256 A.D. 437 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1939
These claims are for damages resulting from an automobile accident which occurred on State Highway Route 17C in the villege of Owego on September 2, 1935. During the latter part of that evening the automobile which the claimant Anthony Ruggiero was driving, and in which his wife, Frances Ruggiero, was a passenger, ran off the highway while rounding a curve and struck a tree, resulting in serious damage to claimants. The road at this point runs generally east and west and the claimants were driving west toward the center of the village of Owego. The highway was a two-strip, concrete pavement. Each strip was ten feet wide with five-foot shoulders of black macadam on either side. Concrete curbs and gutters rah along the outside edges of the macadam.
Appellants urge the State was negligent in creating and maintaining a dangerous curve in its highway without ample sight distance for its entire length and that the warning signs were inadequate.
We see no reason for disturbing the findings below. While it may be readily conceded that our standards of safe construction of highways are being gradually raised, curves are still necessary and as to them the principe 1 duty resting upon the State is to give adequate warning. This is especially true when the highway is
The judgments should be affirmed, without costs.
Crapser and Heffernan, JJ., concur; Hill, P. J., concurs in the result.
McNamee, J. I concur in the affirmance of the judgments on the ground that no negligence on the part of the State was shown, but I know of no decision, clarified by an opinion of the Court of Appeals, in which it has been held that the standard of highway safety has been raised as a matter of law, or by which it has been held that barriers are required to prevent a traveler on a highway from running off the road. (Best v. State of New York, 203 App. Div. 339; affd., 236 N. Y. 662; Roberts v. Town of Eaton, 238 id. 420.)
Judgments affirmed, without costs.