Fischer v. City of New York

207 Misc. 528, 138 N.Y.S.2d 754, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2678
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 207 Misc. 528 (Fischer v. City of New York) 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
Fischer v. City of New York, 207 Misc. 528, 138 N.Y.S.2d 754, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2678 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1955).

Opinion

Pette, J.

In this action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained hy plaintiffs’ intestate and for medical expenses and loss of services hy her husband, the cause was tried by the court without a jury.

On the morning of January 15, 1951, the intestate, then seventy-six years of age, was injured when she fell while walking on a public sidewalk on the east side of Vernon Avenue, some twenty-five feet south of 40th Avenue, Long Island City, New York. She was removed by an ambulance to St. John’s Hospital, Long Island City, where she stayed for about an hour and a half. She was then taken to the Metropolitan Hospital on Welfare Island, where she remained for fourteen months until her death on March 13, 1952. There is no question- that the intestate sustained a fractured right hip as a result of the [530]*530accident, which kept her hospitalized for this long period of time and resulted in medical and hospital expenses aggregating $5,317.47.

The serious question presented for determination is the cause of the accident to which there were no eyewitnesses and as to which the intestate herself could no longer testify at the trial, except by testimony she gave when examined before the comptroller, pursuant to section 93d-1.0 of the Administrative Code of the City of New York. This testimony was received in evidence on behalf of the plaintiffs on the authority of Rothman v. City of New York (273 App. Div. 780), after it had been duly authenticated by reason of the fact, that for causes for which the plaintiffs could not be blamed, it had never been subscribed by her. (Cf. Ricker v. Daniels, 263 App. Div. 584, and Magnus v. Magnus, 54 N. Y. S. 2d 271.)

In the deposition before the comptroller, the intestate testified that while walking on the sidewalk in question, the heel of her shoe was caught in a hole in the sidewalk which caused her to fall and break her right hip. It had been raining the day prior to the accident and all morning on the day of the accident, and the hole in the sidewalk which she described as about a foot long, four inches wide and three inches deep, was partly filled with water. After she fell and started to scream, two men aided her by bringing a box and sitting her on it. Her husband was called and when he arrived, he went to a neighbor’s home where an ambulance was called. She did not remember ever seeing the hole in the sidewalk before the accident nor how loúg it had existed. She admitted that two police cars came, but denied that any police officer questioned her.

The intestate’s husband testified that he was at home when he was summoned to the scene of the accident; that when he arrived there, he found his wife lying on the sidewalk with ‘ ‘ her feet towards the hole, towards the sidewalk ’ ’; that this hole, about a foot long, four inches wide and four inches deep, had a little water in it and he had observed it “ about six months or more ’ ’ prior to the accident.

Bose Morra, the neighbor in whose home the telephone call was made, testified that she ran out to the intestate and found her lying on the sidewalk on her right side. She described the hole in the sidewalk as long, and a little narrow ” and it was pretty deep ” and that the intestate’s feet were right near it. She stated that for more than six months prior to the accident she had observed the hole in the sidewalk. She testified also that she called police officers and was present when they arrived [531]*531and did not observe them have a conversation with the intestate, although she was there all the time. She did not give her own name to the police officers nor point out the hole in the sidewalk to them. She held Mrs. Fischer’s head until the ambulance arrived. She knew that “ two men came along and wanted to put her up on a box, and it was pretty high getting her there, that is why I held on to her, to give her support. ’ ’

The defendant introduced evidence as to oral statements made by the intestate immediately after the accident to a policeman and later to the doctor at Metropolitan Hospital, who, on the admission record, noted in his own handwriting “ states that she slipped on a banana & fell on her rt. side.” The oral testimony of the doctor and the policeman to whom the intestate made a similar statement, as well as the admission sheet of the hospital and the accident report of the police department, were admitted over objection, on the authority of Kwiatkowski v. John Lowry, Inc. (276 N. Y. 126). Decision upon plaintiffs’ motion to strike out the oral testimony of the doctor and the policeman and the admission record of the hospital, on the ground that such evidence violated the provisions of section 347 of the Civil Practice Act, was reserved. That motion is now denied.

Inasmuch as this was a sidewalk accident case, it does not fall within the purview of the last paragraph of section 347 which was added in 1948 (L. 1948, ch. 705). The theory of the remaining portion of that section and its predecessor statutes “is to render incompetent as witnesses against the representative of a decedent, as to personal transactions with decedent, parties to the action, persons from or through whom title to the subject-matter of the action is derived and persons for whose benefit the action is prosecuted or defended — persons directly interested in the event" of the action — and no others.” (Bopple v. Supreme Tent of Knights of Maccabees of World, 18 App. Div. 488, 493.) The testimony of the doctor and the policeman, who testified as to the admissions by the intestate as to how the accident occurred, as well as their written reports of such conversations, was admissible since these persons are not directly or immediately interested in or benefited by the result of this action. (Pack v. Mayor of City of N. Y., 3 N. Y. 489 ; Matter of Olson, 119 N. Y. S. 2d 207, 210 ; Greenfield on Testimony Under § 347, Civ. Prac. Act, §§ 56, 58.)

• In the Pack case (supra), it was held in a suit against a municipal corporation that one of the corporators was not a party within the meaning of section 399 of the Code of Civil [532]*532Procedure, the predecessor statute of section 347, so as to be excluded as a witness. In the Olson case (supra), it was held that one of the employees called by the department of welfare of the City of New York, which was interested in the event, was not thereby disqualified from testifying on behalf of the employer over the objection of the special guardian of the decedent’s allegedly incompetent sister that stock in a co-operative apartment house corporation owned by the alleged incompetent had been assigned by her to the decedent prior to death. The foregoing applies with equal force to the testimony of the doctor and the policeman.

Hospital records are admissible in evidence under section 374-a of the Civil Practice Act if found to have been made “ in the regular course of any business, and that it was the regular course of such business to make such * * * record at the time of such act, transaction, occurrence or event, or within a reasonable time thereafter.” (Meiselman v. Crown Heights Hosp., 285 N. Y. 389 ; People v. Kohlmeyer, 284 N. Y. 366.) It may be argued that it was not the regular course of the doctor’s “ business ” to make a memorandum on the hospital admission sheet as to the manner in which the accident occurred.

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207 Misc. 528, 138 N.Y.S.2d 754, 1955 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fischer-v-city-of-new-york-nysupct-1955.