Naulty v. State

25 Misc. 2d 76, 206 N.Y.S.2d 210, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2342
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedOctober 10, 1960
DocketClaim No. 35798; Claim No. 35799
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 Misc. 2d 76 (Naulty 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
Naulty v. State, 25 Misc. 2d 76, 206 N.Y.S.2d 210, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2342 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1960).

Opinion

Alexander Del Giorno, J.

These are claims to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by claimants as a result of the alleged negligence of the State. The claimant Howard W. Naulty seeks also to recover additional damages for the loss of the services of his wife, Melba Naulty.

On November 2, 1957, at about 7:00 a.m., claimants left their home in East Aurora, New York, to attend a meeting of the board of trustees of Keuka College in Keuka Park, New York, of which board claimant Howard W. Naulty was a member. The latter drove his automobile, a 1957 four-door Oldsmobile sedan, in a general easterly direction on Route 20-A from East Aurora to Honeoye, New York. The day was cloudy, and there were damp spots on the roads which were in the process of drying. When they arrived at Honeoye, the claimant Howard W. Naulty pulled the car off the road. After a few minutes’ rest, his wife took over the wheel, her husband remaining in the front seat, beside her, rewriting some notes for an address to be delivered by him before the board of trustees.

Mr. Naulty testified that his wife then drove the automobile over the said highway, with which she was unfamiliar, and which is a two-lane highway approximately 16 feet in width, to a point approximately 3.4 miles east of Honeoye. She was proceeding at a speed of about 40 miles per hour. At that point Hiere is a descent in the grade of the road, a solid white line dividing the highway in the center. Just east of a left turn in [78]*78the highway, and past the turn, the right wheels of the automobile went off the paved portion of the highway and onto the soft shoulder. In an attempt at recovery by the driver, the front wheels took hold of the edge of the concrete, the car lurching to the left-hand side of the road and then back to the right-hand side of the road. At that time, the car went off the road completely, proceeded across a ditch which was three to four feet wide and into a field. It then turned to the left at an angle of 90 degrees, skidding sideways until the right wheels struck a small drainage ditch. The car rolled over, making one full revolution, and came to rest on its wheels. The drainage ditch was almost at right angles to the road and about 100 feet from where the car left the road. At the place in the road where the accident occurred, there were damp spots and dry spots on the roadway, and the surface of the fields and adjacent grounds was still muddy. The witness inspected the car immediately after the accident, and, one week later, the car being in the same condition, took a photograph of the car. After the accident, neither claimant was unconscious. The witness was able to get out of the car. His wife, who had been pressed against him through the roll-over, slid out of the car through the opened right door, ending up in a sitting position. Although prior to the time the car went off the road, the witness had been writing, he did feel the difference of traction and observed his wife’s handling of the car. She turned the wheel to the left and was thrown to the right side of the car. Her hands stayed on the wheel.

After the occurrence of the accident, some people from a house immediately across the road came to the scene. His wife was not moved, and an ambulance was called. Both claimants were taken to the Frederick Ferris Thompson Hospital in Canandaigua.

On November 9, 1957, the witness measured the shoulder of the road, finding that the distance from the rut in the shoulder to the top of the pavement, at the point where the car returned to the road was three and one-half inches, and at a point farther away, two inches.

On July 17, 1958, with his attorney present, the witness took photographs of the highway looking east. (Claimants’ Exhibits 11, 12, 13, approaches to the turn; Exhibit 14, site looking back from east to west; Exhibit 15, point 400 feet west of the crest in the hill, looking east.)

On November 9,1957, claimant took photographs of the scene. (Claimants’ Exhibit 16, southerly lane and the edge of the road, looking from west to east, marker 108; Exhibit 17, southerly [79]*79side of road, showing broken concrete subsurface under asphalt; Exhibit 18, southerly lane of highway, indicating groove or depression; Exhibit 19, from west to east, showing scene of accident from distance, markings indicating that the car travelled in the form of an S, starting from top to bottom, then a long spindle at the end of the S, going into the drainage ditch; Exhibits 20, 21, looking north and showing the height of the shoulder below the pavement; Exhibit 22, southerly side looking northeast, where the car left the road; Exhibit 23, southerly side of pavement, ink marking where tire marks were found immediately after the accident; Exhibit 24, point where the car returned to road; Exhibit 26, indicating relative height of shoulder to pavement.)

Claimant Howard W. Naulty did not require the services of a physician and was not hospitalized. Immediately after the accident, he had an ache in his head and in his back. That evening he returned home and went to bed, where he remained the following day. On the day after that, he resumed his normal duties. For several weeks thereafter, anything that required the bending of his back was painful.

On cross-examination, the witness testified that he had been on this road many times, and, while proceeding at 50 miles per hour, had never gone off the road.

Claimant Melba Naulty testified that she is now 46 years of age, that she is a registered nurse, and that she operated at the time of the accident and now operates a nursing home accommodating 16 patients. As she was driving along the road and approaching the turn, which was the first time she had driven on this road, she was unable to see the turn, and saw no signs on the road. As she came to the crest of the road, there was a turn to the left. In relating how the accident happened, she substantiated the testimony of her husband. She testified that she did not apply her brakes when the car went off the road, but did take her foot off the gas pedal. She stated that as a result of the accident, she was obliged to discontinue a great part of her work in the nursing home, and that she was obliged to undertake payment to nurses employed by her for extra hours worked by them in the sum of $250 in 1957, $2,000 in 1958 and $2,100 in 1959.

On cross-examination, she testified that just prior to the accident she had been proceeding at a speed of 40 miles per hour; that she did not see the turn in the road until she had reached a point 15 feet ahead of the turn and had not sufficient time within which to negotiate the turn. She had driven for one year prior to the date of the accident. She conceded that [80]*80she accidentally went off the road, that when she went off the road onto the shoulder she did nothing except to proceed for a time trying to get back upon the pavement. As to the motor vehicle accident report, she testified that although she signed it, she did not "write it. In this report it was stated that in entering the field where it overturned, the car struck and knocked down two wooden fence posts and wire fence, and proceeded 100 feet.

Mr. Joseph Martin, called as a witness on behalf of claimants, testified that he is a resident engineer of the State Department of Public Works, Ontario County. He stated that the distance between markers 105 and 106 and 107 and 108 on Route 20-A is 100 feet. The distance between stations 103 and 108 is 500 feet. The elevation at the top of the hill, near marker 106 is 13.45 feet.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Misc. 2d 76, 206 N.Y.S.2d 210, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/naulty-v-state-nyclaimsct-1960.