203 Misc. 887 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1952
This action is brought in the interest of the infant plaintiff who, the complaint alleges, was injured August 19, 1952, while “ playing in and about a coal gondola car owned and maintained and controlled by the defendant ’ ’ in the vicinity of the underpass beneath Exchange Street near Doran Street, in the city of Rochester, New York. While playing in this car, the complaint states that the infant plaintiff “ was caught and pinned to the floor of said coal gondola car by the end door and siding of said car The negligence charged is that defendant knew that children of tender years, including the infant plaintiff, were in the habit of playing in and about defendant’s coal cars and tracks, but neglected to construct and maintain at said location fences or guards which would have prevented access by children to defendant’s tracks and cars.
The ground of the motion to dismiss the complaint is that it appears upon its face that the infant plaintiff was a trespasser or bare licensee, and that defendant owed to him no duty except
The leading case of Walsh v. Fitchburg R. R. Co. (145 N. Y. 301) involving a child injured while playing on a railroad turntable, is still law in this State, holding that the doctrine of attractive nuisance does not apply. As recently as Carbone v. Mackchil Realty Corp. (296 N. Y. 154, 156) the Walsh case was said never to have been questioned in the Court of Appeals. Some inroads have been made, to be sure, by the cases cited by plaintiff in the application to the facts of particular cases of the classification of infant plaintiffs as trespassers, but, unless the circumstances admit of characterizing them as invitees, the long-established rules limiting the duty owing to trespassers or bare licensees, and excluding the attractive nuisance doctrine, still hold. In view of section 83 of the Bailroad Law and subdivision 4 of section 1990 of the Penal Law, and the decisions construing them, not to mention the cases based on the common law, the infant plaintiff cannot be held to be an invitee under the factual allegations of the complaint.
The New York law was considered by the Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, in Rasmussen v. Palmer (134 F. 2d 780, 782) where it was intimated that knowledge by a railroad company that children were playing in a railroad yard where they were liable to be electrocuted by a live wire, while standing on box cars, might constitute such a degree of recklessness as to entail liability. Without expressing any view concerning whether that would be a correct interpretation of the New York law, on the theory that it would be a concealed danger or trap, it is pertinent to quote a paragraph from the opinion which applies exactly to the case at bar: “ Had there been no live
The motion to dismiss the complaint as insufficient in law should be granted.