Stein v. Palisi

125 N.E.2d 575, 308 N.Y. 293
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 10, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 125 N.E.2d 575 (Stein v. Palisi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stein v. Palisi, 125 N.E.2d 575, 308 N.Y. 293 (N.Y. 1955).

Opinion

Fkoessel, J.

The Appellate Division has reversed, on the law and the facts, a judgment of Trial Term based on a unanimous jury verdict in favor of plaintiffs, and dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint. Thus the question before us is whether plaintiffs have made out a prima facie case. In determining that question we must, of course, consider the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, and afford to them the benefit of every favorable inference which can reasonably be drawn therefrom (Sagorsky v. Malyon, 307 N. Y. 584, 586).

[295]*295In June of 1948, plaintiff Samuel Stein, Ms wife, and their two cMldren were vacationing in one of a group of small bungalows known as the Dritsas Farm Colony near Beacon, New York. These bungalows were situated in a row along the left-hand side of a private, dead-end access road. Said private road, where it began, joined a public dirt road, which in turn led to New York State Route 9-D, some three-tenths of a mile away. The bungalows were “ completely separated from the highway and the main road ”. The private access road was fifteen feet wide, and was made of rough cinders and stones. Between it and the bungalows were lawns of grass and weeds. Four bungalows were grouped toward the dead end of the private road. The first of these was occupied by the Steins.

On June 21, 1948, at about 6:15 p.m., the Steins’ nineteen-month-old baby was playing with his three-year-old sister, his six-year-old cousin and two other children on the lawn in front of the second bungalow. Defendants’ Chevrolet taxi came down the private road “ pretty fast ” raising dirt “ in the air ”, according to a neighbor, and passed the spot where the children were playing. Kaufman, driver of the taxi, admitted that when he drove in, he had seen and passed some children around the first bungalow. Kaufman then, according to plaintiff’s mother, made a left turn off the cinder road onto the lawn, drove up “ quite a ways ” toward the third or fourth bungalow, and stopped, with Ms cab facing the bungalow.

Immediately after the taxi had begun to drive away, the baby’s sister and cousin, who had meanwhile come to the Stein bungalow to inquire about dinner, and who had been promptly sent back by Mrs. Stein to look after the baby, began screaming. Mrs. Dritsas, who was at the time about fifty feet from the Stein bungalow, heard the screaming and then saw defendant’s taxi departing along the private road. She testified it was going ' ' very fast ’ ’, and had not yet made the turn onto the dirt road. Alarmed by the screaming, Mrs. Stein ran outside and found her baby lying unconscious, half on the grass and half on the road, face down.

When Mrs. Stein first reached the baby, his head was “ completely bloody ”, and his clothes were bloody, torn, dirty and black, with “gravel, oil, stains” and “grease” (emphasis supplied). Summarized, the baby’s injuries were a fractured [296]*296skull, shock, abrasions and lacerations. There was a triangular laceration of the forehead and frontal areas which penetrated all layers of the scalp and bared the bone of the skull. Dirt had been ground into it. There were other lacerations on the chest, face and legs. Dirt and cinders had also been ground into them. These lacerations were abrasive ” and had a “ brush characteristic ” which indicated to the attending physician that Either the skin was moving across some surface or some surface moved across the skin in such wise that this material was ground into these lacerations and abrasions.”

The permanent scars left by those lacerations are linear bluish marks, diagnosed by the dermatologist as accidentally induced tattoo marks of a permanent nature caused by the introduction of some matter such as coal dust, cinders or stones into the skin; he added that these scars could not have been caused by a fall or a blow, but were undoubtedly ” due to an abrasive trauma.

In leaving the area, the taxi concededly passed the point where the baby was found bleeding and unconscious. Moreover, there is no evidence of any other person, motor vehicle, or object in the vicinity which during that brief unguarded interval was capable of inflicting upon the baby injuries of the severity and character of those just described. The medical testimony as to those injuries left little doubt as to how they had come about. From all these circumstances a jury could properly find that defendants’ taxi had contacted the baby, and either dragged or pushed him through the dirt and cinders.

The only question remaining, therefore, is whether there was sufficient evidence from which the jury could reasonably have inferred negligence. The Appellate Division held that there was no evidence on which to base an inference of negligence, and it dismissed the complaint. We may affirm that dismissal only if we conclude that “ by no rational process ” could the jury have based a finding in favor of plaintiffs on the evidence here presented (Blum v. Fresh Grown Preserve Corp., 292 N. Y. 241, 245-246).

The injured plaintiff here, as noted, was a baby nineteen months old. He could walk and was very active. But obviously, at his age, he was totally unable to watch out for his own safety. Indeed, as a matter of law, he could not be guilty of contributory negligence (Prendegast v. New York Central & H. R. R. R. Co., [297]*29758 N. Y. 652, 653; Verni v. Johnson, 295 N. Y. 436, 437-438; Ihl v. Forty-Second St. & Grand St. Ferry R. R. Co., 47 N. Y. 317, 323; Mangam v. Brooklyn R. R. Co., 38 N. Y. 455, 458-461; McGarry v. Loomis, 63 N. Y. 104, 106). Moreover, since the infant plaintiff was of course unable to testify, the jury had to rely upon circumstantial evidence. This it could properly do (Garippa v. Wisotsky, 305 N. Y. 571; see, also, Noseworthy v. City of New York, 298 N. Y. 76).

When Kaufman entered the bungalow area, he drove ‘' pretty fast ” on the private fifteen-foot road, and admittedly saw the young children playing on the lawn, which by Kaufman’s own testimony was only fifteen to twenty feet wide. Shortly thereafter he left by the same road, going very fast There is no direct evidence available to plaintiff as to exactly what happened in the brief interval between the time Kaufman stopped to discharge his passengers and when he was seen driving out “ very fast ”, except Kaufman’s testimony that he turned his Chevrolet cab around. The jury • could have inferred that this could not readily be done on a road fifteen feet wide without driving onto the lawn. It was also proper for the jury to determine that as a reasonably prudent person, he should have driven with greater caution than would have been required had no one, or only adults, been in the vicinity (see Hammer v. Bloomingdale Bros., 215 App. Div. 308; Day v. Johnson, 265 App. Div. 383, 387; Schwartz v. Petfield, 283 App. Div. 845);

On the issue of defendant’s negligence, it makes no difference whether the jury chose to believe Mrs. Stein’s testimony that the taxi stopped on the lawn when its passengers alighted, or whether it accepted Kaufman’s statement that he stopped on the road.

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Bluebook (online)
125 N.E.2d 575, 308 N.Y. 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stein-v-palisi-ny-1955.