166 Misc. 113 | New York Court of Claims | 1938
The above-entitled claims were filed to recover damages for the alleged negligence of the State of New York in failing to provide proper care and supervision over and resulting in injury to Elizabeth Gardner, the infant claimant, a pupil in an elementary grade at the Cortland Normal School, Cortland, N. Y.
The accident occurred on January 16, 1936, in a regular physical education class held in the foyer of the gymnasium at said school which was entirely under the control of the State.
At the time in question these girls had been divided into groups of eight or ten pupils, and each group was directly supervised by a student teacher who stood at the end of the mat upon which each group was doing the prescribed exercises. The student teacher, in her junior year, in charge of the particular group of which the infant claimant was a member, was. talcing the physical education course for the purpose of qualifying herself as a supervisor and teacher of physical education, and she was an especially well-quali-! fied and apt student, with a good deal of experience in directing, group exercises in the normal and other elementary schools of Cortland. She was under the direct supervision of the supervisor in charge of the physical education course of the normal school, and who was at the moment of the accident in the adjoining main gymnasium, where a group of boys were performing physical exercises, and he had been in the foyer that morning and was supervising both the boys’ and the girls’ exercises on the particular occasion in question.
The particular stunt which caused the injury complained of was a head stand. The pupils put the palms of their hands flat upon the floor with their heads resting upon the floor and balanced with their feet straight upwards. Each pupil was assisted in maintaining a balance by another pupil of the same class, and at a signal given by the one mating the stand, was released and rolled over in a somersault.
Physical exercises and education were a part of the regular schedule and practice courses in the school for all of the students, adapting those exercises to the various grades, ages and ability of the pupils to perform them, and the infant claimant had been through all of these preliminary exercises.
The infant claimant had made this head stand in connection with her regular physical education work twice before in the fifth and sixth grades and once before in the seventh grade, and in addition to that had had all of the experience of watching the other girls perform the same stunt.
Dr. Sornberger, who attended the infant claimant, testified that head stands were very common stunts for children, and that it was not a usual or normal result for a fractured vertebra to happen in such cases, and that it might depend upon how the particular child did it as to whether it would be a competent producing cause of the injuries described, rather than the act itself; also, that somersaults were very common stunts for children at play by themselves.
Paul Krimmel, a witness for the infant claimant, who was the director of physical education of the public schools of Syracuse, with twenty years of experience in physical education, testified that he helped compile the syllabus, and characterized self-testing stunts, such as the head stand, as being among the “ most worth while physical education activities.” The stunt in question was one which was proper for fourth grade students, whereas the infant claimant was a seventh grade pupil, eleven years of age, who, as she herself testified, was an athletic girl, having been accustomed to swim, dive, skate and ski, and was necessarily larger and better developed than a child in one of the lower grades.
Mr. Krimmel also stated that the practice which was carried out in the Cortland Normal School in using normal students who were in training as teachers, which is the particular object of maintaining normal schools by the State, as practice teachers, under supervision of regular faculty members, was a generally prevailing custom and practice in normal schools and State colleges in this and other States. He also stated that whether these practice or student teachers should be in their senior year or junior year would depend upon the qualifications of the particular student teacher, and was a matter of judgment for the supervising officials.
Dr. John P. McNeil, who was the head of the physical education department of the school, was supervising the classes, of the girls in the foyer, as well as the boys in the general gymnasium, and he had a competent practice student in charge of the particular group of which the infant claimant was a member, but the evidence nowhere discloses that even if a duly licensed supervisor had been present anything different than was done could or would have been done which would have prevented this accident. The syllabus specifically states (p. 159) that “ classes may be divided into squads under pupil leadership,” which is exactly what was done in this case.
It is axiomatic that the law, generally speaking, and in the absence of express statute, knows no absolute liability — no one is made an insurer of his acts; he is liable only for injury arising from a failure to act with the degree of forethought and intelligence that characterizes the conduct of prudent persons in general. There are many injuries to persons and property for which the law furnishes no redress —■ damnum absque injuria.
It has long been recognized that no action will lie for injuries attributable to what is termed inevitable or unavoidable accident. In other words, if no fault or negligence is chargeable to either of the parties to the occurrence upon which the action is founded, the loss and injury will be allowed to remain where it has fallen, or, if negligence is established, if it is not a proximate cause of the injury, then there can be no recovery. The injury in this case was caused by what may be termed a pure accident.
The term “ accident ” in legal signification is said to be difficult to define. Judge Story said on that subject: “ By the term accident is here intended, not merely inevitable casualty, or the act of providence, or what is technically called vis major, or irresistible force; but such unforeseen events, misfortunes, losses, acts, or omissions, as are not the result of any negligence or misconduct in the party.” (Story on Equity [3d ed.], § 78.)
Other definitions are, in substance, something that happens by chance or unexpectedly, taking place not according to the usual course of things; an undesigned and unforeseen occurrence of an
I am satisfied that, subject to all the requirements and tests known to the law, the conduct of the teachers at the Cortland Normal School in permitting the infant claimant to stand on her head under the circumstances of this case, was not of such a nature that could be defined as negligence, and, further, that the injury complained of was not one which an ordinary, reasonable and prudent person .ought to have foreseen; in other words, this was clearly an accident for which there can be no recovery.
To secure justice each case must be decided upon its own peculiar facts. The cases called to the attention of the court by the claimant’s attorney are so widely different in fact that they are in no sense controlling in these claims.
I recommend a dismissal of both claims on the merits.
Barrett, P. J., concurs.