Arbegast v. Board of Education

65 N.Y. 161
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 1985
StatusPublished

This text of 65 N.Y. 161 (Arbegast v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arbegast v. Board of Education, 65 N.Y. 161 (N.Y. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Meyer, J.

The system of comparative causation established by CPLR article 14-A encompasses both the strict liability of an owner of a domestic animal to a person injured as a result of the animal’s vicious propensity and the assumption of risk implied from the injured person’s use of or contact with the animal with actual or constructive notice of such propensity. It does not, however, cover the express assumption of risk by the injured party. Plaintiff, a participant in a donkey basketball game, would have been entitled to a jury instruction on comparative causation based on implied assumption of risk as she requested had she not testified that she was informed by defendant’s employee prior to her participation that she participated at her own risk. In view of that testimony, however, her participation in the games constituted an express agreement on her part to assume the risk, entitling defendant to the direction of a verdict in its favor. The order of the Appellate Division, affirming the judgment for defendant entered on the jury’s special verdict, should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.

I

Plaintiff, a student teacher at the South New Berlin Central School, was injured during a donkey basketball game when the donkey she was riding put its head down and she fell off. The game, sponsored as a fund-raising event for the senior class, was [163]*163staged under contract by the defendant Buckeye Donkey Ball Company, which provided the donkeys, helmets for each of the players, and an employee who transported and handled the animals, gave instructions to the participants, and acted as referee of the games, in return for which the company received a percentage of the receipts. Two games were played; the first pitted the faculty team against the fire department team and was won by the faculty team; the faculty team then opposed the senior class team in the second game. Plaintiff participated in the first game without mishap, but had a different, larger donkey for the second game than she had had for the first. She spent a good deal of the game walking the donkey around but, at the urging of another faculty member, mounted. Soon thereafter she was thrown over the donkey’s head when it put its head down as it stopped, with resultant permanent injury to her left arm.

Plaintiff sued both the Board of Education and defendant Buckeye, but settled her claim against the Board of Education prior to trial. The claimed negligence on the part of Buckeye as particularized was that knowing of the vicious propensities of the donkey, defendant allowed plaintiff to ride without sufficient warning of such propensities, failed to provide adequate supervision and failed to provide adequate safety equipment. Buckeye, in addition to denying negligence on its part, pleaded as separate affirmative defenses assumption of the risk and reduction of damages by reason of plaintiff’s culpable conduct. There was evidence that the instructions given by Buckeye’s employee to the participants included the statements that the donkeys do buck and put their heads down causing people to fall off and that if injuries happened the participants were at their own risk.

At the close of the evidence defendant moved to dismiss on the grounds that no vicious propensity had been shown and that by plaintiff’s own admission she had assumed the risk, and plaintiff moved for a directed verdict and also for a comparative negligence charge from New York Pattern Jury Instructions — Civil.1 All of those requests were denied, the Trial Judge ruling [164]*164that plaintiff’s conduct was to be measured not in diminution of damages, but “solely for the purpose of determining whether all of the elements of her cause of action exist, one of the elements being that she did not knowingly expose herself to the danger of injury by the animals.” The case was submitted to the jury under instructions that if they found that the donkey assigned to plaintiff had tendencies likely to cause the type of accident which occurred, that defendant Buckeye was aware of those tendencies, and that plaintiff was not made aware of those tendencies either by defendant or by her own observation before the accident occurred she could recover, but that if she was made aware of them by defendant or by observation before the accident she could not recover. In answer to specific questions presented to the jury, they found that the donkey had such tendencies, that defendant was aware of them and that plaintiff was informed by defendant’s employee, or in the exercise of reasonable care should have been aware of, the propensity of the donkey she was thrown from. On plaintiff’s appeal from the judgment for defendant entered on that special verdict, the Appellate Division affirmed, without opinion.

The matter is before us by our leave (62 NY2d 602). We conclude that the comparative causation principle enacted by CPLR 1411 applies to a strict liability action involving the vicious propensities of a domesticated animal, and to the implied assumption of risk by a person injured by such an animal, but not to the express assumption of risk by such a person. Although implied assumption of risk, therefore, was under these circumstances a defense in mitigation of damages to be pleaded and proved by defendant rather than an element of plaintiff’s cause of action, defendant was entitled to dismissal of the complaint at the end of the plaintiff’s case by reason of her admission that she had been informed both of the risk of injury and that “the participants were at their own risk.” We, therefore, affirm.

II

The rule governing one who keeps an animal with knowledge of its vicious propensities is one of strict liability or, as it is sometimes called, absolute liability, rather than negligence (Molloy v Starin, 191 NY 21, 25; Muller v McKesson, 73 NY 195, 200; Lynch v McNally, 73 NY 347, 349; see, Strunk v Zoltanski, 62 NY2d 572; People v Sandgren, 302 NY 331, 339; cf. Hosmer v Carney, 228 NY 73, 75-76). It is, however, important to note that prior to enactment of CPLR article 14-A, contributory negligence was not a defense to such liability (Molloy v Starin, supra) but assumption of the risk was (see, Stevens v Hulse, 263 NY [165]*165421), and that the rule applies not only to a wild animal but also to a domestic animal which is vicious or has a dangerous tendency of which its owner knows or has reason to know (Restatement [Second] of Torts § 509; 1 NY PJI2d 506-508).

This is not a situation like Akins v Glens Falls City School Dist. (53 NY2d 325) in which prior to adoption of CPLR 1411 there had been no determination of the scope of the duty involved because all participants were held to have assumed the risk, and in which the issue raised was scope of duty. Here the Trial Judge charged that if the donkey assigned to plaintiff had tendencies or propensities likely to cause injury to plaintiff, the defendant was aware of those tendencies and did not tell plaintiff about them or plaintiff was otherwise unaware of them, and those tendencies were a proximate cause of plaintiff’s injuries, she was entitled to recover, but that if plaintiff was made aware of those tendencies either by defendant or by her own observation, she could not recover.

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Bluebook (online)
65 N.Y. 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arbegast-v-board-of-education-ny-1985.