Hann v. State

137 Misc. 2d 605, 521 N.Y.S.2d 973, 1987 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2631
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 9, 1987
DocketClaim No. 69926-A
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 137 Misc. 2d 605 (Hann 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
Hann v. State, 137 Misc. 2d 605, 521 N.Y.S.2d 973, 1987 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2631 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1987).

Opinion

[606]*606OPINION OF THE COURT

Edwin Margolis, J.

This action involves a claim by a prison inmate for personal injuries inflicted by another inmate and alleged to have been caused by the negligence of prison oflicials. Specifically, claimant alleges that the prison officials were negligent in failing to take reasonable precautions to guard against the likelihood that unprovoked assaults would be made by claimant’s assailant.

It is well settled that the State has a duty to exercise reasonable care to assure the safety of inmates in its institutions (Flaherty v State of New York, 296 NY 342) and, in the context of the instant case, to provide its inmates with "reasonable protection against foreseeable risks of attack by other prisoners” (Sebastiano v State of New York, 112 AD2d 562, 564; see also, Restatement [Second] of Torts § 320). The question of whether there has been a breach of this duty by failing to conform to the appropriate standard of conduct is largely one to be determined in accordance with the facts and circumstances of each particular case. (See generally, Annotation, Prison — Assault by Prisoner, 41 ALR3d 1021.)

To establish the standard of conduct against which the circumstances of each case are to be tested, a risk-benefit analysis may be fruitfully utilized. Such analysis involves "balancing the risk, in the light of the social value of the interest threatened, and the probability and extent of the harm, against the value of the interest which the actor is seeking to protect, and the expedience of the course pursued.” (Prosser and Keeton, Torts § 31, at 173 [5th ed].) Thus, negligence is a concept that is " 'relative to the need and the occasion,’ and conduct which would be proper under some circumstances becomes negligence under others.” (Id., citing Cardozo, Ch. J., in Matter of Babington v Yellow Taxi Corp., 250 NY 14, 18.)

Therefore, in order to determine whether the State’s actions with respect to claimant’s assailant, one Hector Miranda, constituted negligence, it is necessary to review the full facts and circumstances and the public policy involved. One clearly relevant factor in assessing the risk that Miranda posed to other inmates is his past prison record.

Prison records introduced into evidence at trial indicate that between 1972 and 1982, when claimant was injured, at least 34 disciplinary proceedings were commenced against [607]*607Miranda by New York State correction officials. Of those 34 proceedings, 9 arose from assaults against either other inmates or correction officers; some of these involved knife stabbings and some were unprovoked attacks on inmates with whom Miranda had no prior relationship. In July 1976, while he was a prisoner at Green Haven Correctional Facility, Miranda was convicted of the crime of assault in the first degree, a class C felony, for stabbing another inmate with a knife; he was sentenced to an additional 3- to 6-year term of imprisonment, to run consecutively with the sentence he was then serving. In May 1981, he was confined to a special housing unit (solitary confinement) for one year for an assault on a correction officer, and in July of that year, he was sentenced to an additional year in special housing for another assault on a correction officer.1 On April 28, 1982, at the time he was completing his first year in special housing, Miranda was certified a mentally ill inmate and transferred from Green Haven Correctional Facility to Central New York Psychiatric Center, pursuant to section 402 of the Correction Law. On June 23, 1982, he was returned to Green Haven, again in accordance with section 402. On Miranda’s return from Central New York, Green Haven officials remitted the balance of his first one-year special housing sentence and his second full-year sentence to "time served” and returned him to the general prison population. Miranda’s conduct from that time until September 24, 1982, the date of the assault on claimant, was unexceptional; his prison records for that period indicate no disciplinary violations or other evidence of any behavioral problems.

The circumstances of the assault on claimant, which occurred at approximately 6:00 p.m. on the evening of September 24, 1982, are as follows. Claimant was in the prison yard assembling picture frames during the after-dinner recreational period. This was an approved hobby, and Hann had been issued a hammer, as was authorized, for the duration of the recreational period. He placed the hammer on the table before him for a moment, and in that moment Miranda walked up behind him, picked up the hammer, and hit claimant on the head with it several times. In the subsequent investigation, prison authorities determined that the attack [608]*608was completely unprovoked and that Hann and Miranda had not known each other prior to the incident. As a result of the assault, Hann suffered a laceration over the right front area of the scalp which required sutures at the prison infirmary. He was then taken to a local hospital and diagnosed as having a cerebral concussion. He was discharged on September 26, 1982 in good condition.

The central issue presented by this case is whether the State had a duty to segregate or otherwise isolate Miranda from the general prison population. The general criterion in New York was stated by Judge Fuld in Flaherty v State of New York, as follows: "The law is clear; it is only in its application that difficulty is encountered. The State — just as any other party (Court of Claims Act, § 8; L. 1939, ch. 860) — is responsible, in the operation and management of its schools, hospitals and other institutions, only for hazards reasonably to be foreseen, only for risks reasonably to be perceived. ” (296 NY 342, 346, supra [emphasis supplied].)

Defendant argues in its posttrial brief that there was no proof that, at the time of the subject assault, claimant’s assailant was unduly dangerous or any more dangerous than any other inmate at Green Haven Correctional Facility and that "[a]bsent a finding by this Court that the claimant’s assailant was unduly dangerous, it cannot be said that the assault upon the claimant was foreseeable.”

The primary argument in support of the claim is that in view of Miranda’s record of assaultive behavior over the past 10 years, prison officials were not justified in allowing him to be in the general population where, for example, tools such as hammers were routinely issued to inmates. Defendant counters this argument by relying on several cases where courts have found that a specific assault on one prisoner by another was not foreseeable and that there had been no lack of adequate supervision. (See, e.g., Dizak v State of New York, 124 AD2d 329; Mobley v State of New York, 1 AD2d 731; Denza v State of New York, Ct Cl, Sept. 15, 1986, Blinder, J.; Vicente v State of New York, Ct Cl, Sept. 16, 1985, Weisberg, J.; Bartolomeo v State of New York, Ct Cl, Jan. 19, 1984, McCabe, J.) None of these cases, however, involved an assailant whose institutional record disclosed as great a propensity toward violence as does Miranda’s.

Each case of this nature turns on its specific facts and the court’s determination of what was reasonable or not reason[609]*609able under the circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
137 Misc. 2d 605, 521 N.Y.S.2d 973, 1987 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hann-v-state-nyclaimsct-1987.