Order unanimously modified on the law and as modified affirmed without costs, in accordance with the following memorandum: This action seeks damages for the wrongful death and conscious pain suffered by plaintiff’s decedent, a seven-year-old boy who fell into Brown’s Race and drowned. Brown’s Race is a concrete waterway situated in the City of Rochester that carries water from the Genesee River to a hydroelectric power plant operated by defendant Rochester Gas & Electric Corporation (RGE). The record indicates that the decedent and two young companions gained access to the wall along Brown’s Race by walking through a hole in a wrought-iron fence situated on property owned by defendant Consolidated Rail Corporation (Conrail).
RGE, Conrail and the City of Rochester separately moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint, each claiming that it owed no duty to the decedent. Special Term denied all three applications. We affirm the court’s decision as to Conrail and RGE. As owner of adjacent land, Conrail owed a duty to exercise reasonable care in the maintenance of its property to prevent foreseeable injury that might occur on the adjoining property (Scurti v City of New York,
Plaintiff failed, however, to raise a triable issue of fact regarding any duty owed by the City of Rochester. The city could not be held liable upon the theory that it failed to enforce its ordinances regarding the dilapidated condition of Conrail’s fence (see, O’Connor v City of New York,
