55 A.D.2d 766 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1976
Lead Opinion
Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court, entered January 19, 1976 in Clinton County, upon a verdict rendered at a Trial Term in favor of defendant. On January 7, 1973, Debra O’Hearn sustained personal injuries when a snowmobile on which she was a passenger collided with an automobile owned and operated by the defendant. The accident occurred as Jose Rodriguez was operating the snowmobile uphill on a road and the defendant immediately preceding impact was proceeding down the hill in his car. As between the two operators and their actual negligence, the question was whether or not the defendant’s vehicle was on its own side of the highway and the trial court so charged the jury. The plaintiff, James O’Hearn, commenced separate actions against the defendant seeking for himself derivative damages based on the loss of services of his daughter, Debra, and medical expenses he incurred on her behalf. In the action on behalf of his daughter he sought damages for her personal injuries. The plaintiff submitted a bill of particulars in response to a demand for bills of particulars that, inter alia, requested a statement as to: (1) each and every injury sustained by Debra; (2) each and every permanent injury and the nature and extent of such permanency; and (3) the dates and place of hospitalization. The response to those demands consisted of attaching hospital and medical records to the bill of particulars. The defendant’s attorney over objection read a portion of the attached hospital records to the jury in his summation. The plaintiff testified that he was not an eyewitness to the accident, but that after the collision the defendant told him "I hit her”. The operator of the snowmobile, Jose, testified that at the time of the accident he was on the, right side of the road, going about 10 or 15 miles per hour when he got hit. Jose also testified that he had not seen a sign on the area where he operated the machine saying it was designated for snowmobiles. Jose further testified that he did not know if the place where the accident occurred was a road or a driveway. The infant plaintiff, Debra, testified that the place where the accident happened was a road with a few trailers located thereon. In her opinion the snowmobile was in the middle of the road when they saw the car coming and then they got over to the right and the car hit them. The defendant testified that he had stopped his car before the impact on his own side of the road. He also testified that he had been going only five miles per hour and that after the accident, the operator apologized to him for hitting his car. The plaintiff’s attorney objected to any statement by the snowmobile operator as it was hearsay. The trial court first struck the statement, but then
Lead Opinion
Koreman, P. J., Mahoney and Herlihy, JJ., concur; Kane and Main, JJ., dissent and vote to affirm in the following memorandum by Main, J.: We dissent and would affirm. The plaintiff O’Hearn brought both a derivative action and an action on behalf of his infant daughter. The jury returned an unanimous verdict of no cause for action. Both actions were instituted individually by separate summonses and complaints and two separate judgments were rendered. The only notice of appeal filed was from the judgment in the derivative action. Upon discovery of this omission, plaintiff sought leave to amend the notice of appeal or, in the alternative, to file a late notice of appeal from the judgment in the infant’s action and the motion was denied and properly so. We conclude that the plaintiff’s failure to appeal from the judgment rendered in the infant’s action establishes his inability to recover from the defendant, for it is clear that: "An action by a parent to recover pecuniary loss sustained by reason of injuries inflicted