Masone v. Gianotti

54 A.D.2d 269, 388 N.Y.S.2d 322, 1976 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13766
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 54 A.D.2d 269 (Masone v. Gianotti) 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
Masone v. Gianotti, 54 A.D.2d 269, 388 N.Y.S.2d 322, 1976 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13766 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Shapiro, J.

In a negligence action by an infant, John Masone, to recover damages for personal injuries, and by his natural parent and guardian, Thomas Masone, individually, for medical, hospital and surgical expenses incurred by him for the care of the infant plaintiff, and for loss of the infant’s services, plaintiffs appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Queens County, entered August 21, 1975, upon a jury verdict in favor of the defendants. We reverse and order a new trial.

THE ISSUES

The issues are (1) whether the trial court committed preju[271]*271dicial error when it refused to instruct the jury, as requested by the plaintiffs, (a) that parents may be responsible for negligent failure to exercise reasonable care in entrusting and leaving a dangerous instrumentality, a "BB gun”, in the possession of their 12-year-old infant son, with which gun the infant plaintiff was seriously injured and, (b) that violation by the infant defendant and his codefendants, his parents, of sections 265.05 and 265.10 of the Penal Law, which declare, respectively, that possession of such a gun by an infant under the age of 16 years constitutes juvenile delinquency and that the giving of such a gun to a person less than 16 years of age is a class A misdemeanor, is evidence of negligence on the part of the owner and giver of such a gun if such possession of the gun was the proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff, and (2) whether the trial court’s charge on contributory negligence was correct.

There is also the question whether it was reversible error for the trial court to permit the defendants’ attorney to inform the jury on summation that the defendants were insured and that their defense was being presented by the insurer.

THE FACTS

The one-year-old infant plaintiff, John Masone, was struck in the right eye by a shot fired from a "BB gun” by his three and one-half-year-old brother, Thomas Masone. This occurred at about 8:00 a.m. on November 28, 1969 when both children were in the living room of their grandparents’ home. Both grandparents, the adult defendants, Rosario and Frances Gianotti, were then in the kitchen, having breakfast with the children’s mother. The infant defendant, Frank Gianotti, was in his room at the time, sleeping.

At about 8:00 a.m. the occupants of the kitchen heard a "puff sort of noise” and then heard something hit the kitchen wall. They then saw Tommy standing in the adjoining living room in front of his brother (the infant plaintiff), with the gun in his hand. The brother was crying and when his mother, after picking him up, put him down on the bed, she observed that his eye was "all brown”. She then took him to the hospital for treatment of his injury. He ultimately became blind in his right eye.

While there was no eyewitness testimony as to how the three-year-old had obtained the gun, the undisputed evidence [272]*272is that, along with other toys, it was kept in the sliding-door closet in the bedroom of Frank Gianotti, the 12-year-old defendant. Mrs. Gianotti testified that after the baby was injured, Tommy told her that he had entered Frank’s bedroom, opened the closet door, taken the gun out, and had then gone back into the living room, where he cocked the gun and then fired it at his younger brother, hitting him in the eye. There was also undisputed testimony that Mrs. Gianotti, one of the defendants, had purchased the "BB gun”, a Daisy 99 air rifle, for her son Frank as a present for his 12th birthday in August or September, 1969; that from time to time she bought him BBs for the gun; that he had played with it, but always away from the house; and that he kept it in his closet and, on occasions, under his bed.

Although Mrs. Gianotti testified that she knew of no prior occasions on which Tommy had taken Frank’s gun, the latter testified that he had seen Tommy come into his room and go to his closet "looking for toys and stuff”. Tommy had taken the gun out of Frank’s closet on other occasions. When he did so, Frank took the gun away from him and either put it back in the closet, which was always closed, or under his bed. He also testified that he knew Tommy could cock the gun because when he had previously taken the gun from him, it was loaded and ready to be shot. Frank Gianotti also testified specifically as to one such occasion, about a month before the time of the shooting of the baby, when he saw Tommy in the hallway of the house with the gun and took it away from him. He testified further that his mother, one of the defendants, was in the house at that time. Finally, he testified that he had used the gun in the woods behind the house about two weeks or a month before the baby was shot in the eye and that he had then fired all of the BBs in the gun’s magazine, although he added that the magazine could have had one BB left in it, which had gotten stuck. In any case, there is uncontradicted testimony by the two parental defendants and the infant claimant’s mother that there was at least one BB in the gun at the time of the accident and that it was discharged when Tommy fired the gun at his brother in the living room on the morning of November 28, 1969.

THE court’s CHARGE TO THE JURY

A. Denial of Requested Charges

The plaintiffs requested two charges to the jury, both of [273]*273which were denied by the trial court. The first was that a parent is responsible for his failure to exercise reasonable care in allowing his child to have possession of an instrument which, in view of its nature and of the age and intelligence of the child, constitutes an unreasonable risk of harm to others, with reasonable care defined as that degree of care which a reasonably prudent parent would exercise under the same circumstances. The second was the plaintiffs’ claim that the defendants had violated former subdivision 4 of section 265.05 of the Penal Law (which was essentially the same as the entirety of the present section 265.05) and subdivision 5 of section 265.10 of the Penal Law, and that if the jury were to find that to be so, and if the violations were a proximate cause of the injury to the infant plaintiff, then it must find the defendants negligent.

B. The Charge on Contributory Negligence The trial court, in its charge to the jury, stated that plaintiffs "must be free from contributory negligence”. It then went on to define that term, saying: "The plaintiff is required to exercise reasonable care for his own safety; that is the same degree of care that a reasonable person would have exercised for his own safety under the circumstances. The law does not permit you to weigh the degree of fault of the plaintiff and defendant, but requires that if you find that the plaintiff was guilty of any negligence, no matter how slight, whether it is one percent, one half of one percent, 90 percent, any percent at all, in that event a plaintiff cannot recover, even though you find the defendant negligent.” The plaintiffs’ attorney took exception to that portion of the charge, stating: "The plaintiff in this case was one and a half years of age at the time, and I submit to your Honor that at that age he is, as a matter of law, unable to understand danger, and he cannot be found negligent, nor can he be found contributorily negligent as a matter of law at the age of one and a half years.”

The trial court then directed that the jury be returned to the courtroom and had plaintiffs’ counsel state his request with respect to the contributory negligence charge in the jury’s presence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 A.D.2d 269, 388 N.Y.S.2d 322, 1976 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masone-v-gianotti-nyappdiv-1976.