Upton v. Town of Windham

53 A. 660, 75 Conn. 288, 1902 Conn. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 5, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 53 A. 660 (Upton v. Town of Windham) 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
Upton v. Town of Windham, 53 A. 660, 75 Conn. 288, 1902 Conn. LEXIS 46 (Colo. 1902).

Opinion

Hamerslby, J.

The defendant, having suffered a default, notified the plaintiff that upon the hearing in damages it would offer evidence to disprove the material allegations of the complaint, viz., that the highway in question was defective; that the town had neglected its duty to repair the defect; that the injury to the plaintiff’s intestate was caused by the defect; and also to prove that the injury was due to the contributory negligence of. the plaintiff’s intestate. The burden was on the defendant to disprove the allegations, and to prove the contributory negligence. The trial court has found that the defendant has failed to sustain this burden, and has prop *290 erly assessed substantial damages. There is no error unless the court, in reaching its conclusion as to the facts the defendant undertook to establish, has been influenced by an erroneous view of the law. The appeal assigns errors of this kind.

It is claimed that the court, in finding that the injury complained of was caused by a defect in the highway, misconstrued the meaning of the statute authorizing an action against the town, in that the injury, received in the manner as found by the court, did not happen through or by means of the defect in the highway within the meaning of that statute.

It appears that the portion of the highway where Mrs. Up' ton (the plaintiff’s intestate) was driving with her husband when the injury was received, was so raised above the adjoining ground as to be unsafe for travel, and that the town had failed to maintain any railing or fence on the side of this portion of the highway. Such relation.of the highway to the adjoining land, without a sufficient railing or fence on its side, is by statute a defect in the highway, and the person injured by means of such defect, that is, by want of such railing or fence, may recover just damages in an action upon the statute against the town. General Statutes, § 2672 (Rev. 1902, § 2019).

The horse was a gentle horse and was being driven with due care. While meeting and passing an automobile it became frightened, shied, veering sharply to the right, and being within a few feet of the right side of the road, plunged down a declivity of some three or four feet to the adjoining land, ran a distance of some forty feet and then, taking another turn, overturned the carriage, whereby Mrs. Upton was thrown to the ground. When the horse plunged down the declivity Mrs. Upton was thrown against the dashboard of the carriage and was badly injured upon her head, receiving also, by being thrown against the dashboard and thereafter upon the ground, a serious concussion of the brain. She suffered great pain, and died within two weeks after the accident from concussion of the brain caused by being thrown against the dashboard, as aforesaid, and out of the carriage upon the *291 ground. The automobile was being driven with ordinary care and at a reasonable speed.

The defendant claims that the court erred in finding the injury to Mrs. Upton to have been caused by want of the fence or railing required by statute, because the fright of the horse was a proximate, contributing cause,' and relies upon Bartram v. Sharon, 71 Conn. 686, in support of this claim. The precise point decided in that case was this: “ A traveler upon a highway cannot be injured through a defect in a highway, . . . when the culpable negligence of a fellow-traveler is a proximate cause of Ms injury.” p. 697. The law thus stated does not apply to the present ease, but the grounds on which the decision rests must govern the claim now made. These grounds are stated at length in the opinion, and it is sufficient to refer to them without repetition. The ratio decidendi may be stated thus : The State undertakes to provide highways for the common use, and to maintain them m a reasonably safe condition for that purpose; it sees fit to indemnify any one of the traveling public who, while .using them in a proper way, may receive injuries caused by a failure to maintain the way in a reasonably safe condition; it imposes upon the town corporation the governmental duty of maintaining the highways within its limits, and provides means for the enforcement of that public duty; among these means it provides that whenever a traveler is injured through or by means of a defect in the highway, existing by reason of the town’s failure to perform this public duty, the town shall pay, as a penalty for such failure, the just damages that may be awarded to the injured person, and authorizes such person to bring an action upon the statute against the town for the purpose of determining the amount of just damages and of enforcing the penalty. The penalty is not incurred unless a person is injured through or by means of a defect in the highway. This is a penal statute, and the language defining the condition upon which the penalty arises should not be extended beyond a natural meaning of the words used. An injury caused by the culpable negligence of a third person is an actionable tort for wMch the injured party has Ms remedy. *292 An injury caused by a defect in a highway is not an actionable tort. The party injured has no remedy against the town or against any one, for any wrong done to him. His indemnity provided by the State may be collected of the town, but only as a penalty and when the occasion upon which the penalty arises exists as defined by statute. That occasion is defined thus: “ Any person injured in person or property by means of a defective road ” (General Statutes, § 2673, Rev. 1902, § 2020), having the same meaning as the language used in the original Act (Law of 1672, p. 7), viz., if it so shall happen that any person shall lose a limb, etc., through or by means of the defect of any highway.

This definition of the occasion upon which the penalty may arise, requires that some one has suffered a personal hurt or loss of property under circumstances that entitle him to the indemnity provided by the State for those of the traveling public who thus come to grief in reliance on the reasonably safe condition of the highway,—for those who properly use it. It requires also that such hurt shall be the direct result of some defect in the highway.

The State undertakes to make the highway reasonably safe in view of its proper use, and of those events which may naturally be expected to arise as incident to that use, by the traveling public. It does not undertake to make it safe in view of culpable negligence by the traveling public, whether it be that of the person hurt or his fellow-traveler, nor to make it safe in view of every event that may possibly happen. The indemnity given by the State is' provided upon consideration of the exposure of travelers and their property to dangers by the proper use of a highway, which is defective in view of events naturally connected with and incident to its tise.

The meaning of the definition may, therefore, be stated affirmatively and in general terms, thus : the penalty may be incurred when a person properly using a highway suffers a personal hurt or loss of property not due to his culpable conduct nor to that of a fellow-traveler, but being the direct result of the defective condition of the highway in relation to *293

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Bluebook (online)
53 A. 660, 75 Conn. 288, 1902 Conn. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/upton-v-town-of-windham-conn-1902.