Swanson v. Queens Ball Park Co., LLC

2024 NY Slip Op 50587(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Queens County
DecidedMay 14, 2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 50587(U) (Swanson v. Queens Ball Park Co., LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Queens County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swanson v. Queens Ball Park Co., LLC, 2024 NY Slip Op 50587(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

Swanson v Queens Ball Park Co., LLC (2024 NY Slip Op 50587(U)) [*1]
Swanson v Queens Ball Park Co., LLC
2024 NY Slip Op 50587(U)
Decided on May 14, 2024
Supreme Court, Queens County
Caloras, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on May 14, 2024
Supreme Court, Queens County


Alexander Swanson, Plaintiff,

against

Queens Ball Park Company, LLC, STERLING METS, LP,
and STERLING METS OPERATIONS, LLC, Defendants.




Index No. 716592/2019

ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF (Swanson):
DUSTIN ALEXANDER LEVINE
Firm Name: ACAMPORA AND LEVINE ATTORNEYS AT LAW P.C.
Address: 1615 Merrick Rd, Merrick, NY 11566
Phone:(516) 407-3400
Other E-mails:annalisa@aclevlaw.com
maria@aclevlaw.com
jennie@aclevlaw.com

ATTORNEYS FOR DEFENDANTS (Queens Ball Park Company LLC et al.):
BENJAMIN DAVID GREENFIELD
Firm Name: Wilson Elser Moskowitz Edelman & Dicker LLP
Address: 150 E 42nd Street, New York, NY 10017
Phone: 212-915-5492
E-mail:Benjamin.Greenfield@wilsonelser.com Robert I. Caloras, J.

The following e-filed documents, listed by NYSCEF document number (Motion 001) 25 - 60 read on this motion by defendants, QUEENS BALL PARK COMPANY, LLC, STERLING METS, LP, and STERLING METS OPERATIONS, LLC, for SUMMARY JUDGMENT in their favor and dismissal of plaintiff's claims in their entirety.

According to the Amended Complaint, this case concerns an incident that occurred on June 5, 2019, during a baseball game at Citi Field ballpark ("Citi Field"), in Queens New York, operated by defendants. As indicated in the Amended Complaint, Plaintiff allegedly suffered severe personal injuries while in the stands as a spectator.

Defendants, QUEENS BALLPARK COMPANY, LLC, STERLING METS, L.P. and STERLING METS OPERATIONS, LLC ("defendants"), now move for an Order granting them summary judgment pursuant to CPLR § 3212. In support thereof, defendants submit, among other things, plaintiff's deposition transcript, two affidavits from directors at Citi Field, and an affidavit from Dr. David L. Gushue, Ph.D., a biomechanical engineer who investigated the facts surrounding plaintiff's accident. Plaintiff testified at his deposition that he was injured during a promotional event at Citifield (hereinafter referred to as "t-shirt launch event(s)") where tightly rolled t-shirts were launched into the stadium stands from air cannons (also called "gun(s)") held by defendants' employees on the baseball field. In the instant case, plaintiff stated at his deposition that during the launch of one specific t-shirt, he was hit in his right eye while standing on the bottom stair of Section 301 of the Citi Field stadium stands. Plaintiff also testified to the following:

• that he had been going to Citi Field (previously called Shea Stadium) his "whole life" and had attended approximately 100 games and "more than 20" t-shirt launch events prior to his accident,

• that he had never felt in danger when witnessing past t-shirt launch events, and he had never viewed a t-shirt launch event to be a "dangerous activity,"

• that on the day of his accident, he had been sitting in the second tier of the right field on the Pepsi Porch, but he left his seat and walked down "approximately ten rows" to try to increase his chances of catching a t-shirt,

• that when he saw t-shirt launch events in the past, the stadium personnel launching the shirt would aim the air cannon at "maybe 80 or 90 degrees" or a "70- to 85-degree angle . . ." but on the day of the alleged accident, plaintiff testified that a t-shirt was shot from "more of a 20— to 25— degree angle," or "between a 25- and maybe 35-degree angle,"

• that plaintiff "estimated[d] that there w[ere] 40 feet . . . from [the employee's] gun to [plaintiff's] eye,"

• that plaintiff "was watching [the employee] pretty intently to see where he was aiming the launcher to try to guess where the T-shirt would come down and as the T-shirt was being loaded, [plaintiff] noticed [the employee] looking down and [plaintiff] noticed the T-shirt launcher pointed pretty much in [his] direction, directly in [his] direction, without much of an angle" and

• that "it seemed as though [the employee launching the shirt] was either off balance or fumbling with the launcher before he shot the T-shirt that struck [plaintiff]," and it "seemed as though [that employee] was having a problem either loading the cannon or pulling the trigger or both" as the employee was "looking down at the gun while the cannon was being pointed at [plaintiff] at the time the gun was shot" and

• that plaintiff "d[id]n't know how fast [the t-shirt] travels . . . [he] d[id]n't know how hard it hit [him]."

Defendants also submitted a report by Dr. Gushue, who inspected the site of the accident on August 7, 2023, and conducted accident reconstruction using a dummy and the same model of air cannon as was used when Plaintiff was allegedly injured. Based on his study, he found, among other things, that "the distance . . . between the area where the T-shirt was shot from . . . [*2]to the first row of the section 301 where the dummy was positioned was 47 feet." Therefore, defendants argue, based on the evidence they submitted, that they did not breach any duty owed to plaintiff and they did not have a duty to protect or warn against any condition related to said promotional event, since it was not inherently dangerous and was open, obvious, and readily observable by plaintiff. In support thereof, defendants rely on the fact that plaintiff testified that he observed the cannon aimed in his direction just before the shirt that allegedly hit him was launched, plaintiff had substantial experience participating t-shirt launch events, and any danger presented by the t-shirt launch was open and obvious and readily observable by the plaintiff.

Defendants also point out that according to the affidavit of Brendan McKeon, Executive Director of In-Game Operations for the Mets, the t-shirt launch event "is one of the common and ordinary promotional events that has been conducted at each and every Mets game since the opening of Citi Field in 2009." Furthermore, defendants submit that according to Sara Bollock, Senior Director of the Building Command Center/FLSD, since Citi Field's opening, she was "unaware of any prior reports, notices, or complaints made by patrons at Mets games concerning prior similar . . . accidents of any kind involving a patron being injured. . . by a T-shirt propelled during a [t]-shirt [l]aunch promotional event . . . ." Based upon the foregoing, in conjunction with the fact that there was a large distance between where the t-shirt was shot from and where it landed and that plaintiff never felt in danger during past t-shirt launch events, defendants argue, among other things, that the t-shirt launch was open, obvious, and not inherently dangerous, and therefore they did not breach any duty owed to plaintiff. The Court notes that defendants also argue that any danger presented by the t-shirt launch was assumed by the plaintiff as a legal matter pursuant to the doctrine of primary assumption of risk.

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Bluebook (online)
2024 NY Slip Op 50587(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swanson-v-queens-ball-park-co-llc-nysupctqueens-2024.