Grauer v. State

15 Misc. 2d 471, 181 N.Y.S.2d 994, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4489
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedJanuary 20, 1959
DocketClaim No. 33610
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 15 Misc. 2d 471 (Grauer 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
Grauer v. State, 15 Misc. 2d 471, 181 N.Y.S.2d 994, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4489 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Alexander Del Gtorno, J.

This is a claim to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by claimant as a result of the alleged negligence of the State of New York. The claim has not been assigned in whole or in part.

On August 6, 1955, claimant visited the Belleayre State Park, at Highmount, New York, where there is located what is known as the Belleayre Chair Lift, which is maintained by the State for use by skiers during the Winter and by sightseers during the Summer. Accompanying him were his wife, his son, aged 5 years, and a friend, Mr. Ingberg, with his family. Claimant purchased tickets for the climb up the mountain for himself [472]*472and Ms son. He stood in line and when his turn arrived, he waited on the loading platform with his son in his arms to be loaded into one of the chairs. He testified that the platform he stood on was one yard square. Claimant is five feet seven inches in height.

The chairs on the lift were suspended by a bar from a cable, were 70 feet apart and were in constant motion. These chairs could swing freely from right to left and from front to back. On the left side of each chair was a safety bar and footrest, all in one piece. When open, the safety bar extended out from the front of the chair parallel to the left side of the chair; when closed, it formed a right angle with the left side of the chair. At both the upper and lower loading platforms the footrest, whether the safety bar was opened or closed, was several inches from the ground; as to the chairs when they were swinging and when the safety bar was open, they tilted back to prevent people from falling out.

The claimant, with his child in his lap, rode to the top and alighted from the chair with the help of an attendant. He went sight-seeing, had a soda and signed the log. While there, he met a Mr. Friedensohn, whom he knew. As he was waiting on the platform for the descent, facing down, he testified that he was struck on the back of the right leg and thrown bodily into the chair travelling downward. He claims that he was given no instruction as to how to stand on the platform but that he merely followed the crowd and stood as others did. He did not see what struck Mm, except that the impact threw Mm off Ms feet and he was cast into the chair at the moment of contact. Claimant was not cross-examined by the State on the question of the cause of the accident.

The claimant sustained a spiral fracture of the lower portion of the right fibula from wMch he has completely and fully recovered and now has a normal functioMng extremity with no residual disability. The parties stipulated that the spiral fracture would reasonably have disabled claimant from pursuing Ms normal occupation for a period of four months and further resulted in a partial disability for one additional month; that claimant was confined to his home for four months; that an injury of tMs type can reasonably be caused by a blow; that such an injury is reasonably productive of pain; that the doctors’ bills amounted to the sum of $334.25. A diathermy macMne which was rented cost the sum of $27.75; the hospital bill amounted to the sum of $20. Claimant testified that his average earmngs were $700 per month. A copy of his Federal income tax return for the year 1954 indicates that Ms gross profit on [473]*473sales as a diamond dealer was $7,843.82 and that in the year 1955 his gross profit from sales was $6,335.17.

The witness Arthur G. Draper, Superintendent at Belleayre, testified that people were permitted to carry in their laps children not over six years of age. He described the lift as containing 85 to 90 chairs on a constantly moving endless chain, and the chairs as being about 20 inches wide; when the bar is open it is 18 inches to 20 inches to the outside of the frame of the chair. He stated that the loading platform is 18 inches in width and 2 feet in length. Normally an empty chair would have the safety bar open, as left by the prior passenger; if it were closed the attendant would open it. The hanger grip is so designed as to permit the chair to swing from side to side and from front to back; if a chair were to swing too much, i.e., 4 inches, the attendant stops it. The attendant, however, has the duty of guiding the chair to the waiting patron. He testified further that if a person is standing on the platform waiting, there is normally nothing that would strike him on the right foot; that the only way in which a patron would be struck would be in a situation where the chair and footrest swung in an arc to the right, but even then that would be apt to hit a person higher on his body than in the instant case. Further, he stated that if the footrest were open before striking, it would close upon striking with the result that it would be impossible for the patron to sit in it. He testified that only if the shaft of the footrest had struck claimant could it have remained open. In describing the operation of the lift in the summertime, Mr. Draper testified that it runs at a speed of about 3 or 4 miles an hour; that the attendants collect tickets, instruct the waiting patrons to look for approaching chairs and to sit immediately as the chair nears; that if a chair swings forward or sideways, the attendant takes hold of the chair and steadies it; that the place in which to stand is marked by footprints on the platform, but that if the patron is not in that exact position the attendant pulls the chair laterally around the patron into a position where he can sit in it; that when the chair is at the loading platform, the point of the footrest would be 5 inches from the ground; that in the Summer of 1954 there were 28,000 passengers, with no accidents to his knowledge. He further testified that when the attendant steadied the chair he guided it to the rear of the patron who would fall into it in a sitting position, thus preventing the chair from hitting the patron; that a patron facing downhill normally would be to the left of the chair; that sometimes an attendant may hold the chair with one hand on the safety bar and the other on the back of the chair, and in [474]*474such case, if he were to swing the chair into the patron the safety bar could remain open.

The State introduced into evidence moving pictures of the loading operation. These indicate that the chairs may swing from side to side and from front to back, that the platform is a mere board upon which to stand, that the attendant operates the chair in loading and unloading passengers and that the footrest normally is close to the left side of the standing patron.

The witness George Ingberg substantiated the testimony of claimant and testified further that when he saw claimant descending 30 minutes after the ascent, the latter shouted to the attendant that he was hurt, at which time the cable was stopped. Mr. Ingberg helped the attendant remove claimant from the chair and asked the attendant where there was a first-aid station. Upon being informed that there was none, he took claimant to a doctor at Fleischmanns, then to a hospital and then back from the hospital to New York.

Testifying later on behalf of the State, the witness Draper stated that on April 8, 1958, he had measured various distances, finding that the distance between the platform and the point of the chair footrest is 14 inches and the shaft 5 inches; that the platform is 24 inches wide; that in 1954 there had been one reported accident on the chair lift during the Summer, and in 1955 none. He admitted that the chairs can be tipped, although attendants are instructed specifically not to do so.

William L. Harris, an engineer employed by J.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Misc. 2d 471, 181 N.Y.S.2d 994, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grauer-v-state-nyclaimsct-1959.