—Appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims entered on a decision rendered after trial. Claimant who is a lawyer was seriously injured when his car went off a State highway at a curve. He has had an award in the Court of Claims of $98,524.33. Near the curve, at a point in which it could have played some part in the accident, was a substantial patch of ice which had been there some time and which had caused other accidents. The State’s brief contains this statement: “We concede that there was ample basis for finding the State negligent ”. The sole issue on appeal is whether the Court of Claims was justified, on the record before it, in finding .that the claimant had not fallen asleep at the wheel. The State argues that the proof required a holding that the claimant had fallen asleep. The argument that he had fallen asleep depends in part on events, as found by the Court of Claims, preceding the accident, and in part on the credibility of two State police officers who testified they interviewed claimant in a hospital after the accident. The accident occurred at 7:30 a.m., December 8, 1953 on Route 9-W at West Camp near Kingston. Claimant was driving from New York City on his way to Albany. He had arisen at 7:30 a.m. on December 7 — 24 hours 'before the accident — had' spent the day in his office and elsewhere in New York City, and had left for Albany at about 1:30 a.m. on the day of the accident. He had been stopped by police for going through a red light in Nyaek; had lost some time there, and reached a point a short distance above Newburgh at about 4 o’clock where he pulled off the road and slept in his ear for two hours, and then continued on to the place of accident. Thus claimant had had two hours sleep in the 24 hours before the accident; and although it might well be found that he was still sleepy an hour and a half after he had slept briefly on the road, the claimant testified distinctly that he was awake at the time of the accident and described what he did to control his car after it skidded. This kind of question is credibility in the pure sense and we are not able on the record ■ before us to make- a more adequate or accurate finding than the Judge in-, the Court of
