219 Conn. 179

Louis Sanzone et al. v. Board of Police Commissioners of the City of Bridgeport et al.

(14102)

Shea, Glass, Covello, Borden and F. X. Hennessy, Js.

Argued March 22

decision released June 11, 1991

*180 Robert R. Sheldon, with whom were Frank A. Bailey and, on the brief, T. Paul Tremont, for the appellants (plaintiffs).

JohnH. Barton, associate city attorney, with whom was Carolyn C. Mihalek, assistant city attorney, for the appellees (defendants).

Shea, J.

We are asked to determine the meaning and scope of a proviso contained within General Statutes § 52-557n, § 13 of the Tort Reform Act of 1986, No. 86-338 of the 1986 Public Acts.1 That statute addresses *181the liabilities and immunities of political subdivisions, their employees, officers and agents. The trial court concluded that the proviso barred the plaintiffs’ tort and indemnification claims against a city and its police officers arising out of an accident allegedly caused by a defective traffic light. It therefore granted the defendants’ motion to strike and the plaintiffs’ motion for judgment, from which the plaintiffs appealed. We affirm.

The plaintiffs2 sued the city of Bridgeport, its board of police commissioners, the members of the board, the superintendent of police, and a police sergeant, all “acting as” the city’s “traffic authority,” for damages the named plaintiff’s wife suffered when, according to the complaint, the car in which she was a passenger collided with another vehicle after the traffic light at an intersection simultaneously signalled green to both vehicles, one traveling north, the other traveling west. *182The plaintiffs alleged that this malfunction was caused because the defendants collectively had “failed to maintain” and inspect the traffic light as required by General Statutes § 14-314a3 or because they had “disassembled” one half of the “traffic control” in violation of General Statutes § 14-314b.4 The complaint contained five counts: count one, charging the board of police commissioners, the superintendent and the sergeant with negligence under § 52-557n and with nuisance; count two, claiming loss of consortium arising from the same tortious conduct; count three, charging the members of the police commission, the superintendent and the sergeant with misperformance or “violation” of their ministerial duties; count four, claiming loss of consortium arising from the same tortious conduct; and count five, seeking indemnity by the city, pursuant to General Statutes (Rev. to 1987) § 7-465 (a),5 for the damages sought in count three.

*183On the defendants’ motion, the trial court struck the complaint in its entirety, holding that § 52-557n made *184a defective highway claim under General Statutes § 13a-149,6 commonly referred to as the “highway defect statute,” a plaintiffs exclusive remedy against a municipality for damages resulting from a “highway defect.” It held, further, that because § 7-465 (a) required a municipality to indemnify its officers for their negligent acts, § 52-557n also barred an action against municipal officers for damages resulting from a highway defect. In their appeal, the plaintiffs claim that: (1) § 52-557n permits them to bring nuisance and negligence claims against a municipality whether or not they also have a valid claim under § 13a-149; (2) if it does not, § 52-557n is unconstitutional; and (3) even if § 13a-149 would be the exclusive remedy for a claim involving a highway defect, the plaintiffs’ claims should not have been stricken prior to a determina*185tion at trial that the facts alleged would support a valid claim under § 13a-149.

I

Section 52-557n of the General Statutes was enacted as § 13 of the Tort Reform Act of 1986. The Tort Reform Act was drafted in response to rapidly rising insurance rates, which, some believed, would be curtailed if tort liability could be limited and systematized.7 As finally enacted, the act represents a complex web of interdependent concessions and bargains struck by hostile interest groups and individuals of opposing philosophical positions.

Sections 13 and 14 of the act address municipal liability. Section 13, now § 52-557n, entitled “Liability of political subdivision and its employees, officers and agents,” contains two subsections. Subsection (a) sets forth general principles of municipal liability and immunity, while subsection (b) sets forth nine specific situations in which both municipalities and their officers are immune from tort liability. Section 14 of the act modifies the required notice provision contained within § 13a-149, the highway defect statute, by removing language which previously had permitted a party to satisfy the statutory notice requirement, the condition precedent to recovery of damages from a municipality under that statute, by filing a complaint within the ninety day notice period. The act does not refer to § 7-465.

Section 52-557n (a), § 13 (a) of the act, provides in pertinent part: “(a) (1) Except as otherwise provided by law, a political subdivision of the state shall be liable for damages to person or property caused by: (A) The negligent acts or omissions of such political subdivision or any employee, officer or agent thereof act*186ing within the scope of his employment or official duties; (B) negligence in the performance of functions from which the political subdivision derives a special corporate profit or pecuniary benefit; and (C) acts of the political subdivision which constitute the creation or participation in the creation of a nuisance; provided, no cause of action shall be maintained for damages resulting from injury to any person or property by means of a defective road or bridge except pursuant to section lSa-1^9 of the General Statutes. (2) Except as otherwise provided by law, a political subdivision of the state shall not be liable for damages to person or property caused by: (A) Acts or omissions of any employee, officer or agent which constitute criminal conduct, fraud, actual malice or wilful misconduct; or (B) negligent acts or omissions which require the exercise of judgment or discretion as an official function of the authority expressly or impliedly granted by law.” (Emphasis added.) The defendants’ motion to strike, and the trial court’s decision, were based squarely upon the italicized proviso.

The plaintiffs countered by asserting, first, that the section as a whole was intended to codify the existing common law on municipal liability, using the phrase “except as otherwise provided” in subdivision (a) (1) as a catch-all savings clause designed to preserve any unenumerated causes of action; and second, that the proviso itself simply reaffirmed the continuing viability of claims brought pursuant to § 13a-149 or, alternatively, eliminated a plaintiffs rights to bring nuisance actions against a municipality while leaving alternative theories of liability, e.g., negligence, intact.

The guideposts of statutory construction are familiar. Our task is to find the expressed intent of the legislature, “that is, the intention of the legislative body ‘as found from the words employed to make it manifest.’ ” Park Regional Corporation v. Town Plan & Zoning *187 Commission, 144 Conn. 677, 682, 136 A.2d 785 (1957). We seek the intent of the legislature “not in what it meant to say, but in what it did say.” Daily v. New Britain Machine Co., 200 Conn. 562, 571, 512 A.2d 893 (1986). Thus, “ft]he actual intent, as a state of mind, of the members of a legislative body is immaterial, even if it were ascertainable.” Park Regional Corporation v. Town Plan & Zoning Commission, supra.

To determine the collectively expressed legislative intent, we look first to the language of the statute itself. If that language is plain and unambiguous, we go no further. University of Connecticut v. Freedom of Information Commission, 217 Conn. 322, 328, 585 A.2d 690 (1991). If, however, the statute is ambiguous, e.g., either opaque or susceptible to alternative conflicting interpretations, we will seek guidance from “extrinsic aids,” e.g., the legislative history. Shelby Mutual Ins. Co. v. Della Ghelfa, 200 Conn. 630, 637-38, 513 A.2d 52 (1986); State v. Ellis, 197 Conn. 436, 445, 497 A.2d 974 (1985). If the legislative history and purpose are also ambiguous, we may resort to “intrinsic aids,” the technical rules of statutory construction. Farms Country Club, Inc. v. Carini, 172 Conn. 439, 443, 374 A.2d 1094 (1977); see also Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402, 412 n.29, 91 S. Ct. 814, 28 L. Ed. 2d 136 (1971); 2A J. Sutherland, Statutory Construction (4th Ed. Sands) § 48.01. In applying these principles, we follow the “golden rule of statutory interpretation”; 2A J. Sutherland, supra, § 45.12, p. 54; that the legislature is presumed to have intended a reasonable, just and constitutional result. See Board of Education v. State Board of Labor Relations, 217 Conn. 110, 126, 584 A.2d 1172 (1991); Gentry v. Norwalk, 196 Conn. 596, 606, 494 A.2d 1206 (1985); Bridgeport v. Stratford, 142 Conn. 634, 644, 116 A.2d 508 (1955); Camp v. Rogers, 44 Conn. 291, 298 (1877); see also 2A J. Sutherland, supra, §§ 45.11, 45.12.

*188The meaning of § 52-557n (a) is far from plain. At a minimum, it is unclear whether the proviso modifies only subdivision (a) (1) (C) or (A) and (B) as well as (C); it is unclear what is intended by the words “Except as otherwise provided by law” that begin subsection (a) and, if they conflict with the words of the clause, “provided, no cause of action shall be maintained,” which language prevails; and it is unclear whether the limitation on liability of political subdivisions contained in the section is intended to supersede the indemnification statute, § 7-465.

Unfortunately, the legislative history of § 52-557n is worse than murky; it is contradictory. The only explicit reference to the proviso in question sheds no light on its meaning but merely repeats its language with minor variations.8 The transcripts of legislative hearings on the bill are full of heated debate over § 13, dealing with municipal liability, but the legislators seemed not to agree as to its meaning. The record of legislative debate does indicate that § 13 was intended, in a general sense, both to codify and to limit municipal liability, but it also reflects confusion with respect to precisely what part of the preexisting law was being codified, and what part was being limited.9 Cf. Robinson v. Unemploy *189 ment Security Board, of Review, 181 Conn. 1, 8-9, 20, 434 A.2d 293 (1980).

The sparks flung from the legislative forge fail to illuminate the statute’s meaning. We must seek guidance, therefore, from the traditional rules of English grammar and of statutory construction.

A

“A proviso is said to remove special cases from the general enactment and provide for them specially.” 1A J. Sutherland, supra, § 20.22a; see also 2A J. Sutherland, supra, § 47.08. Provisos do not usually expand the scope of a statute, but restrict it. 2A J. Sutherland, supra, § 47.08. While sometimes a proviso is said to limit only the language immediately preceding it, the better rule is that the proviso limits the entire section or, as the case may be, the subsection within which it is incorporated. See 1A J. Sutherland, supra, § 20.22, and vol. 2A, § 47.09. That the language at issue is written as a “proviso” does not, therefore, necessarily imply that it modifies only subdivision (C) dealing with nuisance actions against municipalities.

Indeed, the punctuation of § 52-557n (a) (1) suggests that the proviso was intended to limit all of subdivision (a) (1), not merely subdivision (a) (1) (C). Although punctuation is not generally considered an immutable *190aspect of a legislative enactment, given its unstable history; see State v. Roque, 190 Conn. 143, 152, 460 A.2d 26 (1983); see also 2A J. Sutherland, supra, § 47.15; it can be a useful tool for discerning legislative intent. State v. Dennis, 150 Conn. 245, 248, 188 A.2d 65 (1963); Connecticut Chiropody Society, Inc. v. Murray, 146 Conn. 613, 617, 153 A.2d 412 (1959). Thus, where a qualifying phrase is separated from several phrases preceding it by means of a comma, one may infer that the qualifying phrase is intended to apply to all its antecedents, not only the one immediately preceding it. 2A J. Sutherland, supra, § 47.33.

Where, however, the punctuation mark after each succeeding phrase is a semicolon, as here, its use to separate the proviso from the immediately preceding phrase indicates that the proviso was intended to apply to all the antecedent propositions. Compare Connecticut Chiropody Society, Inc. v. Murray, supra. If anything, semicolons “ ‘separate with more distinctness than commas.’ ” West Hartford v. Thomas D. Faulkner Co., 126 Conn. 206, 210-11, 10 A.2d 592 (1940), quoting Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d Ed.). To indicate a less distinct separation between the proviso and the immediately preceding phrases, which are set off by semicolons, the drafters would have used either no punctuation or a comma.

We conclude that the proviso at issue was intended to modify the entire content of subdivision § 52-557n (a) (1), not merely subdivision (a) (1) (C). Thus, simplified, the statute states: “(a) (1) Except as otherwise provided by law, a political subdivision of the state shall be liable for damages to person or property caused by: [(A), (B) or (C)] . . . provided, no cause of action shall be maintained for damages resulting from injury to any person or property by means of a defective road or bridge except pursuant to section 13a-149 of the General Statutes.” The proviso’s language, “no cause of *191action shall be maintained,” (emphasis added) further supports this construction; were the proviso intended to restrict only nuisance actions, it should instead have said “no cause of action in nuisance shall be maintained.”

B

We must next construe the meaning of the proviso itself and analyze its relationship with the savings clause, “[e]xcept as otherwise provided by law.” The plaintiffs point out that prior to the 1986 Tort Reform Act, our case law “otherwise provided” that a party could bring an action in nuisance against a municipality instead of resorting to the highway defect statute, § 13a-149, if the nuisance arose from the positive and intentional acts of the municipality. See, e.g., Ryszkiewicz v. New Britain, 193 Conn. 589, 479 A.2d 793 (1984); Murphy v. Ives, 151 Conn. 259, 196 A.2d 596 (1963); Aerotec Corporation v. Greenwich, 138 Conn. 116, 82 A.2d 356 (1951); Karnasiewicz v. New Britain, 131 Conn. 691, 42 A.2d 32 (1945). The plaintiffs argue that, as some legislators claimed, the words “[e]xcept as otherwise provided by law” were intended to preserve without modification all existing law, common and statutory, including such actions for positive nuisance.

We decline to read the savings clause as broadly as the plaintiffs request; to do so would render the statute a nullity. The legislature could not have intended the general language of the introductory clause to swallow up and nullify the section’s other provisions. See Board of Education v. State Board of Labor Relations, supra, 127; see also Board of Education v. Freedom of Information Commission, 217 Conn. 153, 160, 585 A.2d 82 (1991); DeFonce Construction Co. v. State, 198 Conn. 185, 187, 501 A.2d 745 (1985); cf. 2A J. Sutherland, supra, § 47.12. Despite remarks by some legislators to *192the effect that the word “law” would include the common law, we must limit the word’s meaning, within § 52-557n (a), to state and federal statutes. While we strictly construe statutes purporting to limit the common law; State v. Ellis, supra, 444; Ahern v. New Haven, 190 Conn. 77, 82, 459 A.2d 118 (1983); see 3 J. Sutherland, supra, § 61.01; the principle that the legislature does not enact a meaningless statute must be controlling.

In short, we construe § 52-557n to provide that an action under the highway defect statute, § 13a-149, is a plaintiff’s exclusive remedy against a municipality or other political subdivision “for damages resulting from injury to any person or property by means of a defective road or bridge.” It also, therefore, precludes a joint action seeking such damages against a municipality and its officer pursuant to § 7-465 (a);10 otherwise, the proviso in § 52-557n would be stripped of all meaning, for § 7-465 (a) would permit a plaintiff to reach the result forbidden by § 52-557n: the imposition of tort liability on a municipality for a highway defect claim.11

C

We do not, however, construe § 52-557n to bar a plaintiff from asserting causes of action in tort against *193those individuals whose actual conduct was a proximate cause of the injury. At common law, municipal officers were liable for their own torts, but the municipality, their municipal “master,” was not vicariously liable for those torts. W. Prosser & W. Keeton, Torts (5th Ed. 1984) § 132; see Evon v. Andrews, 211 Conn. 501, 505, 559 A.2d 1131 (1989); Gordon v. Bridgeport Housing Authority, 208 Conn. 161, 165, 544 A.2d 1185 (1988); but see W. Williams, Liability of Municipal Corporations for Torts §§ 11, 16 (proprietary functions), § 25 (ministerial duties). Section 7-465 (a) effectively circumvented the general common law immunity of municipalities from vicarious liability for their employees’ acts by permitting injured plaintiffs to seek indemnification from a municipal employer for such acts under certain circumstances and after conformance with certain statutory requirements, but it did not bar a plaintiff from seeking redress from those employees. Fraser v. Henninger, 173 Conn. 52, 56-57, 376 A.2d 406 (1977).

We agree with the trial court that § 52-557n removes torts related to highway defects from the class of torts for which municipal employees may be indemnified under § 7-465 (a). There is no reason to believe, however, that the legislature intended to eliminate an injured plaintiff’s common law right to seek damages from individual municipal employees. Indeed, whereas § 52-557n (b) immunizes both “political subdivisions” and “any employee, officer or agent acting within the scope of his employment or official duties” from liability in enumerated cases, including certain types of highway defects, § 52-557n (a), by contrast, addresses only the liability of “political subdivisions.” “A plaintiff’s failure to sustain his complaint against the municipality is no reason for turning the plaintiff out of court if he can sustain his complaint against the employee.” Fraser v. Henninger, supra, 57.

*194The trial court construed the complaint to allege liability on the part of the individual defendants based solely upon their breach of ministerial duties concerning the creation and maintenance of the traffic control signals at the intersection where the accident occurred. The plaintiffs do not challenge this reading of their complaint. The court held that “[t]he proper operation of a roadway system by a police department is a governmental function” and that it is a “discretionary governmental function” like the operation of a police department, citing Gordon v. Bridgeport Housing Authority, supra. Implicitly, it concluded that police maintenance of traffic signals, whatever the statutory requirements for such maintenance, was a discretionary governmental duty which conferred qualified immunity upon the individual defendants who performed that duty. The plaintiffs have not challenged that basis for the trial court’s decision.12 Nor have they ever, in their memoranda to the trial court or in their briefs and argument to this court, suggested that they intended to assert claims against the named individuals in their individual capacities except as a basis for imposing liability on the municipality. We need not, therefore, consider further the propriety of the trial court’s conclusion on that issue.

II

The plaintiff maintains that the statute, thus construed, unconstitutionally deprives a plaintiff of the right to bring actions that existed at common law. This claim is without merit.

Article first, § 10, of the Connecticut constitution provides: “All courts shall be open, and every person, for *195an injury done to him in his person, property or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law, and right and justice administered without sale, denial or delay.” “[A]ll rights derived by statute and the common law extant at the time of the adoption of article first, § 10, are incorporated in that provision.” Gentile v. Altermatt, 169 Conn. 267, 286, 363 A.2d 1, appeal dismissed, 423 U.S. 1041, 96 S. Ct. 763, 46 L. Ed. 2d 631 (1976); Sharp v. Mitchell, 209 Conn. 59, 64, 546 A.2d 846 (1988).

Our decision in Gentile constitutionalized the maxim “for every wrong, there is a remedy,” with respect to injuries recognized before 1818. Enactment of our state constitution protected the right to redress for injuries, but it did not enshrine any particular causes of action. Thus, in Gentile we upheld the no-fault insurance statute, which barred automobile accident suits for sums under $400, because the statute gave the injured party the right to receive damages from his own statutorily required insurance policy. Similarly, in Daily v. New Britain Machine Co., 200 Conn. 562, 512 A.2d 893 (1986), we upheld a provision in the products liability statute of limitations that barred employees from bringing products liability suits more than ten years after the manufacturer had “last parted with possession” of the product, because our workers’ compensation statute gave the injured employee the right to receive workers’ compensation benefits. In Gentile, we also recognized that the legislature was constitutionally permitted to replace a common law cause of action with a statutory scheme that incidentally deprived certain individuals of their right to redress, so long as such individuals were among those on whom the statute conferred new benefits formerly unavailable at common law. The focus of any claim of unconstitutionality under our holding in Gentile must rest, therefore, upon an evaluation of whether “ ‘some form of legal recourse *196for injured parties’ ” as a class “is retained” despite a legislative decision to “limit the availability of certain constitutionally incorporated common law causes of action.” (Emphasis added.) Burkert v. Petrol Plus of Naugatuck, Inc., 216 Conn. 65, 73 n.9, 579 A.2d 26 (1990).

In short, Gentile asks three questions: (1) Was redress available for the type of injury at issue, whether the redress was conferred by statute or at common law, prior to 1818? (2) Is redress presently available for the type of injury at issue, notwithstanding the enactment of the challenged statute? (3) If the challenged statute deprives certain individuals of redress for the type of injury at issue, does the statute, in exchange for that deprivation, confer commensurate aggregate benefits upon any class of individuals to which those individuals belong?

Applying these questions to the plaintiff’s claim, we conclude that our construction of the proviso in § 52-557n (a) (1) does not make the statute constitutionally defective. The availability of redress under § 13a-149 permits the legislature constitutionally to eliminate common law remedies, if any,13 that may have *197existed prior to 181814 and that continued to exist prior to the Tort Reform Act of 1986,15 for injuries arising out of highway defects. Our decision in Gentile does not require the legislature intentionally to craft a new remedy in order to displace an old one. It is enough if there exists an adequate “remedy by due course of law” for the underlying injury.

A plaintiffs right to redress under § 13a-149 is not, of course, coextensive with his rights in a common law tort action. Section 13a-149 does not permit recovery unless the defect was the sole proximate cause of the injury, even if the concurring cause was a third party’s negligence. Lukas v. New Haven, 184 Conn. 205, 207, 439 A.2d 949 (1981); see also Bartram v. Sharon, 71 Conn. 686, 43 A. 143 (1899) (barring recovery where the victim was a passenger and the driver, by exercise of ordinary diligence, could have avoided the accident). As construed by case law, § 13a-149 also does not permit recovery for consequential damages. Chidsey v. *198 Canton, 17 Conn. 475, 478 (1846). On the other hand, § 13a-149, as construed by case law, permits recovery against a municipality if the municipality had nothing more than “constructive notice” of the defect. See, e.g., Linn v. Hartford, 135 Conn. 469, 472, 66 A.2d 115 (1949). On balance, § 13a-149 affords a constitutionally adequate right to redress for injuries arising out of highway defects.

It is true that some plaintiffs who are limited to their recourse under § 13a-149 may be deprived of a remedy. The plaintiff who fails within ninety days to provide the municipality with the statutorily required notice will be barred from any recovery. We have previously rejected a challenge to the constitutionality of § 13a-149 on the ground that its notice provision violated article first, § 10 of our constitution. See Shally v. Danbury & Bethel Horse R. Co., 64 Conn. 381, 387, 30 A. 135 (1894); cf. Daily v. New Britain Machine Co., 200 Conn. 562, 584, 512 A.2d 893 (1986); Vilcinskas v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 144 Conn. 170, 174-75, 127 A.2d 814 (1956) (addressing statutes of limitation). The statutory notice assists a town in settling claims promptly in order to avoid the expenses of litigation and encourages prompt investigation of conditions that may endanger public safety, as well as giving the town an early start in assembling evidence for its defense against meritless claims. The notice requirement strikes a balance between the public benefit and the private right to seek a remedy. “[S]uch reasonable conditions and regulations as are demanded by the public good, and have for their object the promotion of the cause of justice and the general convenience, do not amount to an infringement” of our constitution. Curtis v. Gill, 34 Conn. 49, 54 (1867).

We note also that in providing that “no cause of action” shall be maintained in nuisance or negligence that might be brought under the highway defect stat*199ute, the legislature eliminated the victim’s spouse’s right to recover for loss of consortium. An action for loss of consortium “is derivative of the injured spouse’s cause of action, the consortium claim would be barred when the suit brought by the injured spouse” is barred. Hopson v. St. Mary’s Hospital, 176 Conn. 485, 494, 408 A.2d 260 (1979). Section 13a-149 does not permit damages for loss of consortium, but permits recovery only by the injured “traveler.” Tuckel v. Argraves, 148 Conn. 355, 170 A.2d 895 (1961); Frechette v. New Haven, 104 Conn. 83, 132 A. 467 (1926); Lounsbury v. Bridgeport, 66 Conn. 360, 368, 34 A. 93 (1895); Chidsey v. Canton, supra, 479.

At common law, prior to 1818, a husband could bring an action on the case seeking damages for loss of consortium resulting from his wife’s injury. See Marri v. Stamford Street Rail Co., 84 Conn. 9,14-17, 78 A. 582 (1911); Cross v. Guthery, 2 Root 90 (1794). Neither the plaintiffs, nor our own research, has been able to uncover any negligence action brought prior to 1818 against a municipality, however, that sought damages for loss of consortium. Considering that our earlier decisions in Eldredge v. Pomfret, 1 Root 270 (1791), and Lewis v. Litchfield, 2 Root 436 (1796), which suggest the existence of a common law negligence action arising out a highway defect in addition to the remedy afforded by the statute, appear to be anomalies as recognized by the consistent refusal of this court, during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, to expand liability against towns beyond the liability explicitly imposed by statute; see Seidel v. Woodbury, 81 Conn. 65, 66, 70 A. 58 (1908); Lavigne v. New Haven, 75 Conn. 693, 695, 55 A. 569 (1903); Jones v. New Haven, 34 Conn. 1, 13 (1867); Chidsey v. Canton, supra, 478; we decline to assume that one whose wife was injured by a defective highway would have been able, prior to 1818, to seek damages for loss of consortium *200from the town responsible. The legislature was free, therefore, to take away any such right that may have subsequently developed, at “ ‘[its] will, or even at [its] whim . . . ” Gentile v. Altermatt, supra, 283, quoting Munn v. Illinois, 94 U.S. 113, 134, 24 L. Ed. 77 (1876).

Moreover, § 52-557n, by implicitly barring claims for loss of consortium based on highway defects, “does not restrict the right to redress for an actionable injury but, rather, redefines the injury or the class of persons injured to which this constitutional right of redress attaches. What is of constitutional dimensions . . . is the right of redress and not the nature of the particular injury for which redress is sought. . . . [I]t is within the province of the legislature to redefine or abolish existing definitions of injury since it is within its province to create, abrogate or redefine the ‘established law.’ ” Gentile v. Altermatt, supra, 284-85. Insofar as the statute merely “redefines the injury or the class of persons injured”; id., 284; “it does not infringe upon the right to redress.” Id., 285.

Ill

The plaintiffs contend that the trial court’s decision to grant the motion to strike improperly prevented them from pleading in the alternative as expressly permitted by Practice Book § 137.16 If we had construed § 52-557n to bar only nuisance actions against municipalities for injuries caused by highway defects, it would, of course, have been improper for the trial court to have struck all of the plaintiffs’ counts. We have, however, construed § 52-557n to bar, in addition to nuisance actions, actions in negligence or for breach of ministerial duty brought against the municipality directly or derivatively by way of the indemnification statute, *201§ 7-465. The motion to strike was properly granted with respect to those theories imposing liability upon the municipality.

At oral argument, however, the plaintiffs put forth a slightly different proposition. In essence, they argue that whether the accident was caused by a “highway defect” cannot be determined until trial, and that until the status of the accident’s cause can be determined, their other legal theories must remain viable as alternative means of redress.17 We disagree.

Section 13a-149 provides that “[a]ny person injured in person or property by means of a defective road or bridge may recover damages from the party bound to keep it in repair.” Whether a highway is defective may involve issues of fact, but whether the facts alleged would, if true, amount to a highway defect according to the statute is a question of law which may be determined on a motion to strike. See Older v. Old Lyme, 124 Conn. 283, 285, 199 A. 434 (1938). Whether or not the accident was caused by the defective traffic light, the plaintiffs’ claim that it was caused by the defective traffic light is, as a matter of law, a claim based upon a “defective road.”

This court has not yet had occasion to decide whether a faulty traffic light comes within the statutory term “defective road,” but the courts of other states, construing state highway defect statutes similar to our own, have repeatedly reached that conclusion. See, e.g., Brown v. State Highway Commission, 202 Kan. 1, 444 P.2d 882 (1968) (obstructed stop sign was a “defect in a state highway” under highway defect statute, Kan. Stat. Ann. § 68-419 [1961 Sup.]); Fox v. Columbia, 260 S.C. 367, 196 S.E.2d 105 (1973) (defective traffic light *202was a “defect in any street” under highway defect statute, S.C. Code § 47-70 [1962]); Fretwell v. Chaffin, 652 S.W.2d 755, 756 (Tenn. 1983) (obscured stop sign was an “ ‘injury caused by defective, unsafe or dangerous condition of any street’ ” under statute providing exception to governmental immunity from negligence actions); see also Thorpe v. Denver, 30 Colo. App. 284, 494 P.2d 129 (1972) (defective traffic light is a “dangerous condition in [the city’s] streets” which, under earlier case law, made the city liable in negligence for injuries caused thereby). The Superior Court of this state has reached the same conclusion. DeLeo v. Orlando, 29 Conn. Sup. 107, 273 A.2d 725 (1971).

We have held that a highway defect is “[a]ny object in, upon, or near the traveled path, which would necessarily obstruct or hinder one in the use of the road for the purpose of traveling thereon, or which, from its nature and position, would be likely to produce that result . . . Hewison v. New Haven, 34 Conn. 136, 142 (1867); see Hickey v. Newtown, 150 Conn. 514, 518, 192 A.2d 199 (1963). In Hewison, we distinguished such highway defects from those objects “which have no necessary connexion with the road bed, or the public travel thereon, and which may expose a person to danger, not as a traveler, but independent of the highway . . . .” Hewison v. New Haven, supra, 143. We explored this distinction more recently in Comba v. Ridgefield, 177 Conn. 268, 413 A.2d 859 (1979). In that case, rejecting the plaintiff’s assertion that an overhanging tree limb, which subsequently fell on a traveling automobile, could be a “highway defect,” we explained: “[I]f there is a defective condition that is not in the roadway, it must be so direct a menace to travel over the way and so susceptible to protection and remedial measures which could be reasonably applied within the way that the failure to employ such measures would be regarded as a lack of reasonable repair.” Id., 271.

*203Unquestionably, a malfunctioning traffic light, although not a physical impediment at street level, is, as a matter of law, such a highway defect, or in the language of the statute, part of a “defective road.” We need not consider, therefore, the impact § 52-557n would have in another case in which the statutory status of an accident’s cause could not be established prior to trial.

The plaintiffs also advance a more novel proposition. They point out that § 13a-149 limits recovery to those accidents of which the municipality is the sole proximate cause and of which the municipality has been given statutory notice within ninety days. They insist that their alternative theories of liability may not be stricken until it has been determined at trial, not only that their cause of action arises from a highway defect, but also that the cause of action is viable: that is, that the defect was the sole proximate cause of the injury, and that they have fulfilled the statutory notice requirement. This argument raises the bizarre possibility that a plaintiff who fulfills the statutory notice requirement and whose injury is solely caused by a highway defect would be limited to his remedy under § 13a-149, while the plaintiff whose injuries were caused only tangentially by the highway defect, and who did not provide the municipality with notice, could maintain a full-fledged nuisance suit and recover intangible and consequential damages. We reject such an absurd reading of Practice Book § 137. See Caltabiano v. Planning & Zoning Commission, 211 Conn. 662, 667, 560 A.2d 975 (1989).

The judgment is affirmed.

In this opinion the other justices concurred.

Sanzone v. Board of Police Commissioners
219 Conn. 179

Case Details

Name
Sanzone v. Board of Police Commissioners
Decision Date
Jun 11, 1991
Citations

219 Conn. 179

Jurisdiction
Connecticut

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