Opinion
File No. 14591
No presumption of the receipt of a notice by a certain day arises from the mere dating of the notice. The plaintiff, in an action for damages for injuries from a defective highway, must allege facts which, if proved, will show that the highway commissioner actually received the statutory notice of injury within sixty days after its occurrence. The annexation of a copy of the notice to the complaint and a broad allegation that the commissioner was given notice are not sufficient to withstand a demurrer on the ground that the notice was not received by the sixtieth day.
Memorandum filed February 21, 1961
Memorandum on demurrer to amended complaint. Demurrer sustained.
Parmelee Snow, of Middletown, for the plaintiff.
Alfred F. Wechsler and Bailey Wechsler, of Hartford, for the defendant.
Plaintiff's complaint, claiming damages for injuries caused by a defective highway, alleges in paragraph 4 simply that "the defendant was given notice that said highway was defective on or about December 21, 1959, by the plaintiff, in writing, as is provided for by statute," and an amendment subsequently was filed incorporating therein a copy of the notice itself, a letter dated December 21, 1959. The injuries complained of, from which plaintiff's decedent died instantly, are alleged to have occurred on October 22, 1959.
Defendant has demurred on the ground that the notice "exceeded the sixty-day requirement for such notice" in that it was not received by the highway commissioner within the sixty-day statutory period, to which plaintiff's counsel replied, in oral argument, that proof of the failure of defendant to receive the notice on time was a matter of evidence to be produced at the trial of the case.
Section 13-87 of the General Statutes, under which this action was brought, bars such a claim unless notice "has been given within sixty days thereafter to the highway commissioner," and our Supreme Court has specifically held, in Rapid Motor Lines v. Cox, 134 Conn. 235, that this means that the notice must have been received by the commissioner by the sixtieth day, excluding the day of the injury and counting the sixtieth day thereafter as the final day.
As stated in Barteis v. Windsor, 134 Conn. 569, 571: "It was the duty of the plaintiff, under the [1934] Practice Book, § 43, either to recite the notice in the complaint or to annex it thereto. The obvious purpose of this rule is to have the sufficiency of the notice, if challenged, tested by demurrer preceding the trial." True, plaintiff has filed a copy of a notice dated December 21, 1959, but nowhere does he allege that such notice was served upon or received by the commissioner on that date — which was the sixtieth or final day. It is not sufficient for him simply to rest upon the broad allegation that "defendant was given notice . . . as provided by § 13-87 of the General Statutes," without alleging those facts which, if proved, would constitute proper notice. To hold otherwise would be to defeat the purpose of the rule, to test the sufficiency of the notice by demurrer preceding the trial. As stated by the court in the Barteis case, supra, 572: "Allegations and proof of the notice required by statute are a vital part of the plaintiff's case. They go to the very existence of the action, which in the absence of compliance with the requirements of the statute does not exist at all."
The burden is on the plaintiff to allege those facts which, if proved, would constitute proper notice — such as an allegation that the notice dated December 21, 1959, was actually received by the commissioner upon that date. No presumption of such receipt arises from the mere dating of the letter, and if plaintiff is unable to prove it, and therefore to sustain that vital part of his burden of proof, defendant is entitled to ascertain that fact now, by demurrer, without going to trial and himself proving that such notice was not received within the sixty-day period.