Tetro v. Town of Stratford

458 A.2d 5, 189 Conn. 601, 1983 Conn. LEXIS 479
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 5, 1983
Docket10791
StatusPublished
Cited by94 cases

This text of 458 A.2d 5 (Tetro v. Town of Stratford) 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
Tetro v. Town of Stratford, 458 A.2d 5, 189 Conn. 601, 1983 Conn. LEXIS 479 (Colo. 1983).

Opinion

Petebs, J.

This case involves the liability of police officers, and the town by which they are employed, for injuries arising out of a police pursuit of a suspected law violator. The plaintiff, Joseph Tetro, brought an action alleging negligence on the part of the individual defendants, Anthony Rich and William Thornton, and vicarious liability on the part of their employer, the town of Strat-ford. 1 After a trial, a jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the amount of $59,000. The defendants are appealing from the adverse judgment which followed from the trial court’s denial of their motion to set aside the jury’s verdict and to enter a directed verdict in their behalf.

The jury might reasonably have found the following facts. The defendants Rich and Thornton, members of the Stratford police department, were in their patrol car on March 4, 1975, at about 12 noon, when they observed a green Chevrolet parked in a shopping center parking lot off Stratford Avenue. They thought the Chevrolet might have been stolen because the boys in the ear looked too *603 young to have valid drivers’ licenses. 2 When the police approached the Chevrolet to make inquiries, the boys drove off. The police ear pursued the Chevrolet, with the police car’s siren working and revolving dome light flashing. Both the fleeing and the pursuing car reached speeds of approximately fifty miles per hour.

When the Chevrolet left the parking lot, it headed west on Stratford Avenue, toward Bridgeport, in a densely populated urban area. At the Stratford/ Bridgeport town line, Stratford Avenue bifurcates, with Stratford Avenue becoming one way easterly, and Connecticut Avenue becoming one way westerly. The Chevrolet, with the police car in close pursuit, proceeded westerly, the wrong way, on Stratford Avenue, until the Chevrolet collided with two cars including that of the plaintiff Tetro. The plaintiff, who had been driving his car in a lawful manner, heard the police car’s siren but was unable to determine its source before his car was struck head-on.

With regard to the defendants’ failure to exercise due care, the jury could reasonably have found that the town of Stratford had adopted, prior to this accident, a policy concerning the conduct of high speed chases by police officers. That policy urged police officers to avoid high speed chases as much as possible, and to consider, before under *604 taking such pursuit, the nature of the underlying offense and the dangers that might attend pursuit. When a high speed pursuit was made, all safety precautions were to be used. According to the opinion of an expert witness, a member of the Stratford police department, the high speed chase that was conducted in this case by Rich and Thornton was in violation of the Stratford policy.

The defendants’ appeal does not directly challenge the propriety of the jury’s conclusion that their conduct was negligent. The defendants claim instead that the evidence was insufficient, for three reasons, to establish the necessary causal link between their acts or omissions and the injuries sustained by the plaintiff. They argue that proximate cause was lacking because of: (1) the intervening negligence of the driver of the pursued car; (2) the lack of connection between the plaintiff’s injuries and the defendants’ operation of the police car; and (3) the immunity conferred, as a matter of public policy, upon emergency vehicles in pursuit of law violators. Therefore, the defendants maintain, the court was required to resolve the issue of proximate cause in their favor as a matter of law. We do not agree.

The defendants’ first claim of error is that, according to the Connecticut law on causation and the rulings of other jurisdictions in police pursuit eases, the sole proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury was the negligent driving of the pursued car, the Chevrolet, for which the defendants cannot legally be held responsible. Recognizing that, in application, this case is one of first impression for this court, we are nonetheless unpersuaded by the authorities upon which the defendants rely.

*605 The Connecticut law of causation was recently restated in Coburn v. Lenox Homes, Inc., 186 Conn. 370, 382-84, 441 A.2d 620 (1982), where we held (at pp. 383-84) that “[m]ore than one proximate cause may result in any harm suffered. . . . An actual cause that is a substantial factor in the resulting harm is a proximate cause of that harm. . . . Proximate cause is ordinarily a question of fact. . . . The test for finding proximate cause ‘is whether the harm which occurred was of the same general nature as the foreseeable risk created by the defendant’s negligence.’ . . . The foreseeable risk may include the acts of the plaintiff and of third parties.” In earlier cases, we have specifically addressed the effect of a third party’s intervening negligence. We have consistently adhered to the standard of 2 Restatement (Second), Torts §442B (1965) that a negligent defendant, whose conduct creates or increases the risk of a particular harm and is a substantial factor in causing that harm, is not relieved from liability by the intervention of another person, except where the harm is intentionally caused by the third person and is not within the scope of the risk created by the defendant’s conduct. Kiniry v. Danbury Hospital, 183 Conn. 448, 445, 439 A.2d 408 (1981); Merhi v. Becker, 164 Conn. 516, 522, 325 A.2d 270 (1973); Miranti v. Brookside Shopping Center, Inc., 159 Conn. 24, 28, 266 A.2d 370 (1969). These authorities 3 make it clear that the recklessness of *606 the operator of the pursued car, the Chevrolet, does not relieve the defendants of liability because the trier of fact may find that the plaintiff’s injury falls within the scope of the risk created by their negligent conduct in maintaining a police pursuit at high speeds in the wrong direction on a busy one-way street.

Recent cases in other jurisdictions have similarly refused to limit police liability for negligent conduct of a high speed chase, as a matter of law, to collisions involving the police vehicle itself. See Myers v. Town of Harrison, 438 F.2d 293, 297 (2d Cir. 1971); S chatz v. Cutler, 395 F. Sup. 271, 275 (D. Vt. 1975); City of Sacramento v. Superior Court of the State of California, 131 Cal. App. 3d 395, 405-406, 182 Cal. Rptr. 443 (1982) (expressly limiting the earlier California cases upon which the defendants rely); Reed v. Winter Park,

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Bluebook (online)
458 A.2d 5, 189 Conn. 601, 1983 Conn. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tetro-v-town-of-stratford-conn-1983.