Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Sise, J.), entered August 2, 2000 in Ful
In 1996, plaintiff, an experienced golfer, played golf at the Nick Stoner Municipal Golf Course owned by defendant Town of Caroga in Fulton County. As plaintiff had done on numerous other courses, she rented a golf cart, this time from defendant Stephen Jennings, who was employed by the Town as, inter alia, its golf professional at the course.
After teeing off at the second hole, plaintiff drove her cart on the path and stopped perpendicular to the crest of a small hill in front of the green despite a sign labeled “carts” with an arrow pointing parallel to the crest. After she removed a club and began to walk towards her ball, the cart rolled down the slope of the fairway, ultimately striking her and causing her injury. Plaintiff testified that while her habit was to set the brake when stopping her cart, she could not recall if she did so on this occasion; she made this disclosure not only to the investigating police officer but also to the numerous other witnesses who assisted her at the scene. Jennings testified that minutes after the accident, he tested the braking mechanism of the golf cart and found it to be in proper working condition. This fact was confirmed by the testing of the cart at the accident scene by both a volunteer firefighter and a golfer in the group immediately behind plaintiff.
Plaintiff commenced this negligence action against both the Town and Jennings. Jennings moved for summary judgment prompting the Town’s cross motion for the same relief. Supreme Court, while granting Jennings’ motion, found that factual issues precluded the granting of such relief to the Town. Both the Town and plaintiff appeal.
Jennings, as the movant on the motion for summary judgment, bore the initial burden of tendering evidentiary proof in admissible form sufficient to demonstrate that judgment should be granted to him as a matter of law (see, Zuckerman v City of New York,
The burden then shifted to plaintiff to “produce evidentiary proof in admissible form sufficient to require a trial of material
Turning to the Town’s cross motion for summary judgment, it is well established that a participant in a sport is “held to have consented, by [his or her] participation, to those injury-causing events which are known, apparent or reasonably foreseeable consequences of the participation” (Turcotte v Fell,
Cardona, P. J., Mercure, Crew III and Lahtinen, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is modified, on the law, without costs, by reversing so much thereof as denied defendant Town of Caroga’s cross motion for summary judgment; said motion
