Jaked v. Board of Education

198 A.D. 113, 189 N.Y.S. 697, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8051
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 7, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 198 A.D. 113 (Jaked v. Board of Education) 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
Jaked v. Board of Education, 198 A.D. 113, 189 N.Y.S. 697, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8051 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Van Kirk, J.:

Plaintiff, a girl seven years of age, on November 22, 1918, was attending school No. 1 on Bassett street in the city of Albany. The school building is erected immediately upon the street line. The main entrance to the schoolhouse, intended for the use of teachers and visitors to the school, is on_Bassett street. There is a vestibule, the floor of which is on the level with the street, extending several feet deep, from the rear of which floor are a number of steps leading up to the front door of the building. At the entrance to this vestibule ar.e two large iron swinging gates, which when closed protect this vestibule. These gates are attached to hinges, which are attached to the outer walls of the building on either side of the entrance. These gates swing inward. In the wall back of one of these gates, when open, is an iron bar set in the wall, extending out some twelve or fourteen inches, so fashioned that, by means of a padlock, this gate may be fastened open. On November 22, 1918, there was no such bar in back of the other gate, but in a corresponding place in the wall back of this gate is a hole in which it is inferred that at some time a similar bar had been placed. At noontime on November -22,- 1918, this plaintiff, with an older sister and some others, went to this main entrance and she, with four or five others, was swinging upon the gate which was not equipped with a fastening device. She was on the inside or back side of the gate. One or two boys pushed the gate back [115]*115toward the wall. Plaintiff, standing on the gate and evidently-intending to hold the gate from reaching the wall, extended her leg back against the wall and her leg was broken above the ankle. For about a year prior to this accident there had been no means of fastening this gate when open, and scholars had been accustomed to swing on the gate. The complaint alleges that the defendant had the care, custody and control of the school building, and it was its duty to keep the building and the approaches thereto in a reasonably safe condition, so as not to endanger the life or limb of children attending the school, and not to use said building while in a dangerous condition; that the plaintiff was attracted by the gates and by seeing other children swinging thereon and got on the swinging gate; that the injuries were received solely as the result of the defendant’s negligence in failing to keep the approach to the school building in reasonable repair and permitting the use of such approach when not in proper repair. There is no other charge of negligence against the defendant than the failure to provide a means of fastening the gate when open and permitting this entrance to be used when such means had not been provided. The questions of fact were submitted to the jury and they have found that the defendant was negligent in this respect and that the plaintiff was not negligent in a manner which contributed to her injuries. A verdict of $400 was rendered in favor of the plaintiff. Upon motion of the defendant, the court set aside the verdict and dismissed the complaint upon the ground that the defendant, in performing its duties in respect to the maintenance and repair of school buildings, is performing a governmental function as an agency of the State and for its benefit and is, therefore, immune from liability, .as would be the State. (113 Misc. Rep. 572.)

The. board of education of the city of Albany is a body corporate. (Education Law, § 300.) The powers and duties of a board of education include (Education Law, § 868, as added by Laws of 1917, chap. 786) “ any duty imposed upon boards of education or trustees of common schools under this chapter or other' statutes, * * * the care, custody, control and safekeeping of all school property; ” and (Education Law, § 875, as added by Laws of 1917, chap. 786) “ power [116]*116to purchase, repair, remodel, improve or enlarge school buildings * * * and to construct new buildings.” The State imposes some of its duties by statute upon municipalities and agencies, authorizing departments of police, charity, .fire, education and highways. These agencies are for the efficient exercise of these governmental functions. The State is immune from action by any person on account of its own acts, or of the acts or negligence of its agents, unless it has given express consent (Buckles v. State of New York, 221 N. Y. 418; Matter of Hoople, 179 id. 308, 311), and the agency of the State, upon which is imposed the performance of a governmental duty, is entitled to and has the same immunity from liability for its acts, or the acts of its representatives, in the performance of that duty, as does the State itself. (Corbett v. St. Vincent’s Industrial School, 177 N. Y. 16; Wilcox v. City of Rochester, 190 id. 137; Maxmilian v. Mayor, 62 id. 160; Ackley v. Board of Education, 174 App. Div. 44; Donovan v. Board of Education of City of N. Y., 85 N. Y. 117; Gaetjens v. City of New York, 132 App. Div. 394; Ham v. Mayor, 70 N. Y. 459, 463; Springfield Fire Ins. Co. v. Village of Keeseville, 148 id. 46.)

This immunity was given to the city of Rochester in respect to the management of the building for police headquarters in a suit brought by a mechanic going to work in the building, who fell into an elevator shaft, the door thereof having been left open negligently by the operator, an employee of the city (Wilcox v. City of Rochester, supra); and to the city of Buffalo in respect to the management of a city and county hall in a suit brought by one who was injured on an elevator in the city hall by reason of the negligence of the operator (Moest v. City of Buffalo, 116 App. Div. 657; affd., 193 N. Y. 615); and to St. Vincent’s Industrial School in an action by a minor^ convict, who had been committed to the school, for injuries sustained by him because of the negligence of defendant’s manager in failing to instruct him in the proper operation of a machine (Corbett v. St. Vincent’s Industrial School, supra), in which case the court said: “ The question here is whether the defendant, acting so far as this plaintiff was concerned as a governmental agency for the care of such convicts, is not entitled to the same immunity from liability for damages in case of such accidents that is conceded to the [117]*117State itself and to all its municipal divisions; ” and the court concludes: “We think that, inasmuch as the defendant, in receiving and taking charge of the plaintiff, was exercising functions which in a large sense belonged to the State, it cannot be held hable for accidents of this character; and to the county of Monroe in an action by an employee in the Monroe County Insane Asylum who «was injured while operating a steam mangle in the laundry. (Hughes v. County of Monroe, 147 N. Y. 49.)

This rule of total immunity is applied strictly in some States. In a leading case in Massachusetts (Hill v. City of Boston, 122 Mass. 344; 23 Am. Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
198 A.D. 113, 189 N.Y.S. 697, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaked-v-board-of-education-nyappdiv-1921.