Defendants Kevin Earl, Thomas Kachadurian, Nancy Noonan, Dr. Michael J. Johnson, Josephine Moccia, and Louis Cioffi (individual defendants) move and cross-move pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (2) and (8) for an order dismissing the plaintiffs’ actions against them based on plaintiffs’ alleged failure to comply with the requirements of Education Law § 3813 and General Municipal Law § 50-e by failing to present a notice of claim naming the movants within 90 days of the September 7, 2001 student-on-student hazing incident on which the plaintiffs base their claim. Defendant Thomas Kachadurian (Kachadurian) also moves for dismissal based on plaintiffs’ failure to serve him within 120 days after the action was filed.
Plaintiffs do not allege any of the individual defendants acted outside of their scope of employment so as to obviate the need to file a notice of claim or state a viable cause of action against any of the individual defendants in their individual capacity (Gorgone v Capozzi,
In rejecting plaintiffs’ argument, the court has considered the two cases cited by plaintiffs, Lieber v Village of Spring Val. (
Contrary to the Lieber court’s holding, General Municipal Law § 50-e clearly does not dispense with claimants’ naming
Education Law § 3813 and General Municipal Law § 50-e lend no support to plaintiffs’ conclusion that they only needed to name the municipality in their notice of claim before commencing a cause of action naming individual municipal employees in their official and individual capacities. Education Law § 3813 sets forth that plaintiffs may not prosecute an action against any employees, teachers, or members of the supervisory or administrative staff unless plaintiffs complied with General Municipal Law § 50-e. General Municipal Law § 50-e makes no provision for directing the notice of claim at one entity and then prosecuting an action against another. It certainly does not authorize actions against individuals who have not been individually named in a notice of claim. As noted previously, the only relaxation which the statute provides is providing that claimants’ failure to serve their notices of claim on the individuals who will be later sued does not preclude the later action (General Municipal Law § 50-e [1] [b]). Thus, the court must reject the Lieber court’s interpretation of General Municipal Law § 50-e.
Plaintiffs’ interpretation is also inconsistent with the notice of claim’s acknowledged purpose of affording the public corporation the opportunity to not only locate the defect, conduct a proper investigation, but also to assess the merits of the claim (Carhart v Village of Hamilton,
Careful examination of plaintiffs’ notice of claim reveals not only that they failed to direct their claim to any of the individual defendants or otherwise notify them that they were the intended objects of the impending litigation, but they also failed to make specific allegations of wrongdoing against all but one of the individual defendants. The notice of claim only gives notice that plaintiffs would be asserting their claims against the Board of Education of the Averill Park Central School District. In the case of Katchadurian, whom they do refer to specifically, they make it clear that their notice of claim is directed at the Board of Education of the Averill Park Central School District. As plaintiffs gave no notice to the Board of Education of the Averill Park Central School District that it should look into claims against those individuals, plaintiffs may not prosecute their action against those individuals.
Plaintiffs also argue that they should be permitted to prosecute their action against the individual defendants because “[djuring the school district’s thorough investigation, which continued for months and consisted of numerous witness interviews, the school district learned of the negligence of its employees and hence none of those employees who are named as defendants in this action can claim that they would be prejudiced by not receiving a notice of claim against them within 90 days of the accrual of the plaintiffs’ claim * * In similar fashion, they suggest that the fact that the school district will indemnify the individual defendants is a basis for ignoring the notice requirements. Both arguments misconstrue Education Law § 3813 and General Municipal Law § 50-e. The school district’s efforts to investigate the plaintiffs’ claims cannot serve as a substitute for compliance with Education Law § 3813 and General Municipal Law § 50-e. Similarly, the fact that the individuals’ liability would be covered by the school district cannot supplement an inadequate notice of claim.
In the alternative, plaintiffs request that they be allowed to file a late notice of claim pursuant to General Municipal Law § 50-e. Plaintiffs’ application is untimely (Education Law § 3813
It is noteworthy that plaintiffs provide no excuse for their failure to include the individual defendants in their notice of claim or explanation of why they need to proceed against the individual defendants in addition to the defendants school district and board of education. As noted previously there are no allegations that the individual defendants acted outside of the scope of their employment or any other basis for concluding that plaintiffs will be kept from prosecuting their case fully against just the school district and board of education. There being no reasonable explanation or excuse for either the plaintiffs’ failure to name the individual defendants in their notice of claim or their subsequently expanding the defendants by naming school district and board of education officials the court would deny counsel’s informal request that his affidavit be accepted as a motion for leave to file a late claim.
Accordingly, it is unnecessary to pass on Katchadurian’s argument that he was not served and the individual defendants’ motions to dismiss the action against them are granted with $100 costs on each motion and the caption is amended by deleting all of the individual defendants.
