Date: Fri 28-Feb-1997
Date: Fri 28-Feb-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
tree-suit-accident-Murchison
Full Text:
Fallen Tree Limb Lands Town In Court
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
A former Sandy Hook resident is suing the town over a September 1995 auto
accident in which a massive tree limb fell onto the vehicle he was driving,
causing him serious injuries.
The lawsuit alleges the town was negligent in not maintaining the tree from
which the limb fell. The plaintiff seeks compensatory damages and medical
costs he incurred after the accident.
In the lawsuit filed in Danbury Superior Court, James E. Murchison, 28, who
now lives in Bethel, sues the town, Tree Warden John Mead, and Public Works
Director Fred Hurley. Mr Murchison lived in Sandy Hook at the time of the
accident.
According to the suit, on the afternoon of September 4, 1995, Mr Murchison was
driving a 1994 Geo Tracker westbound past 176 Boggs Hill Road when a large
dead maple tree limb, extending over the road, snapped and fell, striking his
vehicle.
The dead branch crushed the hood of the Geo and caused it to flip over,
throwing Mr Murchison from the vehicle, according to the lawsuit.
The tree was either wholly or partially within the road's public right of way,
the suit states.
The suit describes the limb as 18 inches in diameter, more than 45 feet long
and weighing about 3,500 pounds.
According to the suit, the limb had been wholly or substantially dead for at
least eight years before it fell, and the base of its stem had been dead for
at least three years.
The tree from which the limb fell was in a row of six large sugar maples trees
of similar age. all of which show signs of decay and structural unsoundness,
the suit states.
The town is required to locate and remove the rotted tree limbs of publicly
owned trees on a timely basis, according to the suit.
Although the limb that fell on Mr Murchison's vehicle had been noticeably dead
for years and posed a significant hazard to motorists and their passengers, no
town employee had taken steps to remove the tree limb or otherwise protect the
public from the hazards that its presence posed, the suit adds.
The care and maintenance of such publicly owned trees which hang over publicly
owned roads is the responsibility of Mr Mead and Mr Hurley, according to the
lawsuit. The suit asks the town to financially protect Mr Mead and Mr Hurley
from any personal financial liability in the case.
Injuries
According to the lawsuit, Mr Murchison received severe permanent and painful
injuries, including a traumatic brain injury; multiple fractures of the spine;
four broken ribs; a broken shoulder blade; a broken leg; a broken knee; a
punctured lung; and abrasions and bruises. The head trauma resulted in memory
loss, cognitive impairments, and other problems, according to the suit.
"These injuries have caused and will continue to cause Mr Murchison severe
pain and suffering, great mental anxiety, a loss of life's enjoyment and
distress of mind. ... Mr Murchison has also suffered permanent scarring and
disfigurement," it states.
Due to the accident, Mr Murchison incurred bills for medical care and
treatment, surgery, hospitalization, medicine, diagnostic work and
rehabilitation, it states. He will have to spend additional money in the
future for such purposes, it adds. Mr Murchison will be unable to work as he
had in the past, thus sustaining a loss of past and future earnings, according
to the suit.
Mr Murchison is seeking an unspecified amount of money exceeding $15,000
through the lawsuit. He is represented by attorney Steven D. Ecker of Cowdery
and Ecker, LLC, of Hartford. The town is scheduled to appear in court March 11
to answer the allegations made in the lawsuit.
