275 N.Y. 20 | NY | 1937
This is an action to recover damages for the death by drowning of John A. Curcio in a swimming pool maintained by the defendant in a building known as the Public Baths on the corner of President street and Fourth avenue in the borough of Brooklyn, New York. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and resulted in a verdict for the defendant dismissing the complaint. The Appellate Division, second department, reversed the judgment of the Trial Term on the law and the facts and granted a new trial, one justice dissenting. The defendant appeals to this court on a stipulation for *22
judgment absolute in the event that the decision of the Appellate Division is affirmed. If there is an issue of fact in the case, the judgment of the Appellate Division must be affirmed, even though the Court of Appeals disagrees with the Appellate Division as to where the weight of the evidence lies. (World ExchangeBank v. Commercial Cas. Co.,
John A. Curcio was, at the time of the accident, over six feet tall, nearly twenty-two years of age, a student at Brooklyn College, about to graduate the following June in the medical course, and a member of the swimming team of the college. He and three other young men, who were expert swimmers, were swimming in the pool between four-thirty and five P.M., January 31, 1933. One of the swimmers heard a groan or yell after they had been swimming around for a few minutes, but paid no attention to it, and he and another boy left the pool and went on the platform for the purpose of diving, where they remained for about a minute, when the lifeguard, in charge of the pool and then standing on the balcony overlooking the pool, pointed to the water and shouted, "Quick, down there," whereupon one of the men on the platform dived into the pool, secured Curcio, brought him to the side, and he and the lifeguard, who had by that time descended from the balcony and had reached the platform, pulled Curcio out of the water. Immediate efforts at resuscitation failed. The medical testimony showed that Curcio died from asphyxiation and that there was an abrasion one-half inch by three-eighths inch on the right cheek midway between the eye *23 and ear, abrasions on the bridge of the nose, an abrasion one-quarter inch long of the upper lip at the right of the midline, and an abrasion of one-quarter inch in diameter on the left side of his chin. No one saw Curcio enter the pool, and there is no evidence, other than above stated, as to what happened after he entered the pool.
There was a balcony running around the building and above the platform, from which entrance was had to the pool. A view of this pool was at all times available from the balcony. The pool was forty feet wide by sixty feet long, six feet deep at one end, with the bottom sloping upward so that the water was three feet deep at the shallow end. Curcio was found in the water at a depth of about five feet. The use of the pool was customarily given over to small boys up to four-thirty P.M. each afternoon. At that time on the afternoon in question the guard ordered about sixty boys out of the water and proceeded with them to the balcony, where they had their shower and dressing rooms. Generally, older men did not have access to the pool until about five P.M., the interval between four-thirty and five P.M. being held open to enable the youngsters to get out of the pool, dress, and leave the building. The evidence showed that the lifeguard maintained at this pool had passed all required examinations, was thirty-eight years of age, five feet eleven and three-quarters inches tall, weighed one hundred and ninety pounds, and had been employed by the defendant in the same capacity for a period of fifteen years.
There was no evidence that the city charged any fee for the use of the pool or the facilities of the building in question. There was no evidence that there was any defect of construction. The city was not an insurer of the lives of those who used the pool. Its only duty was to exercise ordinary care in its supervision, construction and maintenance of the pool. A person who is suijuris and engages in such a sport as swimming accepts the dangers inherent in the sport so far as they *24
are obvious and necessary. (Murphy v. Steeplechase AmusementCo.,
The Appellate Division asserted that whether the defendant maintained a bathing master, as required by section
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the judgment of the Trial Term affirmed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Division.
CRANE, Ch. J., LEHMAN, HUBBS, LOUGHRAN and FINCH, JJ., concur; O'BRIEN, J., taking no part.
Ordered accordingly. *26