Abbott v. New York Public Library

263 A.D. 314, 32 N.Y.S.2d 963, 1942 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6880
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 13, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 263 A.D. 314 (Abbott v. New York Public Library) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abbott v. New York Public Library, 263 A.D. 314, 32 N.Y.S.2d 963, 1942 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6880 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Dore, J.

Plaintiff sued defendant, The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundations, Forty-second street and Fifth avenue, New York, N. Y., for personal injuries resulting from an assault upon him therein by another visitor of whose dangerous tendencies plaintiff claims defendant had notice. After a trial before the court and a jury, at the close of the plaintiff’s case, the court dismissed the complaint for failure to prove any negligence on defendant’s part. From the judgment in defendant’s favor entered upon such dismissal, plaintiff appeals.

Proper consideration of the issues requires a somewhat detailed narrative of the facts. On February 22, 1938, at two-forty-five p. m., in the library’s main reading room, one Charles Frankel, a visitor therein, without cause or warning attacked and stabbed another visitor, Oscar Stewart, with a knife that resembled a fishing knife having a blade five or six inches long. Stewart had stepped back when he saw the assailant’s hand unexpectedly descending upon him and the wound inflicted on Stewart’s throat was apparently superficial although it bled profusely. Frankel was immediately taken to defendant’s office and questioned by defendant’s representative in charge, John Hayden, the night superintendent. Frankel’s only explanation of the attack was that Stewart had jostled him as he entered one of the alcoves. In the presence of defendant’s employees Frankel threatened Stewart, saying that if he did not get him someone else would. As Stewart’s wife had just come home from a hospital nursing a baby, he did not wish to press a charge against Frankel. Stewart testified that no advice to press the charge was given by library representatives who took the knife from Frankel, procured his name and address, and allowed him to go at large without notifying the police at the time. There was another witness to that assault, a frequenter of the library, whose name and address were not secured [316]*316on February twenty-second; he later told library officials that he was willing to testify and gave his name and address.

On the following day, February twenty-third, George W. Bergquist, defendant’s special investigator, whose duty it is to safeguard library property and the public using the library, learned of the attack from the day janitor and orally told the janitor and the staff in the main reading room to watch for Frankel and to notify Bergquist immediately if Frankel reappeared. Bergquist testified that the night and day janitors had given instructions to the library guards to keep Frankel from the building, but that he did not notify the attendant in the economics reading room, and so far as he knew such attendant was not notified of the incident. On February twenty-third Bergquist sent a detailed report of the assault to the commanding officer of the police of the Fourteenth Precinct, pointing out in his report that the library employee who had handled the case had failed to notify the police and that Frankel had threatened Stewart in the presence of library employees.

On February twenty-fourth, between ten and eleven A. m., one of the guards notified Bergquist that he had seen Frankel on the Fifth avenue steps of the library. Bergquist and the guard immediately went out to search for him but did not find him. On that same day the police reported that they had been watching for Frankel at bis home but did not find him there.

On February twenty-fifth Frankel again entered the library, apparently without hindrance from any of the guards, went to the economics reading room and registered his name and address in a room register book provided for that purpose and kept by an attendant at the entrance of the room. The exact time of this entry was not shown, but it was sometime after three-thirty p. m. In charge of that register was a library attendant whose duty it was to see so far as possible that every one entering that room registered his name and address (although Bergquist testified that was not mandatory), to assist the readers in locating material, and to see that slips calling for books were sent to the proper locations. Apparently in the course of these duties the attendant would from time to time be away from the register desk.

On that same day, February twenty-fifth, plaintiff Abbott, an efficiency engineer, entered the economics reading room about five-thirty p. m. to do some research. Having finished bis reading, plaintiff started to leave about six-thirty p. m. and at the time everything appeared normal. However, as plaintiff stepped into the hall leading from the economics room, Frankel, who had assaulted Stewart in the library on February twenty-second, similarly attacked plaintiff without any cause, striking him a [317]*317number of blows on the head with a hatchet he had brought to the library when he entered. He inflicted injuries including two depressed fractures of the skull made with the hammer end of the hatchet. The injuries concededly were serious, requiring a head operation, but need not be further discussed as we are here concerned with the issue of liability only. After the attack Frankel ran downstairs with the hatchet hanging from his wrist to which it was attached with a leather loop or guard. One Herman Mintzer, a frequenter of the library, who saw the attack, pursued Frankel and notified a guard on the lower floor. Mintzer testified that when he returned to the upper corridor where plaintiff lay unconscious, he did not then notice any guards there and did not see any attendant at the desk in the economics room at the time of the assault.

Plaintiff contends that he was an invitee lawfully on defendant’s premises, a public place; that there is no possible issue of contributory negligence on his part; and that what constituted reasonable care on defendant’s part was an issue of fact to be decided by the jury in the light of all the facts and surrounding circumstances, including defendant’s knowledge of the prior assault, and should not'have been disposed of as a matter of law by the court. Defendant contends that plaintiff was not an invitee but merely a gratuitous licensee on the premises solely for his own purposes to use the facilities defendant, a domestic charitable corporation, furnished without charge; that accordingly defendant’s sole duty was to refrain from willful and wanton injury; and that the complaint was properly dismissed as plaintiff wholly failed to prove any negligence whatever on defendant’s part causing or contributing to cause the injuries.

Defendant’s contention that plaintiff was not an invitee is in our opinion without merit. The verified answer alleges that the library was maintained and operated by defendant for use by the general public to furnish educational and recreational facilities “ for the general welfare of all persons accepting the defendant’s invitation to use ” the library, and was open to all such persons resorting to it free of charge. Irrespective of this conclusive admission by defendant in its pleading of an invitation to the general public to use the library, we think it too clear for argument that persons lawfully using a public library such as this defendant operates, are impliedly invited to use it to further the purposes for which it was established and are not bare licensees but invitees. (La Marca v. Brooklyn Public Library, 256 App. Div. 954.) To such invitees defendant owes the duty of reasonable care to keep the place reasonably safe; and, as it is a public place, that includes the duty to supervise it adequately so that persons lawfully using [318]*318it are not unreasonably exposed to danger.

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Bluebook (online)
263 A.D. 314, 32 N.Y.S.2d 963, 1942 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abbott-v-new-york-public-library-nyappdiv-1942.