Casoni v. Town of Islip

198 Misc. 661, 99 N.Y.S.2d 230, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1912
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1950
StatusPublished

This text of 198 Misc. 661 (Casoni v. Town of Islip) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casoni v. Town of Islip, 198 Misc. 661, 99 N.Y.S.2d 230, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1912 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1950).

Opinion

Golden, J.

This is a motion by the plaintiff to set aside a ten to two verdict rendered by the jury in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff as administrator sought to recover damages by reason of the death by drowning of his daughter, Jean Irene Casoni, due, he alleges, to the negligence of the defendant.

Plaintiff’s daughter, at the time of the drowning on August 29,1948, was fourteen years of age, was a student at Bay Shore High School, was approximately 5 feet, 3 inches tall, and weighed between 130 and 140 pounds. She and a friend, Emma Jane Smith, a girl eighteen years of age, also a resident of Bay Shore, were wading on a public beach owned, operated and controlled by the defendant and known as “ East Islip Bathing Beach.” It includes the bed of Great South Bay and is a smooth, sandy, gradually shelving, gently sloping beach, which extends for a great distance out into the waters of Great South Bay. The defendant maintains a boardwalk extending out into the bay for a distance of 130 feet and beyond that a float approximately sixty feet from the boardwalk.

The two girls, neither of whom could swim, were wading out in the water holding hands and singing. Other people were in the water, some out a greater distance. Suddenly Jean sank down in the water, released her hand from Jane Smith, then grasped Jane’s ankle and pulled Jane down with her. Jane Smith came to the surface and screamed. Her screams were [663]*663heard by one of the witnesses, Alexander Kiengler, who was nearby and who went to Jane’s rescue. The rescuer of Jane was unaware that Jean Casoni was in the water and did not discover that fact until Jane Smith had recovered consciousness ashore. A rescue party then returned to the scene where Patrolman Michael Turoczi found that he “ could not touch bottom.” A boat was brought to the scene and the child’s body was brought up by means of a drag.

In 1946 the Town of Islip added to the beach surface by pumping sand in from the bay bottom, from a distance of approximately 600 feet. In dredging for this sand by the use of a hydraulic dredge, the defendant created a depression covering an area approximately one-half an acre in extent and as deep as eleven feet. At the edge of this hole, on the shore side, the water was approximately four feet deep at high tide and something over three feet deep at low tide. At no time did the defendant in any manner whatever give any warning to persons using this public bathing beach of the creation and existence of this depression which had been created by the dredging. No warning signs were displayed and no effort was made by the defendant to put anyone on notice. The defendant employed no lifeguards. Even though the beach was intended for the use of children, no provision was made for their protection or supervision.

Notwithstanding the provisions of regulations 16 and 17 of chapter VI of the Sanitary Code, established by the Public Health Council of the State of New York, pursuant to section 2-b of the Public Health Law, the defendant failed to provide lifesaving equipment and failed to provide for the personal supervision of the beach by an operator or competent attendant trained in lifesaving procedure.

This court is of the opinion that the negligence of the defendant was established beyond the shadow of a doubt.

The defendant had the burden of establishing, by a preponderance of the credible evidence, the contributory negligence of the deceased girl. Our inquiry on this motion is first, was there any proof of contributory negligence which was a proximate cause of the happening of this accident? The defendant urges three acts which the defendant asserts were proximate causes of the drowning of this girl, the first is that one leg was shorter than the other (approximately one-fourth inch); the second is that she walked out too far; the third is that there was a high wind and high waves.

It was the habit of the users of this beach to walk out as far as this girl did and to a greater distance. The survey which was [664]*664offered in evidence shows the very gradual shelving or sloping of the bay bottom. It was not the distance that the girl walked out into the bay, but it was what suddenly impeded her progress when she walked into this trap which had been dug by the defendant, and of which no warning was given to any man, woman or child who used this beach. The fact that one leg was one-fourth inch shorter than the other, certainly was not the cause of her falling into the trap. There was no evidence of wind or waves at the time of the happening of the accident, although there was some evidence that an hour or so later the water was rough. An examination of the map of this beach, with this gradual increase in depth, would indicate little likelihood of waves of such force and violence as defendant seeks to suggest. An examination of the record will indicate that these waves are mostly the product of a vivid imagination. On the very day that this accident happened, other users of the beach were the same distance, or farther out than the deceased girl, but fortunately for them they did not walk in the direction of the trap or hole which had been created by the defendant. But if it be assumed that there were wind and waves, there was no causal connection between them and the happening of the accident. On the issue of contributory negligence as a defense, the verdict should have been for the plaintiff, first because defendant failed to establish such defense by a preponderance of the credible evidence ; second, that even though the deceased were negligent, her negligence was not a proximate cause of the accident; and third, assuming that the deceased girl were negligent (which this court does not find), under the rule laid down in Bragg v. Central New England Ry. Co. (228 N. Y. 54), the defendant is liable, irrespective of the negligence of the deceased. In the Bragg case, a death action, a railroad section hand, exhausted from overwork, fell asleep on a railroad tie adjacent to a railroad track. He knew that a work train was operating in the vicinity and a little later the work train, proceeding at a speed of twelve miles an hour, ran over and killed him. The trial court charged the jury that the deceased was guilty of negligence, but the Court of Appeals held that the negligence of the decedent was not the proximate cause of his injury and that when the engineer discovered that the decedent was inert or unconscious, or for some reason could not or would not safeguard himself, then the engineer should have sought to avoid the accident. Here, in the present case the defendant knew of the peril to which all persons using the beach were subject if they came in the vicinity of the hole created by the defendant.

[665]*665So in Storr v. New York Central R. R. Co. (261 N. Y. 348, 351): “ If one by a negligent act places himself or his property in a position of danger his negligence does not contribute to defeat his recovery if the situation was known to the defendant in time to avert the consequences of plaintiff’s own negligence. In such a case the defendant’s negligence is the sole cause of the injury.’’

In the case of Klinkenstein v. Third Ave. Ry. Co. (246 N. Y. 327) the court examined the question of the proximate cause of the accident in which the defendant railroad company sought to escape liability for a collision with the bus because the bus was operated upon a public highway without proper consents and authority.

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Bluebook (online)
198 Misc. 661, 99 N.Y.S.2d 230, 1950 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casoni-v-town-of-islip-nysupct-1950.