not already done so, the law as formerly stated in Burkhardt vs. Armour & Co., 115 Conn. 249.

The Porpora case, which was the precursor of Giambozi vs. Peters, is an iconoclastic decision, destroying, as it does, a net' work of precedents, and leaving high, dry and stranded the legal philosophy underlying the purpose and effect of our sur' vival and death statutes, as enunciated so clearly in Kling vs. Torello, 87 Conn. 301.

No legal principles have been more thoroughly accepted than that at common law (1) one’s death, whether traceable to an actionable wrong or to natural causes, abates a pending action for personal injuries, or, if suit therefore has not been instituted, bars a representative from enforcing the right his decedent had possessed during life to recover damages from the wrongdoer, and that (2) the, destruction of human life is not an actionable injury. Broughel vs. Southern New England Telephone Co., 72 Conn. 617; Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. vs. New York & New Haven R.R. Co., 25 id. 265.

*120 These rules, which not infrequently are thought of as a single, composite legal principle, are, in truth, separate and distinct and a failure to appreciate this fact may lead to con' fused thinking. Of course, the rules were too barbaric to re' main unchallenged by society. At least as far back as 1672, the Colony of Connecticut had provided for the recovery of the fixed sum of one hundred pounds for death due to a defec' tive highway or bridge. Laws of Connecticut, Compilation of 1672. This was in the nature of a penalty, requiring no sur' vival statute to enforce it. And obviously so, for the right of recovery was not a right the decedent had enjoyed. The statute created its own cause of action. The provision for this penalty remained in force until repealed by chapter 49 of the Public Acts of 1848. During the same session, but at. an earlier date, the General Assembly enacted the first survival statute concerning postmortem rights flowing from personal injuries. It read:

“Sec. 1. .. . No action to recover damages for injury to the person, reputation or property of the plaintiff, or to the person of his wife, child or servant, shall abate by reason of his death, but his executor or administrator may enter and prosecute the same, in the same manner as is now by law provided in regard to other actions.
“Sec. 2. Actions for injury to the person, whether the same do or do not result in death, actions for injury to the reputa' tion, or actions for injury to the property, real or personal, and actions to recover damages for injury to the person of the wife, child or servant, of any deceased person, shall survive to his executor or administrator, provided the cause of action shall not have arisen more than one year before the death of the deceased.
“Sec. 3. Nothing herein contained shall affect any action now pending, or be applicable to any cause of action now existing.” (Pub. Acts [1848] chap. 5.)

The foregoing statute, amended in phraseology from time to time, and sometimes segregated by itself and sometimes joined by a section incorporating the so'called death statute (notably Pub. Acts [1903]-chap. 193), has remained in force until today when it appears as section 1432e of the 1939 Sup' plement to the General Statutes.

For three years after its passage in 1848, we had no death *121 statute. In 1851, the Assembly passed an act providing that if any person should lose his life in consequence of the failure of a railroad company to cause a whistle to be blown or a bell sounded when a locomotive was approaching a grade crossing, the company should forfeit and pay $1,000 to designated persons. (Pub. Acts [1851] chap. 43, §2.) This statute continued in effect until 1875, when it was amended by striking out the specific sum, and by substituting a provision that a railroad company should pay all damages which might accrue to any person as a result of the failure of the engineer to give a warning by bell or whistle when nearing a grade crossing. (Gen. Stat. [1875] tit. 17, chap. 2, part 9, §73, p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Conn. Super. Ct. 117, 11 Conn. Supp. 117, 1942 Conn. Super. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perlstein-v-westport-sanitarium-co-connsuperct-1942.