107 Misc. 553 | New York Court of Claims | 1919
Lead Opinion
This is a motion to dismiss the claim, upon the ground that the notice of claim does not state facts sufficient to constitute a valid claim against the state of New York.
The claimant is the mother of said deceased, and as administratrix of his estate has filed this claim asking judgment against the state in the sum of $25,000 damages for his death, together with $280 necessarily expended for his medical care and treatment.
The. motion to dismiss is predicated upon two grounds:
First. That the state is not liable for the negligence or incompetence, or both, of the physician, either as to the methods employed by him or the vaccine used in performing the inoculation, because the state, it is urged, is not liable for the torts of its agents and servants unless it has accepted such liability, and
• Second. Because the case is one submitted by law
The motion to dismiss should be granted. States are not liable in damages for torts committed by their agents or servants unless such liability has been voluntarily assumed by act of the legislatures. Lewis v. State of New York, 96 N. Y. 71; Sipple v. State of New York, 99 id. 284; Stone v. State of New York, 138 id. 124; Litchfield v. Bond, 186 id. 66. This rule follows from the maxim of the English common law “ The king can do no wrong,” and not alone from that other rule of the English common law that the sovereign can not be sued without his consent. In Poindexter v. Greenhow, 114 U. S. 270-290, the court applied the English rule or maxim to the American form of government, and stated the principle as follows: “ The State itself is an ideal person, intangible, invisible, immutable. The government is an agent, and, within the sphere of the agency, a perfect representative; but outside of that, it is a lawless usurpation. * * * it is also true, in respect to the State itself, that whatever wrong is attempted in its name is imputable to its government, and not to the State, for, as it can speak and act only by law, whatever it does say and do must be lawful. That which, therefore, is unlawful * * * is not the word or deed of the State, but is the mere wrong and trespass of those individual persons who falsely speak and act in its name.”
This immunity from liability for the torts of its agents and servants the state has not utterly and entirely abdicated by the enactment of section 264 of the Code of Civil Procedure. While it has been held that by the enactment of that statute the state has consented to be held liable in every case in which an individual or a corporation would be liable on the same facts
Furthermore, the state has by statute provided a tribunal and a method for affording relief to those of its soldiers who shall be wounded or incapacitated as a result of illness and for pensioning dependents of such soldier, including his widow, minor children or dependent mother, in case he shall have died as the result of injuries received or from illness. Military Law, §§ 220-224. The state having furnished such tribunal and submitted such cases to it for its consideration, this court is denied by section 264 of the Code of Civil Procedure jurisdiction to hear and determine such claims.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). I concur in the result arrived at by Judge Smith, but I do not agree with him in his construction of the scope, effect and purpose of section 264 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Cunningham, J., concurs with Ackerson, P. J.
Motion granted.