OPINION OF THE COURT
As we explained in
Pelaez v Seide
(
I. Kovit v Estate of Hallums
While driving her car, Katherine Hallums collided with a vehicle carrying security officers from the Kings County Hospital. According to witnesses, the accident left her shaken and so “hysterical” that the security officers tried to calm her down. When New York City police arrived on the scene, an officer told her to move her car forward and out of the middle of the intersection where it had stopped. Although plaintiff was standing directly behind Hallums’s car, she moved the vehicle backward instead of forward, crushing plaintiffs legs between her car and the one behind her. In his suit against the City, plaintiff alleged that the police officer acted negligently when he told Hallums to move her car-while she was unfit to drive.
1
A jury found the City 100% responsible for plaintiffs injuries, even though it found that Hallums was also negligent. The Appellate Division reversed, concluding that on the facts, it was impossible for Hallums to have been negligent but not in some degree responsible for plaintiffs injuries (see
The police officer was exercising his discretion when he told Kaliums to move her car. Even if we were to assume Kaliums was unfit to drive and that the officer knew or should have known it, municipal liability to plaintiff would not follow. To hold the City liable for the negligent performance of a discretionary act, a plaintiff must establish a special relationship with the municipality.
We made this point in
Kenavan v City of New York
(
The exception to the rule, as we noted in
Pelaez (2
NY3d at 193), is when the plaintiff establishes a special relationship with the municipality.
3
Here, plaintiff fails to do so. Establishing a special relationship based on a municipality’s assumption of a duty requires (1) an assumption by a municipality, through promises or actions, of an affirmative duty to act on behalf, of the injured party; (2) knowledge on the part of a municipality’s agents that inaction could lead to harm; (3) some form of direct contact between the municipality’s agents and the injured party; and (4) that party’s justifiable reliance on the municipality’s af
*507
firmative undertaking
(see Pelaez,
Plaintiff does not satisfy the third element of this test.
4
The police officer’s contact was with Hallums, not plaintiff. Not only was there a lack of a special relationship between plaintiff and the police officer, there was no material communication or relationship at all. As we held in
Lauer v City of New York
(
II. Lazan v County of Suffolk
After plaintiff pulled his car over to the shoulder of the Long Island Expressway, a Suffolk County highway patrol officer came up behind him with flashing lights. Plaintiff left his car and walked back to the police cruiser to speak with the officer. In his complaint, plaintiff alleges that he told the officer he had chest pains and was not feeling well. He did not, however, allege that he told the officer he was too ill or dizzy to drive. 5 After explaining that it was not safe to park on the side of the road, the officer told plaintiff to move his car to the nearest service station. Plaintiff drove off, but soon lost control of his car and suffered serious injuries after driving it into a guardrail and a telephone pole. Plaintiff sued Suffolk County, asserting that the police officer—with whom he alleged a special relationship— was to blame for his injuries. Supreme Court denied the County’s motion for summary judgment and the Appellate Division affirmed, certifying to us the question whether its order was proper. We answer in the negative.
The second prong of the Pelaez/Cuffy test for special relationship liability requires “knowledge on the part of a municipality’s agents that inaction could lead to harm” (Pelaez, 2 NY3d *508 at 202). Here, plaintiff never expressly told the police officer he was too sick to drive, and the record shows it was not manifestly clear to the officer that plaintiff was so disabled that he could not drive a short distance to a safer location. Therefore, as a matter of law, neither plaintiffs explanation to the police officer nor his appearance put the officer on notice that instructing plaintiff to remove his car from the shoulder of the expressway could lead to harm. Under these circumstances, we cannot expect the police to make a refined, expert medical diagnosis of a motorist’s latent condition. Requiring them to do so would improperly burden police in carrying out their duties.
For there to be special relationship-based liability, a municipality’s agent must be clearly on notice of palpable danger, as where it is so obvious that a layman would ascertain it without inquiry, or where a person unambiguously communicated his incapacity to the officer. At that point, the officer would have to weigh the danger of leaving the car in a dangerous situation (at least until help arrived) against the danger posed by having the driver move the car. This calls for discretion and could result in liability only when it is clear that the danger in having the driver move the car outweighs the danger inherent in leaving the car in place for some time. In this case, however, the highway patrol officer was not adequately on notice to satisfy this test.
Accordingly, in Kovit, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and the complaint against the City dismissed. In Lazan, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, defendant’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint granted and the certified question answered in the negative.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges G.B. Smith, Ciparick, Graffeo, Read and R.S. Smith concur.
In Kovit v Estate of Hallums: Order reversed, etc.
In Lazan v County of Suffolk: Order reversed, etc.
Notes
. Plaintiff also sued Hallums and the other driver. Only the issue of the City’s liability is before us.
. Finding the award excessive, the Appellate Division modified the judgment by ordering a new trial unless plaintiff agreed to a reduction in damages.
.
See also Kircher v City of Jamestown,
. Although the parties dispute the application of the other three elements, we need not consider them because plaintiffs failure to satisfy the third is dispositive.
. At one point in his deposition, plaintiff explained that he told the police officer that he only parked on the shoulder because he did not feel well. He also said that he had felt dizzy and faint and did not feel like driving, but was unclear as to whether he told those things to the officer. Later in the same deposition, plaintiff stated that he could not remember what he told the officer. Moreover, the record includes a transcript of a police department internal investigation hearing where plaintiff testified that he himself did not realize he was not well enough to drive when he pulled off the shoulder.
