Jones v. United States

304 F. Supp. 94, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10951
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 23, 1969
DocketNo. 64 Civ. 977
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 304 F. Supp. 94 (Jones v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. United States, 304 F. Supp. 94, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10951 (S.D.N.Y. 1969).

Opinion

EDWARD WEINFELD, District Judge.

This Court found plaintiffs had sustained their burden of proof that the defendant, United States of America, “was negligent in allowing the trip to be undertaken without a trained, experienced ambulance attendant, and that Jones was not such a trained attendant, of which the defendant was aware,”1 but had failed to sustain their burden on the issue of proximate cause and accordingly dismissed the complaint upon the merits and awarded judgment in favor of defendant. Upon plaintiffs’ appeal, the Court of Appeals disagreed with this Court’s finding on the issue of proximate cause. It held, “there was sufficient evidence that Hefko caused Jones’ fall from the ambulance and we reject the trial court’s conclusion that the plaintiffs had failed to meet their burden of proof on the issue of proximate cause.”2 Seemingly, with both negligence and proximate cause decided in plaintiffs’ favor, the only issue remaining was that of damages. But the Court [96]*96did not remand for assessment of damages. Instead, citing its own authorities 3 that New York law makes a distinction between duties owed to the public at large and duties owed to employees of independent contractors, the Court held that as to Hefko and the general public the government was under a nondelegable duty to see that adequate precautions were taken to restrain Hefko during the trip, but that “[a]s to Hawkes’ employees, the United States is not liable if its contractual relations with Hawkes justified it in assuming that Hawkes’ employees would be capable of handling dangers such as this, as to which they had been alerted.”4 The Court, however, was of the view that it was not clear whether Hawkes was obligated under the contract to provide such an adequately trained ambulance attendant ; accordingly, it reversed and remanded for consideration of this and other issues related to the defendant’s duty to Hawkes’ employees. These issues include (1) whether Hawkes was obligated under the contract between it and the defendant to provide an ambulance attendant qualified to handle potentially violent. and assaultive mental patients such as Hefko, and (2) if Hawkes was so obligated, whether the defendant gave adequate notice to Hawkes of Hefko’s condition.

Preliminarily, the defendant questions the scope of the judgment of reversal. It contends: “The Court of Appeals did not hold that defendant’s negligence was a proximate cause of the accident” ; it urges that the issue is still open. The hard core of the government’s position is that although the Court of Appeals held the evidence was sufficient to establish that some act or conduct of Hefko caused the accident, it did not decide that the defendant’s negligence in allowing the trip to be undertaken when it knew that Jones was an inexperienced attendant was the proximate cause of Jones’ death. In this Court’s view, the issue was concluded by the Court of Appeals. The broad language that “we reject the trial court’s conclusion that the plaintiffs had failed to meet their burden of proof on the issue of proximate cause” leaves no room for such argument.5 A fair reading of the opinion and the above quoted language make it clear the Court deemed that a trained and experienced attendant would have been equal to the task of handling and, if necessary, restraining Hefko, thereby forestalling the cause or causes which resulted in the disastrous event. In short, the fatal accident would not have occurred but for Jones’ lack of training and experience in the handling of potentially dangerous patients. Thus, we turn to the remanded issues referred to above.

Under the remand, the construction of the contract between Hawkes and the government is crucial, since the Court of Appeals held that defendant’s liability rests upon “whether it was Hawkes’ obligation under the contract to provide an ambulance attendant with adequate experience to handle Hefko.” 6 But, after reviewing the applicable provisions of the contract and testimony relevant to the issue, that Court also held that “the present evidence does not provide any sufficient basis for concluding that the contract required an attendant trained to handle potentially violent and assaultive mental patients.”7 In the absence of additional proof, this Court would not be justified in reaching a different conclusion. At the remand hearing all parties rested without offering additional evidence. Thus the question of which party bears the burden of proof on the [97]*97terms of the contract is of vital significance.

The United States and Hawkes were parties to the contract; they, and not Jones, are responsible for any ambiguities or lack of specificity therein. The defendant offered no proof that the contract, or any practice or custom, or any other circumstance obligated Hawkes to provide attendants who would be capable of handling dangerous patients or justified the defendant in assuming that Hawkes was so obligated. Plaintiff, a total stranger to the agreement, should not have the burden of establishing its interpretation or the intention of those who brought it into being. By any standard of fair play, let alone logic, the parties to a questioned document, and not a stranger, should carry the burden of establishing its meaning. And. this is particularly so where, as here, the defendant seeks to shield itself from liability by contending that, having hired an independent contractor and delegated functions to it, it thereby relieved itself of a duty otherwise owing to Jones. The defendant must, “if responsibility is to be escaped * * * show how and why it was shifted to some one else. Escape from responsibility through the delegation of duty to another is a defense to be proved, not a privilege presumed.” 8

Absent additional evidence on the contract, and in light of the Court of Appeals’ ruling that the record before it did not support a finding favorable to defendant on this issue, this Court holds that the defendant has failed to carry its burden of proof that it delegated to Hawkes the duty it owed to Hawkes’ employees to safeguard them from the unpredictable actions of potentially violent and assaultive patients.9 It has also failed to establish its defense that Jones was contributorily negligent.10 Accordingly, the defendant is held liable and plaintiffs are entitled to recover damages.

New York law limits damages in a wrongful death action to the pecuniary loss sustained by the next of kin for whose benefit the action is brought.11 At the outset it is to be recognized that the determination of the future pecuniary benefits of which next of kin have been deprived does not lend itself to mathematical precision and invokes elements necessarily uncertain in nature; nonetheless, when warranted by evidence, an award is justified.12

Lawrence Jones at the time of the accident and his death was within two months of his eighteenth birthday. He was survived by his father, then aged forty-seven years, and mother, whose age was forty-one. He lived at home [98]*98with his parents, a twin brother and three sisters.

Lawrence dropped out of high school in June 1961, when he was just sixteen years of age. He was an unskilled worker; his work record was episodic and earnings were on the low side.

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Bluebook (online)
304 F. Supp. 94, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-united-states-nysd-1969.