33 A.D.2d 1061 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1970
Appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims, entered August 15, 1968, awarding damages of $114,262.30 together with interest less prior settlements for wrongful death and personal injuries. The claim arose as the result of an automobile accident which occurred on a portion of Route 6 in Orange County that was being resurfaced. A car proceeding in the opposite direction (hereinafter referred to as the Young automobile) of the respondent crossed from its lane of traffic into the respondent’s lane with a resulting head-on collision. At the time of the accident the new pavement was some 20 feet wide with no center lines or markings thereon and was at a height of about four inches above the old highway shoulders which had not yet been filled or brought to grade. The State had signs located at some distance prior to the point of impact which gave ample warning that the highway was under construction. The record establishes that the condition of the highway itself was such as to make it obvious to drivers that reconstruction was in process. The driver of the Young automobile which struck the respondent’s vehicle was unable to testify as to the events immediately preceding the accident. The trial court found that the drop-off or ledge of the new surface to the shoulder of the highway was a contributing proximate cause of the accident. The trial court also found that the driver of the other car was negligent in permitting her vehicle to leave the newly paved surface of the highway; and that the State was negligent in not placing signs along the new surface which would indicate that the shoulders were substantially lower than the highway or otherwise alert highway users to the hazardous condition. We reverse the findings of the trial court and find as facts that the failure to have warning signs or devices along the edge of the pavement at the time and place of this accident was not negligence; and that the sole cause of the accident was the negligent operation of the Young automobile. It appears undisputed or, at least, is a fair inference that the Young automobile was proceeding over the construction in a manner different than the other automobiles in “ crowded traffic ”. A witness testified that when he first observed the Young automobile it was passing other cars and as it