Lorich v. State

113 Misc. 409
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 15, 1920
DocketClaim No. 16188
StatusPublished

This text of 113 Misc. 409 (Lorich 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
Lorich v. State, 113 Misc. 409 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1920).

Opinion

Cunningi-iam, J.

In the month of April, 1913, an extensive strike of street railway employees was in progress in the city of Buffalo. Conditions became so parlous that Hon. Charles H. Brown, a justice of the Supreme Court, ordered out the Fourth Brigade of the National Guard of the state, for the purpose of preserving order. On April ninth strikers, or their sympathizers, had been extremely disorderly and riotous all day. The guardsmen repeatedly were jeered and insulted and all, or nearly all, of them were struck once or oftener. The situation was so ominous that a riot call for the reserves was sent in by the police. Late in the afternoon the company attempted to operate its ears on the Niagara street line. A number of thése proceeded along the street close together. About 500 people had assembled near the intersection of Niagara and Tonawanda streets, at which point a New York Central railway bridge spans Niagara street. About 150 were on this bridge. A thousand [411]*411people rushed along the street behind the oars toward the bridge. Fifteen policemen and sixty guardsmen were on duty in that vicinity. The crowd placed cable-drums and other obstructions on the street-car tracks at the bridge, stopping the cars under it. Persons on the bridge dropped or hurled down fish-plates, a railroad tie and other objects. One man attempted to throw a wire over the trolley feed-wire and thus short circuit and sever it. Some one, in fact, did cut it, destroying the power. Meantime, persons in the street threatened the soldiers and police and hurled stones, bricks and other missiles at them. One of the claimant’s witnesses, a police officer, the target for such an attack, drew his revolver in defense, but was prevented from shooting his assailant by another officer. A passenger train of the New York Central Railroad Company stopped at the Black Rock station just westerly of the bridge, and many persons boarded this train, armed with missiles of various kinds, and as the train passed over the bridge hurled them to the street at the officers and the guardsmen. Previous to the arrival of the ears at the bridge, a policeman without using force cleared the bridge of people, but they surged back again immediately. Two old and experienced police officers who testified for the claimant, and one who was a witness for the state, testified that it was the most vicious and threatening crowd with which they ever had had experience, including the two great railway workers’ strikes in Buffalo of previous years. The soldiers were armed with loaded guns and fixed bayonets and had been ordered to shoot if necessary.- Their captain in the street below the bridge ordered a sergeant and a detail of two or three men to clear the bridge. So far as military practice is concerned, the discretion whether and when the detail should shoot was in the sergeant in command. As they [412]*412started for the bridge, a police officer below called to the crowd, My Grod, get back, you will get shot.” The sergeant soon after reaching the bridge gave orders to his men to shoot, which they did, and the daimarit, who was in the crowd on the bridge, was shot through the body. The bullet entered her back, breaking a rib, slightly fracturing another, penetrating her lung and emerging in front. She was enceinte at the time, 'but there is no proof that her condition in this respect was affected by the wound. She was removed to the hospital, and for a long period was under surgical care, suffering great pain and enduring effects which are permanent. The facts detailed above substantially are not disputed. The claimant testified that she had no interest in the strike and no relatives involved in it; but that she knew of its existence, the fact that the militia had been called out in connection with it and that the cars must be run. She says that on this afternoon, her younger brothers not arriving home from .school promptly after its dismissal at three o’clock, as was their invariable custom, their mother, a helpless cripple, directed the claimant and her sister, at four-ten p. m., to search for them and bring them home. She says that she and her sister departed for the purpose, and were told by some boys that their brothers were at the bridge. On arriving there, an officer prevented them passing under the bridge. They saw the crowd on the bridge, and the claimant climbed upon it and talked to a bey friend of their brothers a few seconds, but not finding their brothers, the claimant was leaving the ’bridge and had proceeded a distance of about ten feet, when the shots were fired and she was wounded: She asserts that she observed nothing disorderly or threatening in the action of the crowd; that she heard no command or direction to leave the bridge. Some of [413]*413claimant’s witnesses testified that about 50 people were on the bridge, but her claim alleges that about 150 people were there and she testified that the crowd numbered about 100. Her sister and another witness likewise testified that they saw no disorder and no missiles throwm. A police officer, testifying for the claimant, asserted that he heard no command given by the sergeant to the crowd to move or disperse, although he was as close to the officer as the crowd, and that he saw no act of resistance by the crowd to the .soldiers as the latter advanced across the bridge. Another police officer, a witness for the claimant, said the crowd was getting off the bridge when the soldiers fired, and no one was advancing toward the latter, the nearest person to them being fifty feet away, and that the soldiers -took aim and fired. The sergeant testified that fifty people were on the bridge proper and 300 to the north of it, that the advance of the soldiers on the bridge was met by a shower of missiles, that when the soldiers had advanced ten or fifteen feet northerly on the bridge, the large crowd at that end rushed towards the soldiers, and others on the bridge also turned to the attack, and again missiles were hurled at them, whereupon he held up his hand and gave orders to his men to fire in the air, if the crowd did not halt, and that after the shooting the crowd on the bridge dispersed. This claim is for the alleged negligence of the guardsmen in the premises, and is filed pursuant to the provisions of chapter 579 of the Laws of 1919, which became a law May 12,1919, and reads as follows:

“ § 1. Jurisdiction is hereby conferred upon the court of claims to hear and determine the claim of Ida Lorich against the state for personal injuries caused by the alleged carelessness and negligence of certain members of the New York State National [414]*414Guard in shooting her through the body in the City of Buffalo, New York, on the ninth day of April, nineteen hundred and thirteen, if claim therefore shall be filed within one year after this act takes effect.

§ 2. If the facts proved before said court of claims should establish a just and equitable claim in favor of said Ida Lorich against the state, for damages for personal injuries, the said court may determine that the state is liable therefor and award such sum as may be just and equitable, not exceeding the sum of fifteen thousand dollars. Nothing herein contained ¡shall be construed as an admission of liability on behalf of or on the part of the state of New York.”

This statute is'not an audit or allowance of the claim by the legislature. That result could not be accomplished validly by legislative enactment. Const, art. III, § 19; Munro v. State of New York, 223 N. Y. 208; Wheeler v. State of New York, 190 id. 406; Roberts v. State of New York, 160 id. 217; O’Hara v.

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Related

Munro v. . State of New York
119 N.E. 444 (New York Court of Appeals, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
113 Misc. 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lorich-v-state-nyclaimsct-1920.