Grasso v. State

177 Misc. 690, 31 N.Y.S.2d 398, 1941 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2397
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 28, 1941
DocketClaim No. 25615
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 177 Misc. 690 (Grasso 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
Grasso v. State, 177 Misc. 690, 31 N.Y.S.2d 398, 1941 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2397 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1941).

Opinion

Fitzsimmons, J.

Claimant’s son, John Grasso, twenty-eight-year old inmate of Woodbourne Institution for Defective Delinquents, died March 26, 1939, as a result of injuries sustained the previous day, while in the performance of assigned duties at the institution. Claimant, as administrator of his son’s estate, seeks damages against the State by reason of its alleged negligence in compelling his son, a sub-normal person, to work in dangerous surroundings.

The immediate cause of death was an embolism resulting from fractures of the tibia and fibula of the young man’s left leg. The fractures were caused by decedent’s left leg having been struck [691]*691by a bouncing stone, which, loosened by thawing conditions, had rolled down from a point two-thirds up the side of a nearby twenty-five-foot embankment and struck and bounced off a stone in its course, with force sufficient to throw him to the ground. The embankment furnished the rocks on which inmates worked on the level ground nearby. Thawing conditions had prevailed for the five days previous to and on the day of the accident; maximum temperature on March twenty-third was forty-five degrees; on the twenty-fourth, sixty-one degrees and on the day of the accident, seventy degrees. Guard Bertram Smith, under whose direction the men were working, called a warning to decedent and his teammate. The warning, though given within their hearing distance, went unheeded.

The reason for decedent’s failure to respond to the warning, while unknown, may fairly be read from his mental condition as well as the circumstances surrounding his injury.

Decedent’s mental ailment, known as mental deficiency, gave him a mental age of six years and four months and an I. Q. of forty-two, which is entirely different in a mentally defective adult from that of a child of six years and four months.

The unheeded warning obviously may be traced to the inability of the young man to grasp and promptly react to a sudden, speedy impending danger, which by reason of the almost imperceptible time elapsing between the stone’s loosening and its striking him, might well have confused the judgment of a person in sound mental and physical health.

No person was stationed on the embankment to observe and warn of possible dangerous conditions nor were means provided to obviate such dangers — except through the guard, who, in addition to having charge of the twelve inmates, directed them in their work, a large task in view of the dangerous conditions prevailing.

The State, in view of its five days’ warning of possible danger through thawing conditions, and of its knowledge — or at least sufficient lapse of time to have served as notice — of a dangerous condition, should have provided means either of removing stones likely to have rolled down the embankment or to have kept the inmates sufficiently distant from the foot of the embankment to have safeguarded them from possible injury.

It seems clear, therefore, that the State was negligent and decedent free of contributory negligence.

Under conditions entitling claimant to a recovery, it is unfortunate that no pecuniary damage was sustained; at least none was proved.

The court, in seeking to determine damages sustained, is mindful [692]*692that in a claim of this kind proof must necessarily be indefinite, prospective and contingent, and likewise, that such proof should establish a fair basis of fact including age, sex, health and intelligence of the decedent, together with the situation and condition of the survivors, their relationship to him and decedent’s prior record of earnings and assistance, to which our attention is drawn by Houghkirk v. President, etc., D. & H. C. Co. (92 N. Y. 219) and Birkett v. Knickerbocker Ice Co. (110 id. 504, 508). The court, too, has considered “in a reasonable way those prospective and indefinite damages arising * * * in addition to actual money damages * * * ” as recited in Countryman v. Fonda, J. & G. R. R. Co. (166 N. Y. 201, 209, 210), yet despite the numerous possible yardsticks to which resort may be had, no measure of damage appears available, actual, prospective or indefinite.

No proof of actual damage having been offered, even of funeral expense, resort must be had to “ prospective and indefinite damages.”

An examination of decedent’s past record held out no reasonable hope to those who might naturally look to him for assistance — financial or otherwise.

The only medical and mental testimony offered by claimant was that of Dr. Vernon Branham, superintendent of the institution, psychiatrist and physician to the inmates, as well as a member of its parole board.

In Dr. Branham’s opinion based upon personal observation of the young man and examination of his case history, decedent was not, and could not be, parole material; that is, recover sufficiently to warrant belief that he could take his proper place in the affairs of life. The doctor added that the decedent was not insane; that his ailment arose from an hereditary lack of gray matter; that the brain had not developed to its full extent, and that it does not develop after a certain age. The doctor further stated that he would describe the decedent’s mentality as a low intelligence level, that such condition was permanent and that there had been no improvement in decedent’s mentality from the time he was first committed to Napanoch in 1934 up to the time of the accident in 1939.

The question put to the doctor: “ In other words, doctor, would he [decedent] have improved to a point where you might have changed your opinion? ” was answered, “ My experience in these cases leads me to believe that there was not.” Claimant’s attorney then asked, “ Was there any possibility? ” to which the answer was given, “ I don’t think so. I am giving you my opinion.”

[693]*693Except to reach into the field of conjecture, it seems clear that John Grasso, had he lived his normal span of years, would always have been a ward of the State.

Examining the record along the border lines of conjecture, we must consider further testimony based on a few questions submitted to and answered by Dr. Branham.

A few inmates of the mental intelligence of John Grasso have left the institution; the mental age does not always indicate the adaptability of an individual; two such may have different powers and capacities of adjusting themselves socially; in some cases outside supervision is better; sometimes it is possible to find the type of job to which a man of that kind can adjust himself; for example, be returned to a rural community for farm work, but he could not find a job in New York city because he could not meet that level of intelligence, but if offered a job in New York city and it was felt that it was a bona fide job — “I think it might have altered it ” (“ it ” indicating parole attitude).

Examination of the record alone might well lead to the impression that, under certain favorable conditions, John Grasso might have improved to such an extent that he would have been capable of working on a farm, or even of winning parole to accept an offer of a bona fide job in New York city. The attitude and demeanor of the witness, in combination with his words,

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Bluebook (online)
177 Misc. 690, 31 N.Y.S.2d 398, 1941 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grasso-v-state-nyclaimsct-1941.