29 A.D.2d 601 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1967
Claimants appeal from judgments of the Court of Claims which dismissed their claims. These three claims arose out of an automobile accident which occurred at about 2:00 p.m. on July 23, 1964 at the intersection of .State Routes 12 and 79 in the Hamlet of Chenango Porks, Broome County, New York. The claimant Avo Tamm, his wife and two children, and their guest, the claimant Peggy D. Saleem, were returning to Canada after a visit to New York City by way of Route 79 when they were in a collision with a van-type truck owned by the Norwich Express which was proceeding in a northerly direction on Route 12. All of the occupants in the Tamm automobile were injured, and Mrs. Tamm died as the result of her injuries. The intersection of Routes 12 and 79 is a “Y” shaped intersection paved throughout its entire area and, at the time of the accident, white traffic control lines four inches wide were painted in a triangular shape on the pavement. The claimants contend that the State was negligent in that the intersection was not adequately signed; that the existing signs were not placed in accordance with the State’s regulations; and that the State failed to give adequate and timely warning of the place where motorists proceeding south on Route 79 should stop before entering Route 12. Although Route 79 runs generally in a northwesterly direction, it turns to the south for a short distance in the area of Chenango Porks. A motorist traveling south on Route 79 in this area, as was the claimant Avo Tamm, would encounter the following signs as