Janet Kulaga et al., Appellants, v. State of New York, Respondent.
Claim No. 49770.
Fourth Department
June 25, 1971.
37 A.D.2d 58
Louis J. Lefkowitz, Attorney-General (Jeremiah Jochnowitz and Ruth Kessler Toch of counsel), for respondent.
CARDAMONE, J. Claimants appeal from a judgment dismissing their claims for damages resulting from an assault upon them by an escaped convict. The Trial Judge held that the State was negligent in its supervision of Moseley, a convicted murderer whose vicious and remorseless character was known to the authorities and whose confinement was not merely for punishment but also for the protection of society.
We are asked to conclude, as the trial court did, that claimants are barred from recovering damages against the State upon the ground that claimants assumed the risk and were guilty of con-
We also find that the record contains insufficient evidence to support a determination that claimants’ conduct precludes them from recovering against the State. The following analysis of the facts leads inescapably to this conclusion.
For three years prior to this incident, the claimant, Mrs. Kulaga, had been maintaining her widowed mother‘s unoccupied premises at 278 Dewey Avenue, Buffalo, New York. Pursuant to these responsibilities Janet Kulaga visited the premises approximately once a week to make sure that the furnace was operating and that heat was being maintained, snow removed, lawn mowed, and she arranged to have the house cleaned on a weekly basis. Mrs. Kulaga‘s mother lived with these claimants and their three small children on Grand Island, New York. Mrs. Kulaga had lived at 278 Dewey Avenue as a child and until sometime after her marriage. She clearly had a right, and even a responsibility, to visit these premises on a regular basis.
She testified that on March 20, 1968 she received a phone call at about 2:00 p.m. from the New York Statе Employment Agency regarding a cleaning woman sent to 278 Dewey Avenue. She thought it was a practical joke since she had not requested anyone be sent there. Nevertheless she called a former neighbor and asked her to check on the house. It was reported back to her (following an inspection by the neighbor‘s son) that the doors were locked and nothing was wrong. Mrs. Kulaga then relayed this information to the employment agency. Later that evening at 8:00 p.m., Mrs. Kulaga received a phone call from one Zella Moore, who identified herself as the cleaning woman sent by the employment agency. Zella Moore informed Mrs. Kulaga that there were orange and apple peels on the floor and that one of the beds looked as if it had been slept in. Mrs. Moore reportedly told Mrs. Kulaga, “something funny is going on, don‘t let your mother gо in the house alone“. Mrs. Moore also told Mrs. Kulaga that she left the house about 2:00 p.m. because she became frightened when no one had come by that time. When Mrs. Kulaga finished speaking with Zella Moore, she immediately called the Buffalo Police Department and asked them to check
Albert Andrews, a police officer employed by the City of Buffalo, on duty March 20, 1968 at Precinct 16, testified that this precinct included Meyer Memorial Hospital, the hospital that Moseley escaped from, and also included the Dewey Avenue premises. He stated that the police were aware that Moseley had escaped, were on the look-out for him, and had searched the area on the afternoon of the 20th, but that the circumstances in connection with 278 Dewey Avenue and the cleaning woman and the call from Mrs. Kulaga did not occasion any connection in his mind with the Moseley affair. He said that “a cleaning woman in the house wouldn‘t have any application” to the Moseley escape. In fact the police suggested that Mrs. Kulaga run over to the house to see if anything was missing.
Hugh Neff, the police officer on duty the following morning, March 21, 1968, testified as a witness for the State. He agreed that anyone with a vacant house would want to get the gun out. He also stated that there was nothing in his conversation with Mrs. Kulaga or his understanding of what went on the day before that would make him suspicious of Moseley bеing in the house, and that he did not mention the possibility of this to Mrs. Kulaga.
Thus, there were three phone calls to the Police Department (two by claimants and one by the employment agency) which never alerted the police or put them on suspicion that someone dangerous was lurking on the premises, let alone an escaped
Contributory negligence, like negligence itself, is based upon a duty owing to prevent injury. In the case of contributory negligence the duty is that the plaintiff avoid injury to himself. Every person is required to use reasonable care in that regard. The degree of care required is ordinary care only. In other words, the plaintiff must use for his own protection the care which a reasonable, prudent person would use under similar circumstances to protect himself from injury. (Clark v. Traver, 205 App. Div. 206, affd. 237 N. Y. 544; 1 Warren‘s Negligence, Contributory Negligence, §§ 1.01, 10.10.) Claimants’ conduct is to be evaluated in its setting in the circumstances, and claimants are entitled to make assumptions that are reasonable in the light of them (James, Contributory Negligence, 62 Yale L. J. 691, 725).
Under these circumstances and considering the responsibility as well as the right that claimant Janet Kulaga had to be on the premises at 278 Dewey Avenue, such entrance by her onto the premises may not be construed to be other than the conduct that a reasonably prudent person would use under like circumstances to protect himself from injury. Her actions in calling a former neighbor, the employment agency, and the police for what she believed to be the possible danger that might result frоm children, or teenage vandals, and the fact that she was careful enough to take her husband with her, were sufficiently prudent in view of what she knew, and should not be construed to be contributory negligence. In brief, this record reveals that the claimant Janet Kulaga was, as a matter of fact, not guilty of any contributory negligence which should bar her recovery here.
However, even if we assume some degree of contributory negligеnce on the part of these claimants as regards other risks, nevertheless when the harm to the claimants does not result from the hazard which their conduct has created but results in some other manner, such other contributory negligence, if such there be, does not bar their recovery (Restatement, Torts 2d, § 468).
Just as negligence is actionable only on account of the harm which was within the scope of the risk (Palsgraf v. Long Is. R. R. Co., 248 N. Y. 339) so claimants’ entry into Mrs. Kulaga‘s mother‘s house may have been negligent with respect to the hazard of being set upon by children or teenage vandals, but was unrelated to the risk of being raped and robbed by an escaped
The facts in the present case clearly and unequivocally establish that these claimants, even assuming that they failed to exercise reasonable care for their оwn safety which exposed them to a foreseeable risk of injury from one cause, were in fact injured through another event which they could not possibly have foreseen. Only by viewing the facts from hindsight and drawing the most extreme inferences could the claimants be charged with foreseeing this danger to their safety. Since the trial court could not reach the conclusion that these claimants were guilty of contributory negligence under any fair interpretation of the evidence, we must reverse. (Citta v. State of New York, 35 A D 2d 288.)
We conclude, therefore, that these claimants were not guilty of contributory negligence on the conceded facts in this record which would bar their recovery. The judgment of the trial court dismissing their claim should be reversed and the matter remitted for assessment of damages.
WITMER, J. (concurring). I concur in the result reached by the majority, but on the limited basis that although claimаnts were guilty of contributory negligence which was the direct cause of their injuries, they should not be barred from recovery, because the consequence of their conduct was not reasonably foreseeable.
At the outset it should be noted that although the State did not cross-appeal (the judgment being in its favor), it has the right to contend on this appeal that the Trial Judge erred in
Turning to the question of claimants’ contributory negligence, there are some facts contained in the record in addition to those recited in the majority opinion, which point up the negligent conduct of claimants and which should be acknowledged in the face of our limited application herein of contributory negligence principles. Such additional facts are: thе cleaning lady advised Mrs. Kulaga that when she went to the house she found $10 on the desk with a note requesting her to do general cleaning; Mr. Kulaga had seen Mr. Moseley‘s picture in the daily newspaper and had read therein that he had escaped and was at large; on the night before visiting the house Mrs. Kulaga asked Mr. Kulaga to go over and check the house, and he said, “Heck, no, I won‘t go over there tonight“. Claimants also checked with Mrs. Kulaga‘s uncle and ascertained that he had not called for a cleaning lady to go to the house. The next morning claimants impatiently by-passed the police and decided to check the house themselves. They walked around the house and found a cellar window broken out, but they were not deterred from entering, nor moved to go to the home of the neighbor who had previously checked the house doors fоr them, to call the police again and obtain assistance on entering. Instead, Mrs. Kulaga got out her key to unlock a door to the house and Mr. Kulaga went to his automobile and took out a crowbar and carried it into the house as they entered together. Inside, they walked up a few steps to the main floor level and on opening a door thereto found a
In view of all the facts, I believe that we must agree with the Trial Judge that claimants did not exercise reasonable care for their safety on entering the house. As the direct result of their entry therein, they received the injuries for which they sue in this action, that is, their conduct was the proximate cause of their injuries.
In most cases the damages which directly ensue from negligent conduct are reasonably foreseeable, and the actor is held responsible for such conduct. Thus, if the fate which befell claimants on entering their house were reasonably foreseeable we would agree with the conclusion of the Trial Judge that claimants’ conduct bars them from recovering damages herein. It must be borne in mind, however, that even the police, who were looking for Moseley, did not relate him to this house. Thus, however imprudent claimants were on entering the house without police assistance in light of facts which they then knew, it cannot be found that what then occurred to them was reasonably foreseeable.
We have a case, therefore, wherein the direct consequence of claimants’ negligent conduct was not reasonably foreseeable. In few cases has this problem occurred and been considered in detail (see Palsgraf v. Long Is. R. R. Co., 248 N. Y. 339; Overseas Tankship [U.K.], Ltd. v. Morts Dock & Eng. Co. [The Wagon Mound], [1961] A. C. 388, [1961] 1 All Eng. Rep. 404). In some cases, negligence (contributory negligence) has been ruled out on the theory of remoteness or intervening cause; but that explanation does not dispose of the fact that the actor‘s conduct was a direct cause of his injuries. In the Overseas Tankship case (supra), the House of Lords expressly overruled a 1921 case (In re Polemis, 3 K. B. 560 [1921] All Eng. Rep. 40) which had held a defendant liable for all damages directly resulting from the defendant‘s negligent act. In the Overseas Tankship case defendants’ employees negligently spilled oil into a
At page 424 the cоurt added: “After the event even a fool is wise. But it is not the hindsight of a fool; it is the foresight of a reasonable man which alone can determine responsibility. The Polemis rule by substituting ‘direct’ for ‘reasonably foreseeable’ consequence leads to a conclusion equally illogical and unjust“. The court further stated (p. 426) that if foreseeable damage and also unforeseeable damage result from negligent conduct, the faсt that the defendant may be held liable for the foreseeable consequences of his negligence does not require that he also be held responsible for the unforeseeable consequences thereof. “Each of them rests on its own bottom and will fail if it can be established that the damage could not reasonably be foreseen“.
Moreover, in the case at bar the question is whether claimants were contributorily negligent. As distinguished from the negligence of a defendant, the doctrine of contributory negligence was established to prevent a negligent plaintiff from recovering for an injury which he helped to cause. The duty which an individual owes to himself is of less magnitude than that which he owes to society in general (Rossman v. La Grega, 28 N Y 2d 300; and see Restatement, Torts 2d, § 468, Comment c; Prosser, Law of Torts, Contributory Negligence, pp. 426-430). It is also noted that the doctrine of contributory negligence has been criticized with suggestions for its limitation (2 Harper and James, Law of Torts, Contributory Negligence, §§ 22.3 and 22.4, p. 1207 et seq.; Prosser, Law of Torts, p. 428; and see Rossman v. La Grega, supra).
In view of the above considerаtions, I am forced to conclude that despite claimants’ knowledge that Moseley was at large, that apparently some stranger had entered and might be in the house, possibly having entered through a broken window, and that a gun had been left in the house, it was not reasonably foreseeable that a dangerous man, such as Moseley, would be there and would assault them upon their entry to inspect the house (see Prosser, supra, pp. 431-432; 2 Harper and James, Law of Torts, § 22.10, pp. 1230-1231; 1 Warren‘s Negligence, Contributory Negligence, §§ 10.02 and 11.04), and that claimants should not be barred from recovering herein because of their conduct.
Accordingly, I concur in the decision for reversal of the judgment and the remission for assessment of claimants’ damages.
Marsh and Gabrielli, JJ., concur with Cardamone, J.; Del Vecchio, J. P., and Witmer, J., concur in result in an opinion by Witmer, J.
