220 A.D. 547 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1927
.The action is for damages for alleged personal injuries attributable to the defendant’s act in discharging a loaded gun from the window of his home into and through a window of plaintiff’s apartment while she was at home.
The defendant was successful in his motion made under rule 106 of the Rules of Civil Practice to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a cause of action.
The complaint charges that the defendant “ assaulted ” plaintiff. This conclusion of fact is followed by allegations showing that the defendant fired this gun into the plaintiff’s apartment several times, in doing which the windows were broken, the bullets struck various parts of a room in which the plaintiff was, and broke household articles therein. Plaintiff also alleged that while the defendant did this shooting she was lying in bed, having but
It is not necessary to hold that the defendant’s act was technically an assault, although authority is not wanting for the proposition that an assault may be committed without an intention to shoot any one in particular if a pistol be fired recklessly resulting in a person being shot (see cases in 4 Am. Dig. [Cent, ed.] 981); and that an action for damages for an assault lies where a pistol is menacingly pointed at another without actually being fired. (Liebstadter v. Federgreen, 80 Hun, 245; People v. Morehouse, 6 N. Y. Supp. 763; memo., 53 Hun, 638. See, also, cases cited by Cullen, J., in People v. McKenzie, 6 App. Div. 199, 201.) A dictum by Chief Justice Shaw (Meader v. Stone, 7 Metc. [Mass.] 147, 151) is instructive: " We have no doubt that an assault may be committed on one in a house, who is not seen or known to be there; as if one were wantonly to fire a loaded gun, and the ball should pass through a house where persons were, it might be an assault on all of them.”
Ignoring the allegation of assault, the other acts charged in the complaint are sufficient to constitute a cause of action, in my opinion. The defendant relies on the well-known case of Mitchell v. Rochester Railway Co. (151 N. Y. 107), where it was held that a recovery of damages may not be had for injuries sustained by fright occasioned by the negligence of another where there is no immediate personal injury. In that case, while the plaintiff was standing upon a street crossing awaiting an opportunity to board an approaching street car drawn by horses, the approaching horses turned to the right and so close to the plaintiff as to result in her finding herself standing between the horses’ heads when they were stopped; and her testimony was that from the fright and excitement caused by the approach and proximity of the team, she became unconscious and ill, and that a miscarriage followed. That case obviously was one of negligence in the want of ordinary prudence as ordinarily understood and accepted in law, and involved no element of wantonness or willfulness. Here, however, there is a great deal more. The defendant’s act of shooting this gun through the - lighted windows of plaintiff’s apartment was so wanton, reckless and
The order should, therefore, be reversed' upon the law, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
Kelly, P. J., Manning, Young and Lazansky, JJ., concur.
Order dismissing complaint for insufficiency reversed upon the law, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.