Opinion
Proof of a material fact by inference from circumstantial evidence alone need not be so conclusive as to exclude every other hypothesis. The court's inference that the ice upon which the plaintiff fell on January 19 had existed on the walk since January 4 was warranted and its conclusion that the defect was of sufficiently long standing to impute notice to the defendant was justified.
Argued May 15, 1946
Decided June 12, 1946
ACTION to recover damages for personal injuries, alleged to have been caused by an icy sidewalk, brought to the Court of Common Pleas in Hartford County and tried to the court, Wall, J.; judgment for the plaintiff and appeal by the defendant. No error.
Harold J. Eisenberg, corporation counsel, for the appellant (defendant).
Maurice W. Rosenberg, for the appellee (plaintiff).
The plaintiff recovered judgment for damages for personal injuries sustained by a fall upon a sidewalk of the defendant city alleged to have been slippery and defective by reason of snow and ice. The material facts found by the court are not subject to correction and may be thus summarized: On January 19, 1942, the plaintiff had delivered milk at house No. 91 on the southerly side of Belden Street in New Britain. In returning, he stepped on a patch of ice on the public sidewalk just west of the foot of the front steps of the house, his feet slipped and he fell, severely injuring his hand. The cause of his fall was an irregularly shaped piece of ice about two feet long, one and one-half feet wide and two inches thick which was frozen to the sidewalk at that point. Belden Street extends east and west. Its southerly sidewalk is of concrete five feet in width and pitches slightly towards the south edge, which adjoins the foot of a four-foot bank in front of the house. No. 91 is a three-story house and shades the sidewalk in front of it from the sun. This retards the thawing of snow or ice upon the sidewalk. Water from melting snow or ice in front of No. 91 flows along the inner edge of the sidewalk to a point where the driveway crosses the walk east of the steps and thence across the sidewalk to the street gutter.
On January 4, 1942, there was a heavy snowstorm mixed with rain and sleet. From then to the date of the accident there was no material precipitation. After January 4 until noon on January 19 the temperature was below freezing except for these intervals: from 11 a.m. on the 14th to 4 a.m. on the 15th, during which period it averaged about forty degrees; from 8 a.m. on the 18th until after the plaintiff's fall on the 19th. At 8 a.m. on the 19th a heavy rain began which continued past the noon hour. No sand or ashes had been placed on this ice and there was no evidence that anyone had shoveled the walk.
The defendant's attack upon the court's judgment and the conclusions supporting it is well summed up in its final assignment of error in these words: The facts found "contain no evidence of the existence of the defect prior to the time of the plaintiff's injury and, therefore, cannot support the conclusions that the neglect was of sufficiently long standing to impute notice to the defendant and that the defect had continued from January 4th to January 19th, without which conclusions the plaintiff must be held not to have proved his case." Thus the question determinative of the appeal is whether the facts found warrant the court's inference that the patch of ice upon which the plaintiff fell had existed on the walk since January 4 and so charged the defendant with the notice of this condition essential to liability. In deciding this question the heavy fall of wet snow of the 4th, the drop in temperature to below freezing which shortly ensued, the lack of any material precipitation thereafter until the 19th, the shaded location of the place in question and the continuation without substantial interruption of a temperature below freezing throughout the period between these dates would afford, in the absence of other facts, a basis for the inference that this patch of ice originated and continued as concluded by the court. That, by reason of the topography, surface water would not naturally gather upon the walk at this point, that the ice in question had not been sanded and that there was no evidence that the walk had been shoveled constitute further corroborative factors.
While these facts are indicative that the probable origin of the ice was the storm of January 4, as concluded by the court, they do not preclude the possibility of its having resulted from some other cause arising at a subsequent time. This does not, however, necessarily affect the validity of the court's inference. "We have consistently held that in a civil case proof of a material fact by inference from circumstantial evidence, alone, need not be so conclusive as to exclude every other hypothesis. Bradbury v. South Norwalk, 80 Conn. 298, 301, 68 A. 321. . . . The decisive consideration is not whether the [fact so found] is consistent or inconsistent with another or other hypotheses but whether or not the inference upon which it is based was one which could have been fairly and reasonably drawn from the physical facts without the admixture of speculation or conjecture. Morse v. Consolidated Ry. Co., 81 Conn. 395, 399, 71 A. 553; Riccio v. Waterbury Foundry Co., 118 Conn. 468, 470, 173 A. 106; . . . Kligerman v. Rosenstein, 128 Conn. 455, 458, 23 A.2d 925." LeBlanc v. Grillo, 129 Conn. 378, 381, 28 A.2d 127. Applying this test, we conclude that the court's inference that the ice upon which the plaintiff fell had existed on the walk since January 4 was warranted, and that, accordingly, its conclusions are sufficient to support the judgment.
The only other assignment of error meriting mention relates to a ruling upon evidence. In a hypothetical question predicated primarily upon the weather conditions to which we have referred, a witness called by the plaintiff was asked his opinion concerning the length of time ice had been on the walk prior to January 19. The defendant objected on the ground that the question was improper because it left out the important factor of what if anything had been done to the sidewalk. The court allowed the question. The opinion was obviously predicated upon the assumption that nothing had been done to the sidewalk, and the failure to include that statement specifically in the question was of no consequence. Had it later appeared that there were some intervening causes which affected the situation, the weight of the opinion would have been greatly affected or destroyed, but the finding indicates that there were not. The court could, in its discretion, properly admit the question. Hall v. Sera, 112 Conn. 291, 297, 152 A. 148; Jackson v. Waller, 126 Conn. 294, 306, 10 A.2d 763.