The infant plaintiff, three years old, and his mother, bring 'this action to recover damages for an injury suffered by the infant and claimed to have been caused by the defendant’s negligence. The' defendant was the mother’s landlord; she and her husband and seven children had occupied an apartment for three years. One of the employees of the landlord, acting under a complaint, removed the adjuster or knob from the radiator, thus exposing a sharp metal top on which the adjuster had been located. Though the
Trial Term dismissed the complaint at the end of the plaintiffs’ case, on the ground that the plaintiffs had failed to prove both proximate cause and foreseeability as elements of the claim of negligence on the part of the defendant. We reverse and grant a new trial. The proof of proximate cause and foreseeability sufficiently raised issues for the determination of the jury.
Negligence as a legal concept traditionally includes both proximate cause and foreseeability as tests of liability. The common law recognizes fault as the primary ground of responsibility to another for injury; and proximate cause and foreseeability represent attempts to measure fault. In most cases the focus is directed on the kind of conduct which is claimed to have been injurious, and the jury is called upon to determine, upon varying evidence, what the nature of the conduct really was, and whether the injury really was sustained as a result of the conduct.
Nevertheless, unusual or freakish accidents occur, in which the defendant’s conduct is not directly related in the continuum of time or space or personal status to the plaintiff’s injury (see, e.g., Palsgraf v Long Is. R.R. Co.,
The definition of proximate cause has been elusive probably because the public policy underlying the concept cannot be described other than in general terms. Courts have attempted to find rational formulations for the rule of limitation of liability by resort to distinction between cause and condition, the "but for” test, or the relationship between principal and intervening causes (see Prosser, Law of Torts [4th ed], § 42, pp 244-249). All of these attempts have not been completely
The defendant draws our attention to the opinion of Mr. Justice Jenks in Trapp v McClellan (
Nor are we aided substantially by the test which Mr. Justice Jenks culled from Insurance Co. v Boon (
A case decided after Trapp illustrates the length to which the chain of proximate cause may be stretched (see Matter of People [Guardian Cas. Co.],
The defendant, moreover, points to Rivera v City of New York (
The decisions in other cases serve only as examples of the process whereby the concept of proximate cause is applied. The doctrinal sweep is so broad that a flexibility of approach, almost intuitive in nature, must be used. Some helpful guidelines emerge, not as overarching principles, but simply as tools of analysis:
1. The test of status—is there an existing legal relationship between the parties? In this case, the relationship of landlord-tenant, with the concomitant statutory overlay (see Multiple Dwelling Law, § 78) is present.
2. The test of temporal duration—is the occurrence of the injury tied to the claimed negligent act or omission within a reasonable lapse of time? In this case, the asserted negligent condition had endured an appreciable length of time, and it could be found that the injury occurred immediately upon contact with the condition.
3. The test of spatial relation—is the occurrence of the injury close or far in distance from the point of the claimed negligent act or omission? In this case, the injured infant plaintiff was found touching the asserted negligent condition.
4. The test of foreseeability—is the claimed negligent act or
5. The test of public policy—is there an identifiable policy which either protects the victim of the injury or forbids liability for the injury? In this case, the interests or public policy are embodied in the statutory command that a landlord of a multiple dwelling should maintain the premises in good repair (Multiple Dwelling Law, § 78).
Surveying this case, in the posture in which it reaches us as an appeal from a dismissal of the complaint at the end of the plaintiffs’ case, we think that the combined influence of the answers to the questions posed by the suggested guidelines leads us to the conclusion that the plaintiffs produced proof enough to go to the jury. Here, the fall of the infant plaintiff did not occur from an unusual circumstance, such as in Rivera, where the bathtub was being used as a platform to reach a greater height—a purpose foreign to its accustomed utility. Here, the fall of the infant plaintiff occurred while he was walking or running within the apartment. As the infant was three years old—one of seven children—the defendant, in his status as landlord, could reasonably expect that falls of infant occupants normally happen. To leave a sharp edge of a stem exposed, so that a person falling under these circumstances would be in a position to sustain injury, constituted conduct which the triers of the facts might find to be negligent, and the negligence so found to be so directly connected with the injury that the requirement of proximate cause is satisfied (cf. Levine v City of New York, 2 NY2d 246; Daas v Pearson,
The judgment should therefore be reversed, and a new trial granted.
Cohalan, Damiani, Christ and Titone, JJ., concur.
Judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County, entered March 17, 1975, reversed, on the law, and new trial granted, with costs to abide the event. No fact findings have been presented for review.
Notes
. Causa sine qua non: "A necessary or inevitable cause; a cause without which the effect in question could not have happened.” (Black’s Law Dictionary [4th ed], p 278.)
. Causa causans: "The immediate cause; the last link in the chain of causation.” (Black’s Law Dictionary [4th ed], p. 278.)
