99 Misc. 655 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1917
The plaintiff was injured while riding in an automobile on a public highway. This machine was run into by an ambulance belonging to the defendant and in charge of its servant. The plaintiff has had a verdict, the jury finding that the negligence of the defendant’s servant, in charge of the ambulance, was the cause of the collision. The verdict is amply supported by the proof and is proper, unless the defendant is immune from liability. That question arises on motions made to dismiss the complaint or direct a verdict for the defendant, decision on which was reserved.
The claim of the defendant to exemption from liability is two-fold: 1. Because it is a charitable corporation; and 2, because at the time of the accident it was performing a governmental duty for the city of New York. The defendant is a charitable organization, maintaining a hospital in which the poor are treated without charge and in which those who can afford it are required to pay, and also owning and operating two ambulances. These are in charge of its employees and are used for its purposes and also to respond to city calls, given through the police department under an arrangement by which the defendant receives $3,000 a year from the city for doing that work. At the time of the accident the ambulance was responding to a call sent in by the police department.
The defendant cites Noble v. Hahnemann Hospital,
That a charitable corporation is liable in this state for the negligence of its servants is no longer open to question. The only exception is in the case of beneficiaries or patients. Kellogg v. Church Charity Foundation, 128 App. Div. 214, 215, 218 and cases cited; Schloendorff v. New York Hospital, 211 N. Y. 125. In the case of beneficiaries it is held that they are deemed to have waived any claim by accepting the benefit of the charity, even though they were not voluntary recipients of it. And this rule has been carried so far as to hold that a criminal, sentenced under the law to an institution not maintained by the municipality, cannot recover for injuries sustained while there, caused by the negligence of its employees. Corbett v. St. Vincent’s Industrial School, 79 App. Div. 334; affd., 177 N. Y. 16. As to outsiders, its liability is the same as that of any other person or corporation. Hordern v. Salvation Army, 199 N. Y. 233; Kellogg v. Church Charity Foundation, 203 id. 191.
There is no authority in this state determining this question, unless the language in Noble v. Hahnemann Hospital, 112 App. Div. 665, 666, which seems to be obiter, be deemed such. That language is (p. 666) ¡ “The defendant is the agent or representative of the city, and the same principle which gives freedom from liability to the city is also effective to exonerate the hospital corporation.” But is this sound? Does that .statement correctly state the law?
Municipalities, are held to be immune from liability for the negligence of their servants only when they are engaged in the performance of some governmental
This principle is involved in the cases dealing with the liability for a dangerous condition of the highway in a town. Formerly a town was not liable for the condition of its highways (People ex rel. Van Keuren v. Town Auditors, 74 N. Y. 310), but the highway commissioners were liable when funds were available. Hover v. Barkhoof, 44 N. Y. 113; Bennett v. Whitney, 94 id. 302, 306. A statute was then passed making towns liable, and that was upheld (Flansburg v. Town
So, regardless of the work in which he was engaged at the time, it is clear that the defendant’s chauffeur in charge of its ambulance would be personally liable for his negligent act which injured the plaintiff.
The exemption from liability of a municipality for acts which are not ultra vires is based on the proposition that the rule respondeat superior does not apply to acts of its employees done in carrying out the obligations of the state at large in the performance of its governmental functions, that in the doing of that work the employees are not the servants of the municipality but of the people or the public generally and are not performing any services for it Maximilian v. Mayor, 62 N. Y. 160. The fact that such service is not for the benefit of the municipality and that the latter realizes no profit from it is also mentioned.
These reasons do not apply to an individual or corporation doing governmental work. If they did, they should apply equally whether the services were rendered at the request of the municipality or voluntarily assumed without such request. And then it would follow that an individual would not be liable for his "j errant’s negligence, if the servant was performing tor him an act of charity. But this is not the law. The reverse is true and the employer would be liable in the case assumed. Kellogg v. Church Charity Foundation, 128 App. Div. 214, 217. The servant of an individual or corporation, charitable or otherwise, is not an employee of the public merely because he is performing for his master some governmental function. He is the servant of his employer while doing that work, just the same as he is while doing other work.
The defendant’s contention would lead to this anomalous result: if an individual were doing the work here in question for the municipality, he would be liable if he personally operated the ambulance in a negligent manner, but not if he hired some one to operate it for him. A person is liable for his personal act of negligence, as the authorities previously cited show, even though it be committed in the performance of a governmental function. And it is inconsistent to hold that he is liable for his own negligent act and is not liable for the similar act of his servant, committed in doing his work under his direction. He should be equally liable for both. This situation can never arise in the case of a municipality, for it can act only through its employees.
This rule, respondeat superior, does apply in all cases except those in which a branch of the government is engaged in performing a purely public service which is imposed upon the people generally. There is no reason for extending the exemption from liability. And this is especially true when, as here, the concern doing the work for the municipality is paid for it. The defendant receives $3,000 a year from the city for answering such ambulance calls as are sent to it, the ambulance being used also for the private purposes of the defendant.
Where this question has arisen outside this state, it has been held that the employer of the person whose negligence caused the accident was liable, notwithstanding the act was committed in the performance
There is no good reason why the defendant should not be held liable for the negligent acts of its chauffeur. It is in an entirely different situation than a municipality. The defendant was not obliged to undertake the performance of the governmental functions. It was free to undertake the work or not, as it wished. It was not required to do it for the city. Having voluntarily assumed the work, it should not be exempt from liability for the acts of its employees. This should be so, if the work was done without pay, and there is greater reason for enforcing its liability when it is paid for rendering the service. There is no hardship to the defendant in enforcing the rule. It was not obliged to maintain the ambulance service for the city. When it saw fit to do so, whether for profit or for no profit, it necessarily assumed a responsibility which included a liability to strangers injured through the carelessness of its servants. If it would be relieved of this liability, it should not operate the ambulance.
The reserved motions must be denied and a general verdict for the plaintiff ordered upon the special verdict of the jury
Ordered accordingly.