The complaint in this case was successfully demurred to upon the ground that it appeared that no sufficient notice descriptive of the injury complained of had been given to the defendant, as required by § 2020 of the General Statutes. The plaintiffs contend that the action of the court in sustaining this demurrer was erroneous for two reasons, to wit: First, that, as the complaint stated a cause of action under § 2019 of the General Statutes, a notice, as provided in § 2020, was not a necessary condition precedent to its maintenance; and second, that the notice given, as set out in the complaint, was a sufficient one under § 2020. We have no occasion to notice the first of these claims, since, in our opinion, the notice alleged to have been given sufficiently complies with the requirements of § 2020.
Our statutory requirement of notice of claims for damages for injuries occasioned by defective roads and bridges, forming a portion of § 2020, has passed through three pertinent stages of development. As originally adopted in 1874, it provided for a "written notice of such injury, and the time and place where it occurred." *Page 48 Public Acts of 1874, p. 196, Chap. 23. In 1883 it was changed, so that the notice was to be "of such injury, and the nature and cause thereof, and of the time and place of its occurrence." Public Acts of 1883, p. 283, Chap. 105. In 1895 it was made to assume its present form, requiring "written notice of such injury and a general description of the same, and the cause thereof, and of the time and place of its occurrence." Public Acts of 1895, p. 534, Chap. 172. As no question is made in the present case as to the sufficiency of the notice in respect to "cause," "time," and "place," we may dismiss those elements of the prescribed notice from our consideration.
In Tuttle v. Winchester, 50 Conn. 496, 500, decided in 1883, it was held that the original statute, which governed the case, contained no requirement that the notice should state the character of the injury. That being so, little of present pertinence is to be expected from the decisions which antedate the amendment of 1883, which, quite probably, was brought about by either the conclusion of the court in the Tuttle case, just stated, or the discussion which that case invoked before its decision.
During the twelve years that passed after the amendment of 1883 and prior to that of 1895, a very considerable number of cases involving the question of the sufficiency of notices arose, which were brought to this court. The law, it will be remembered, called for a notice of the "nature" of the injury. These cases presented a great variety of conditions, so that, first and last, there was in the opinions a thorough discussion and comprehensive determination of the purpose sought to be accomplished by the enactment, the construction to be given to it, and the principles to be observed in its application to concrete situations. The conclusions embodied in these opinions are, in substance, that the statutory *Page 49 notice was not prescribed to throw useless obstacles in the way of a claimant; that its sole purpose was to furnish the party against whom a claim was to be made such warning as would prompt him to make such inquiries as he might deem necessary or prudent for the preservation of his interests, and such information as would furnish him a reasonable guide in the conduct of such inquiries, and in obtaining such information as he might deem helpful for his protection; that, being required to be furnished by plain men, and oftentimes by men of limited education, there was no intention that it be couched in technical language, or expressed with the nicety or exactness of a pleading, or contain a description of the injury in detail; that the sufficiency of the notice was to be tested with reference to the purpose for which it was required; that, if sufficient for that purpose, it was a good notice; that a general description, which would apprise the one to whom it was given of the general nature of the injury, was sufficient; and that the extent of the burden of furnishing information upon that subject was one which was to be determined by the circumstances of the case, and with a view that it be not unreasonably increased by a demand for information which either could not reasonably be expected, or, if given, would not, from its nature, be helpful to the other party. Brown v. Southbury, 53 Conn. 212,213, 1 A. 819; Lilly v. Woodstock, 59 Conn. 219, 221,22 A. 40; Gardner v. New London, 63 Conn. 267, 272,28 A. 42; Budd v. Meriden Electric R. Co., 69 Conn. 272,285, 37 A. 683.
These conclusions as to the purpose of the statutory notice and the principles to be observed in determining whether the requirements of the statute have been met, have been frequently restated, either in terms or in substance, and reaffirmed since the change of phraseology made in 1895. Breen v. Cornwall, 73 Conn. 309, *Page 50 312, 47 A. 322; Judd v. New Britain, 81 Conn. 300,303, 70 A. 1028; Thorson v. Groton Stonington StreetRy. Co., 85 Conn. 11, 12, 81 A. 1024.
But there remains to be considered, before arriving at the present state of the law, the amendment made in 1895. A study of the situation existing when it was passed, and of the change in language which was then made, leads to the conclusion, first, that the change in language had for its object the purpose of making a change in the requirement as to the description of the nature of the injury — a change either in the direction of greater strictness or greater liberality. If there was no such object sought to be attained, there would seem to have been no excuse for the legislation, since no other alteration was made in the existing statute. This study leads quite unmistakably to the further conclusion that the intent of the change was to emphasize the generality, and not the particularity, of the description of the injury. Its design was not to make the requirements in that regard more strict and technical, but less so, so that the burden placed upon a claimant should be no greater than was involved in a general description, sufficient to apprise the other party of the general character of the injury fairly, and to such an extent as might be reasonably necessary, under the circumstances, to reasonably protect his interests.
It is to be noticed, in this connection, that the injury of which the statute requires notice to be given is the injury to the claimant. General Statutes, § 2020. Where that injury results, as in this case, from harm done to property, the injury to the owner comes from that source; and what the statute requires is such description of that source as will meet the purpose of the statutory requirement, as above set forth.
We have now to compare the allegations of injury *Page 51 contained in the complaint with the statements in the notice, in the light of these principles.
It is to be noticed, first of all, that the complaint sets out certain matters of special damage, such as the claimed expenditure for medical attendance and medicines and the loss of the use of the injured horse and wagon. These allegations were necessary to recovery under the recognized rules of pleading. Statements of such damage were unnecessary to the notice. "`The general description of the injury' required is of the direct or immediate injury to person or property caused by such described act of negligence, and not of consequential damages which have or which may result from such injury." Peck v. Fair Haven W. R. Co., 77 Conn. 161,164, 58 A. 757.
Again, the complaint attaches money valuations to the several items of injury recited. This was not called for in the notice.
Omitting these two features from the averments of the complaint, we find that the injury to the wagon is fully as specifically stated in the notice as in the complaint. That to the horse differs only in that the statement of the notice that the horse was injured and greatly deteriorated in value is transformed into one that he was injured about the legs and body and lamed and permanently injured. The latter statement is, in some respects, more specific; but in what material respects the notice failed to reasonably inform the defendant of anything that concerned its interest to know for its protection it is difficult to discover. The notice was not an ideal one; but, in our opinion, it would call for the application to the situation of more strict and technical rules than our statute, as it has been repeatedly construed, justifies, to hold that it was insufficient, in its information conveyed of the injury to the plaintiffs as the property owner, to support a recovery for the injuries *Page 52 recited in the complaint. The complaint may be more specific than the notice. Breen v. Cornwall, 73 Conn. 309,314, 47 A. 322.
This cause was here upon a former occasion.85 Conn. 221, 82 A. 198. Upon its return to the trial court, the defendant moved that it be permitted to withdraw its answer and file instead a motion to direct the plaintiffs to set out the notice in full in their complaint. This was permitted and done. The defendant thereupon demurred, thus presenting the question already discussed. The appeal assigns the court's action in this matter as erroneous. This assignment is not pursued.
There is error, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to be proceeded with according to law.
In this opinion HALL, C. J., THAYER and RORABACK, Js., concurred.