Ragone v. State

123 Misc. 48, 204 N.Y.S. 178, 1924 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 801
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 29, 1924
DocketClaim No. 17472
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 123 Misc. 48 (Ragone 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
Ragone v. State, 123 Misc. 48, 204 N.Y.S. 178, 1924 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 801 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Ackerson, P. J.

In 1922 the above-named claimant owned a small square building situated on land which he leased from the [49]*49New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company in the city of Buffalo. The property on which said building was located was on Porter avenue near the tracks of said railroad company and was open to the street. Said claimant used the above-mentioned building in the summer months for the purpose of conducting a fruit, confectionery, cigar and soft-drink stand. The claimant closed the said stand for the season in October, 1922. On November twelfth following he entered the said building and made an inventory of the goods and property therein which amounted to $401.50, the same being the cost price and reasonable value thereof. After making such inventory the claimant securely locked- the doors and entrances to said building and departed from the premises.

Thereafter and on November 13, 1922, Henry Dahles was employed by the state of New York in the department of public works. As such employee he was engaged in working on the Barge canal under the supervision of Richard Humphrey, the assistant division superintendent of said canal located in the said city of Buffalo. On the said day in question the said Dahles was engaged in driving a motor truck belonging to the state of New York in and about the streets of said city of Buffalo performing work in connection with said canal under the direction and supervision of said assistant division superintendent. While engaged in such employment by the state said Dahles ' carelessly and negligently permitted said truck to run into and collide with said building of the claimant. As a result of such collision said building was moved several inches on its foundation; the corner of said building was broken and a large hole made therein and the concrete floor near the point of impact was broken. It is conceded that the jar to the building caused by the collision was the cause of breaking dishes, bottles, etc., to the value of forty-nine dollars.

It appears that at the time of the accident the said Dahles, who was driving the truck, was intoxicated, and that he had been under the influence of intoxicating liquors while in the performance of his duties-on several prior occasions, to the knowledge of said assistant division superintendent by whom he was employed in the said work of the state;, that said collision occurred about two-forty-five o’clock in the afternoon of said November 13, 1922; that the matter was immediately reported to the canal yard nearby and in less than twro hours canal employees had appeared on the scene with boards and nails and securely closed up the hole in the building made by the collision. In the meantime nobody had entered the building.

About three weeks later state employees repaired the building [50]*50and put it back practically in the same condition as it was before the accident, except that they did not repair the broken concrete floor. Whether this floor was afterwards repaired or not, or what the expense of repairing it amounted to, is not disclosed by the evidence.

The claimant did not learn that his building had been injured until November 25, 1922, when he visited the same. He could not open the doors thereof, and finally gained entrance by crawling up through a hole in the ground under the boards which had been nailed on when the same was temporarily repaired. Upon entering the building he found that all the stock of merchandise which he had left therein and' which he had inventoried on November twelfth preceding had disappeared.

Thereupon claimant filed the claim against the state now before us, contending that the state is liable for all the loss he has suffered.

The first and most important question before us is whether the damages suffered by this claimant are such damages as are referred to and included in section 47 of the Canal Law. That section reads in part as follows:

“ There shall be allowed and paid to every person sustaining damages from the canals or from their use or management, or resulting or arising from the neglect or conduct of any officer of the state having charge thereof, or resulting or arising from any accident, or other matter or thing connected with the canals, the amount of such damages to be ascertained and determined by the proper action or proceedings before the court of claims. * * * ”

The above language of the act it seems to us is broad enough to include the damages suffered in such a case as the one before us.

There is nothing therein to indicate that the damages must be suffered on the physical canal property or canal land itself. Under the liberal construction placed upon the language of the statute by the Court of Appeals in the case of Sipple v. State, 99 N. Y. 284, it is plain to us that the state is just as liable for the damage inflicted upon the property of others by this negligent and careless truck driver off from state property as on it. The only prerequisite to a recovery after establishing the negligence and the damage under this section of the Canal Law is to show that the agency which caused the damage was “ connected with the canals.” As there is no dispute about that fact in this case the liability of the state for damages seems to be satisfactorily established.

We now reach the second question in the case, which is, what are the damages -for which the state is liable?

First, there was the damage to the building itself which the [51]*51state has already met by repairing the building. These repairs were evidently satisfactory to the claimant because he makes no claim for damages to the building. Second, there was forty-nine dollars worth of dishes, bottles, etc., which were broken as, the direct result of the collision when the motor truck ran into the building. For this damage it seems to us the claimant should be compensated. Third, there was merchandise of the value of $352.50 that was stolen from the building apparently after the accident. For this also the claimant contends that he should be paid by the state. It is not claimed or suggested that the state employees stole this property but the claimant contends that the damage to the building induced and made the burglary and. larceny possible. With this contention we are unable to agree. It is true that the truck made a hole in the side of the building. But it happened in the middle of the afternoon and before anybody had an opportunity to enter the building and carry away any of its contents the canal employees had boarded up the aperture. They had nailed the boards on securely right down to the ground when the building apparently was as safe from burglary as before the accident happened.

We cannot hold that the injury to the building was the proximate cause of the burglary or that the larceny was the reasonable and natural result thereof. We believe the law has been correctly stated in volume 1 of Sutherland on Damages (4th ed.), section 41, as follows: “ If the injury inflicted is not the reasonable and natural result of a wrongful act of the defendant, but was caused by such act of a third person, though it was remotely induced by defendant’s conduct, he is not liable. * * * If there intervenes between the defendant’s act or omission a wilful, malicious and criminal act committed by a third person, which act' defendant had no reason to apprehend, the connection between the original wrong and the result is broken.”

This principle seems to be very clearly elucidated in the opinion of Mr.

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Levin v. Eleto Realty Corp.
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Ragone v. State
211 A.D. 573 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 Misc. 48, 204 N.Y.S. 178, 1924 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ragone-v-state-nyclaimsct-1924.