P.R.B. v. State of New York

162 N.Y.S.3d 196, 201 A.D.3d 1237, 2022 NY Slip Op 00348
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 20, 2022
Docket532933
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 162 N.Y.S.3d 196 (P.R.B. v. State of New York) 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
P.R.B. v. State of New York, 162 N.Y.S.3d 196, 201 A.D.3d 1237, 2022 NY Slip Op 00348 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

P.R.B. v State of New York (2022 NY Slip Op 00348)
P.R.B. v State of New York
2022 NY Slip Op 00348
Decided on January 20, 2022
Appellate Division, Third Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided and Entered:January 20, 2022

532933

[*1]P.R.B., Respondent,

v

State of New York et al., Appellants.


Calendar Date:November 19, 2021
Before:Egan Jr., J.P., Lynch, Clark, Pritzker and Colangelo, JJ.

FitzGerald Morris Baker Firth PC, Glens Falls (John D. Aspland Jr. of counsel), for appellants.

O'Connell and Aronowitz, Albany (Michael Y. Hawrylchak of counsel), for respondent.



Colangelo, J.

Appeal from an order of the Court of Claims (Hard, J.), entered January 29, 2021, which denied defendants' motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint.

During the early morning hours of October 23, 2016, claimant, then a sophomore at the State University of New York at Albany (hereinafter SUNY Albany), was sexually assaulted in her dormitory room located within a suite on an upper floor of Stuyvesant Tower. She was assaulted by a recent parolee who had no authority to be in the dormitory.[FN1] In July 2017, claimant filed the instant claim alleging that defendants (1) created a dangerous and unsafe environment for her as a resident in an on-campus dormitory, (2) failed to install proper security devices, including a lock, (3) failed to otherwise provide appropriate security measures in Stuyvesant Tower, and (4) failed to provide an adequate amount of security to students in order to prevent individuals from gaining unauthorized access to dormitory rooms. Following joinder of issue, completion of discovery and the filing of a note of issue, defendants moved for summary judgment dismissing the claim on several grounds, including that governmental immunity bars the claim. Claimant opposed the motion. The Court of Claims denied the motion, finding that defendants' non-police negligent acts were undertaken in a proprietary and not a governmental capacity and defendants were not immune from liability. Further, the court found that claimant presented issues of fact as to whether the rape was reasonably foreseeable, whether defendants discharged their duty to provide reasonable security measures and whether defendants' negligence was the proximate cause of claimant's injuries.[FN2] Defendants appeal, and we affirm.

Defendants initially contend that the Court of Claims erred in determining that their allegedly negligent acts were undertaken in a proprietary rather than a governmental capacity and are therefore not protected by governmental immunity. We disagree. "Where, as here, a negligence claim is asserted against a governmental agency, the threshold issue to be determined by the court is whether the [governmental agency] was engaged in a proprietary function or acted in a governmental capacity at the time the claim arose" (Scozzafava v State of New York, 174 AD3d 1109, 1110 [2019] [internal quotation marks and citations omitted]; see T.T. v State of New York, 151 AD3d 1345, 1345-1346 [2017]). "[T]o determine whether a governmental agency is acting in a proprietary function or a governmental capacity requires an examination of 'the specific act or omission out of which the injury is claimed to have arisen and the capacity in which that act or failure to act occurred'" (Scozzafava v State of New York, 174 AD3d at 1110, quoting Matter of World Trade Ctr. Bombing Litig., 17 NY3d 428, 447 [2011], cert denied 568 US 817 [2012]; see Drever v State of New York, 134 AD3d 19, 22 [2015]).

As the Court of Appeals has recognized, "[a] governmental [*2]entity's conduct may fall along a continuum of responsibility to individuals and society deriving from its governmental and proprietary functions" and "any issue relating to the safety or security of an individual claimant must be carefully scrutinized to determine the point along the continuum that the [governmental entity's] alleged negligent action falls into, either a proprietary or governmental capacity" (Miller v State of New York, 62 NY2d 506, 511-512 [1984]). In Miller, a student at a state university was raped by an intruder in the laundry room in her dormitory. The Court of Appeals permitted the claim of negligence — stemming from the defendant's failure to lock the entrance doors to the dormitory — to go forward in the defendant's proprietary capacity as a landlord. As in Miller, claimant's allegations that defendants failed to, among other things, install proper security devices, including locks, clearly implicate defendants' proprietary function as a landlord, and the Court of Claims therefore correctly rejected defendants' claim of governmental immunity.

Defendants next argue that the sexual assault of claimant was not foreseeable, based upon, among other things, the deposition testimony of Aran Mull, SUNY Albany's assistant chief of police. "Landlords have a common-law duty to take minimal precautions to protect tenants from foreseeable harm, including foreseeable criminal conduct by a third person" (Mason v U.E.S.S. Leasing Corp., 96 NY2d 875, 878 [2001] [citations omitted]; see Haire v Bonelli, 107 AD3d 1204, 1204-1205 [2013], lv denied 22 NY3d 852 [2013]). Criminal conduct is foreseeable if it is "reasonably predictable based on the prior occurrence of the same or similar criminal activity at a location sufficiently proximate to the subject location" (Six Anonymous Plaintiffs v Gehres, 68 AD3d 1177, 1178 [2009] [internal quotation marks and citations omitted], lv denied 14 NY3d 710 [2010]; see Jaqueline S. v City of New York, 81 NY2d 288, 294-295 [1993]; Milton v I.B.P.O.E. of the World Forest City Lodge, #180, 121 AD3d 1391, 1392 [2014]).

Mull testified that he was unaware of any other instance of stranger rape on campus in his 20 years of service as a member of the SUNY Albany police. However, Mull also testified that he was provided notice of all reported crime on campus and that, in 2016, 26 rapes were reported as having occurred on campus and in residence halls. In opposition to defendants' motion, claimant submitted, among other affidavits, the expert affidavit of and chart compiled by security expert Norman D. Bates, following his review of, among other things, the deposition testimony of Mull, John Giarrusso, the Associate Vice-President for Facilities at SUNY Albany, and Carol Perrin, the Director of Residential Life at SUNY Albany, as well as SUNY Albany's crime data/incident reports and Clery reports.[FN3] The chart contained statistical data of criminal incidents reported to the SUNY Albany police during the three[*3]-year period preceding claimant's rape, showing 26 incidents of assaults, sexual assaults and unauthorized entries into dormitory rooms. Of these incidents, five involved a sexual offense and an intruder who came into the room.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 N.Y.S.3d 196, 201 A.D.3d 1237, 2022 NY Slip Op 00348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prb-v-state-of-new-york-nyappdiv-2022.