Felice v. Eastport/South Manor Central School District

50 A.D.3d 138, 851 N.Y.S.2d 218
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 29, 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by1,095 cases

This text of 50 A.D.3d 138 (Felice v. Eastport/South Manor Central School District) 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
Felice v. Eastport/South Manor Central School District, 50 A.D.3d 138, 851 N.Y.S.2d 218 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Crane, J.P.

An injured person who has failed to serve a timely notice of claim may, pursuant to General Municipal Law § 50-e (5), apply for permission to serve a late notice. Among the “facts and circumstances” a court must consider in determining an application for permission to serve a late notice of claim are the actual knowledge of the public corporation of the “essential facts constituting the claim” and the prejudice to the public corporation from a claimant’s failure to serve a timely notice of claim (General Municipal Law § 50-e [5]). Here, we take the opportunity to clarify the standards relevant to the courts’ exercise of discretion in deciding these applications, so the outcomes are more predictable and not merely the product of judicial whimsy. More precisely, we grapple with the distinction between, on the one hand, the knowledge obtained by a public corporation [including a school district] (see General Municipal Law § 50-e [1] [a]; General Construction Law § 66 [l]-[4]) of the “essential facts constituting the claim,” and, on the other, the knowledge obtained by a public corporation of facts about an accident and the resulting injury that do not amount to the essential facts constituting the claim. We also analyze the effect of this distinction in determining whether the lack of a timely notice of claim has substantially prejudiced a public corporation in its ability to defend the claim on the merits.

L

On December 14, 2005, Rebecca Felice, then a tenth-grade student at Eastport/South Manor Central Junior/Senior High School, allegedly was injured during a varsity cheerleading practice at the gym of a local elementary school. Felice was [140]*140taken by ambulance to a hospital where she was diagnosed with a fracture of the talus bone in her right foot. The next day Kathryn Orlando, the varsity cheerleading coach, completed a portion of a student accident claim form. According to that portion of the form, Felice “was dismounting in a vertical position from an extended stunt and landed awkwardly on her right foot.” Immediately below this narrative, in what appears to be different handwriting—and obviously, from the information contained on it, added at least a few days later—the following appears: “She broke her tallus [sic] bone in the foot and required 2 screws in surgery after accident.”

A few days after the accident, Felice was examined by Dr. David Wallach at Stony Brook Hospital; Dr. Wallach informed Felice and her mother that the fracture was displaced and required internal fixation surgery. Dr. Wallach performed the surgery within a week after the accident. Felice’s right foot was placed in a cast, and Felice used a wheelchair for two weeks and crutches for almost three months.

An insurance plan provided by the Eastport/South Manor Central School District (hereafter the District) afforded excess medical benefits to its students for accidental bodily injuries suffered during school activities. On December 30, 2005, Felice’s mother completed the student accident insurance claim form, part of which had already been completed by Coach Orlando on the day after the accident. The District admits that it had notice of the accident itself, but not of the legal claims Felice and her mother (hereinafter together the petitioners) are alleging.

On July 19, 2006, Felice returned to Dr. Wallach, who had been monitoring her condition, and Dr. Wallach explained to the petitioners that there was a 10% chance that Felice would have problems with the blood flow to her injured foot, and that she may need future surgeries. He also told the petitioners that, while Felice need not “walk on egg shells the rest of [her] life, [she] need[ed] to think about what [she does] to put pressure on the right foot.” The record is not clear whether Dr. Wallach told Felice that she could not return to cheerleading, or whether the petitioners merely reached that conclusion on their own from what Dr. Wallach told them. The petitioners retained counsel the same day.

On July 26, 2006, the petitioners commenced this proceeding for leave to serve a late notice of claim against the District and to deem timely served nunc pro tunc the proposed notice of claim annexed thereto.

[141]*141This proposed notice of claim asserted, under the section entitled “The Nature of the Claim,” that the District

“was negligent, careless and reckless in its sponsorship, operation, organization, supervision and control of a varsity cheerleading program/team consisting of students from EASTPORT/SOUTH MANOR JR./SR. HIGH SCHOOL in that Coach KATHERINE ORLANDO, failed to properly and adequately train the girls who were designated as a ‘Lasers’ [sic]; designated girls of insufficient weight and height to be ‘Lasers’; designated ‘Lasers’ of insufficient height and weight to catch their designated ‘flyer’; designated girls of insufficient experience to be ‘Lasers’; failed to follow all of the rules, regulations, safety precautions and standards which govern the activity and/or sport of cheerleading and failed to institute her own safety standards when designating, supervising and controlling each group of ‘Lasers’ and ‘flyers’. . .
“The claimants also allege that prior to the incident which gave rise to this claim, [the District], through its agents and servants, had actual prior notice that the ‘Lasers’ designated to catch the infant Claimant REBECCA FELICE, a ‘flyer’, were of insufficient height, weight and experience to safely catch the Claimant. The infant Claimant REBECCA FELICE, on many occasions prior to the incident orally voiced her concerns and complaint to Coach KATHERINE ORLANDO, who failed to designate more experienced and larger girls to catch the Claimant and failed to heed the Claimant’s warnings that the organization and operation of the cheerleading program/team was neglecting safety standards and procedures for the student participants.”

Felice averred in an accompanying affidavit that, in the autumn of 2005, Coach Orlando had placed her with a stunt team with which Felice felt uncomfortable:

“The stunt team consists of a ‘flyer’, a girl who is thrown in the air and three ‘Lasers’ who are responsible for the flyer to land safely on the ground. I felt uncomfortable with the stunt team because all of the girls were smaller than me and one of the girls was inexperienced since she had just [142]*142come from junior varsity. The girls were having problems during the practices catching me properly. I voiced my concerns to the coach on several occasions and she did nothing about it.”

As to the accident itself, Felice stated: “After I had performed my stunt in the air and I was coming down to the ground, the girls in my stunt team failed to hold on to me to make sure that I landed safely on the grounds [sic]. Instead, I landed straight down on my right foot.”

Felice asserted in her affidavit that she was unaware that there was a time limit for presenting a notice of claim, but also, with some possible inconsistency, that she “initially convinced [her] mother not to file a claim” because she thought she would be returning to the cheerleading team, whose members and coach were her good friends. When she learned of the seriousness of her injury and that she would not be returning to the team, and she considered “all the times” she had told her coach of her discomfort with her stunt team, she concluded that a claim should be presented.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 A.D.3d 138, 851 N.Y.S.2d 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/felice-v-eastportsouth-manor-central-school-district-nyappdiv-2008.