Court Opinion

ID: 3316524
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 17:34:06.325537+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:00:51.782108
License: Public Domain

This demurrer involves two false assumptions, to wit: first, that the plaintiffs' allegations of time precluded them from proving that Mrs. Bulkley received her alleged injuries on some day later than that alleged; and second, that the statements of the officer in his return of service were to be accepted as facts coming within the purview of the demurrer to the complaint. *Page 286 
The plaintiff's averment of the time when the events which furnished the basis of their cause of action occurred, was an immaterial one, and upon a trial proof that they occurred upon some subsequent day, which would render the demurrer pointless, would have been admissible.Fitzgerald v. Scovil Mfg. Co., 77 Conn. 528, 529, 60 A. 132; Sage v.Hawley, 16 Conn. 106, 111; Gould on Pleading (4th Ed.), Chap. III, §§ 63, 64. An allegation of time originally immaterial may become material by reason of subsequent pleading. Fitzgerald v. Scovil Mfg. Co., 77 Conn. 528,529, 60 A. 132. Such a result, however, does not follow from demurring. The complaint stated a good cause of action, since under its averments such a cause of action could be proved without creating a variance.
The demurrer was to the complaint. We have held that a complaint may, for the purposes of a demurrer, be read in connection with the writ which it accompanies. Radezky v. Sargent  Co., 77 Conn. 110, 112, 58 A. 709. It is a very different thing, however, to say that the statements in the return of the officer serving the writ and complaint may be treated as facts supplementing those set up in the complaint, and so forming a part of the complaint that they may be utilized by the defendant in a demurrer to the plaintiff's statement of his cause of action. We can imagine no justification for such a proposition. The facts attending the officer's action, although reported to the court in a return on file as a part of the record of the cause and importing verity, are facts aliunde the pleadings, and must be pleaded by whichever party would avail himself of them, thus permitting an issue of fact to be joined thereon. The language of the demurrer indicates that the defendant appreciated that it was going outside of the complaint for a necessary fact and pleading it as a fact. The demurrer carefully refrains from stating that it appears from the complaint that the action was not begun within the four-month period. On the contrary, *Page 287 
it asserts the proposition that such was the fact, thus making it in form, as it was in fact, a speaking demurrer. If the defendant desired to avail itself of the date of service, it was its duty to set it up in a defense in bar of the action.
Section 1130 of the General Statutes, with which we are here concerned, is quite different in its character from § 2020 relating to actions against municipal corporations by reason of defective highways. The latter section gives a right of action where there would otherwise be none, and makes the giving of a prescribed notice a condition precedent to the existence of such a right under any and all circumstances.Crocker v. Hartford, 66 Conn. 387, 390, 34 A. 98; Forbes v. Suffield,81 Conn. 274, 70 A. 1023. On the other hand, an action may be maintained against this defendant upon the facts set up in this complaint. A written notice is not a prerequisite. Section 1130 simply places a limitation, analogous to the general statute of limitations, upon the right of an injured party to prosecute such an action without further proceedings. This limitation is to be regarded as creating a condition subsequent, by which an existing right is cut off by the nonperformance of the condition, rather than a condition precedent to a continuing right. Such being its essential character, a defense predicated upon it, as upon conditions subsequent and limitations generally, need not be anticipated and negatived by the plaintiff, but may properly be left to be pleaded by the defendant. Gould on Pleading (4th Ed.), Chap. IV, § 17.
The court in its memorandum assigned another reason for its action in overruling the demurrer. We have no need to pass upon the sufficiency of this reason.
   There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.