Brown v. State

24 Misc. 2d 358, 205 N.Y.S.2d 73, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2454
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedSeptember 16, 1960
DocketClaim No. 35490
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 Misc. 2d 358 (Brown v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. State, 24 Misc. 2d 358, 205 N.Y.S.2d 73, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2454 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1960).

Opinion

Alexander Del Giorno, J.

This is a claim to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the infant claimant as the result of an alleged assault and battery committed upon him by a supervisor of the State Agricultural and Industrial School at Industry, New York. The father and guardian ad litem of the infant seeks to recover damages for medical expenses and for loss of services.

In September, 1956, claimant, then 14 years of age, was confined to the State Agricultural and Industrial School at Industry, New York, where he was assigned to a certain cottage and attended manual arts classes. He testified that on October 26, 1956, at about 6:30 p.m., he had an argument with one of the other boys in the basement of the cottage. Other boys were present, having gone there for a smoke. The argument was loud, but no blows were struck. Mr. Coleman, the supervisor of the cottage, came down to the basement, ordered claimant into the back room, directed him to take everything out of his back pockets, to put his hands against the wall, and then hit him in the seat with a paddle about five times. Mr. Coleman is 5 feet 11 inches in height and weighs 163 pounds; claimant was 5 feet 5 inches and lighter than his present weight of 130 pounds. Claimant asked Coleman to stop hitting him, whereupon, he testified, Coleman struck him “quite a few ” times with open hands or his fists on the right side of his head and the stomach. Claimant was hurt, but was not knocked down, and did not strike back at Coleman. During this time, Coleman and claimant were alone in the back room. Coleman then allowed claim[359]*359ant to rejoin the other boys, at which time his ear and the back of his head were swollen and hurt him. Claimant maintains that he had seen Coleman strike other boys on other occasions, as part of his disciplinary procedure, and that Coleman had struck him on prior occasions. Claimant had complained on these other occasions to the night supervisor and to the house father, Mr, Eomasser. On the night in question, claimant later went upstairs to sleep, but was unable to do so because his right ear hurt him and there was buzzing and ringing in it. He complained to the night supervisor of the pain in his ear, but did not recall having told him that Coleman had struck him. The night supervisor did nothing for him that night, and the next morning claimant proceeded to school. The ear was draining while he was there, and the teacher told him to see the nurse, who sent him to the hospital at the school. About a week later, his ear was swollen and infected and there was a “ bloody drainage ”, whereupon the claimant returned to the hospital. He was confined to the hospital for about three months. Drops were put in his ear daily and he was given injections. He told the doctor that the trouble he was experiencing followed his being struck in the head by Coleman. The treatment he received at the hospital seemed to do him no good and he suffered pain during his stay there. He said he had had no trouble with his ear before the incident in question. At one time during his hospital stay, he was sent to an outside hospital for X rays of his ear and head, and then he was returned to the school hospital. In September, 1957, he went home and saw his family physician who referred him to an ear specialist, Dr. Haber. The latter ordered drops and certain prescriptions for his ear. For a period of eight days, his mother, a hospital employee, put the drops in his ear and cleaned it. Then he returned to Industry. After having been discharged from the school hospital, and after his visit home, he returned to and lived there for three months, continuing to receive treatment from the hospital doctor and nurse by way of the cleaning of the ear during drainage. In all, claimant was at the school for 13 months, being released in 1957, at which time he was still having pain and drainage was still occurring. After his return home, his mother gave him medication consisting of drops in his ear, and cleaning the ear and administration of nose spray. He heard better in the left ear than the right, and cold weather affected his right ear, producing drainage. His mother’s medication lasted for about a year. He has been unable to go swimming since the incident, and must take care when showering not to allow water to enter the ear.

[360]*360On cross-examination, claimant stated that he saw Dr. Haber, the family physician, on two occasions, once while he was still in the hospital and the other the week before the trial. Between 1957 and 1960 he did not see the doctor. On the question of other beatings administered to him by Coleman, he testified that they had occurred on many occasions before the alleged ear injury during a two-week period, by the use of a paddle. Although these incidents were not reported by him, he claims conversation relating thereto was overheard by the supervisor and the house father and that he made a report to Romasser about one week before. Romasser told him that “ that is the discipline in the cottage ”. The incident in question was reported by him to Mr. Romasser about a week after it took place, and to the night supervisor the day it took place. The paddle that was used by Coleman was about 2 feet long, 3 inches wide and % inch thick. Although the claimant stated the incident occurred on October 26, he testified it could have happened on the 22d or 23d.

There was introduced into evidence a statement dated December 21, 1956, 9:00 a.m., initialed at the bottom of page 1 “ J. M. B.”, and a statement on page 2 signed “ John Brown ” that claimant had read page 1 which he had initialed, and that the statement was true. In this statement it is alleged that on or about October 22, 1956, at about 5:30 p.m., Coleman took claimant into the boiler room in the cellar and struck him in the face and body with his hands; that when Coleman had finished, claimant’s ear hurt him; that on November 2, 1956, claimant reported to the school nurse and was hospitalized for an infected ear; that at no time did claimant tell anyone with authority about being slapped by Coleman; that he thought about reporting the incident to Mr. Costello, the Superintendent, but neglected to do so. On the trial, claimant testified that he told Dr. Bodamy, a doctor at the school hospital at the time of his second treatment, that he had been struck by Coleman, and stated that except for this omission, the statement was true.

Since claimant’s release from the school, he had been convicted of disorderly conduct in April, 1958, for which he received a suspended sentence, and on April, 1959, of being drunk and disorderly, for which he received a sentence of 30 days.

William M. Brown, the father of claimant, testified that he received a letter from his son to the effect that he was in the hospital. He went with his wife to the hospital the first visiting day in November, 1956, and first went tó see Mr. Romasser, the house father at claimant’s cottage. He then went to the hospital where his son told him Coleman had struck him, that he [361]*361reported it and that nothing was done except that the next day the nurse sent him to the hospital. When the father saw him, there was a swelling behind his ear. The father spoke to Mr. Costello, asking him to discharge the boy so that he could arrange private medical care for him. He said that at the time of the incident his son was about 4 feet 8 inches in height and weighed less than 100 pounds. The boy came home in 1957, about a year later, and was taken to a private physician, an ear specialist. He saw his son on several occasions when he was still in the hospital, even though not confined to bed, the boy complaining of pain in his ear.

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Related

People v. Franklin
79 A.D.2d 611 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1980)
Decker v. Werbenec
36 Misc. 2d 220 (New York Supreme Court, 1962)
Winant v. State
33 Misc. 2d 990 (New York State Court of Claims, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
24 Misc. 2d 358, 205 N.Y.S.2d 73, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-state-nyclaimsct-1960.