Applebee v. State of New York
Applebee v. State of New York
Opinion of the Court
At about 2 o’clock of a Sunday afternoon in November of 1951, there was a 3-car collision at the intersection of a county highway, known as Fisk Road, with Route 96A, a concrete state road, near the Sampson Air Force Base, not far from the City of Geneva, in Seneca County. The weather was clear, the roads dry. Marilyn Steinmiller, 18 years of age, had come from Rochester that same day to visit a friend at the Air Base and was returning home with two companions by way of 96A. Leaving the Base, she proceeded easterly along Fisk Road at about 15 miles an hour and, when she came to within 20 feet of the state highway, she started to slow-down. She had been driving so slowly that it was only necessary for her to take her foot off the gas pedal to slacken her speed, though she “ thought ” she used the brake and, “ as far as ” she could “remember,” she was at a “ standstill ” when she was hit. At any rate, after she had slowed down, she “ glanced ” to her left
McGuire and the bus driver Applebee died of the injuries that they sustained in the crash; their wives are the claimants in these two suits, brought against the state on the theory that the latter was negligent in failing to have a stop sign on Fisk Road just before its intersection with 96A. Such a sign had been there — at a point some 36 feet west of the state highway, by order of the New York State Traffic Commission, pursuant to article 7 of the Vehicle and Traffic Law — but it had been struck by an automobile and bent over almost to the ground about seven weeks before the present accident, and had not been repaired or replaced.
Although the evidence is not explicit that Miss Steinmiller had traveled from Rochester to Sampson via Route 96A and Fisk Road, she was aware, as both the trial court and the Appellate Division found, that, to return to Rochester, she had to go by way of 96A and intended to turn at the intersection, thus indicating a familiarity with the road and the route. Moreover, when asked why she started to slow down on Fisk Road, she answered that she ‘‘ saw ” that she was “ entering another highway.” And, although she asserted that, because of the parked cars, she could see only 200 feet to the left on 96A, there was testimony that one on Fisk Road, 10 feet from the intersection, could see to the north for a distance of about 600 feet.
The Court of Claims, in dismissing both claims, made findings substantially in accord with the facts outlined above. In addi
Since the reversal was on the law and the facts and since new findings, at variance with those of the trial court, were made with regard to the state’s negligence, we must determine where the weight of evidence lies. (See, e.g., Canepa v. State of New York, 306 N. Y. 272, 276; Eastman v. State of New York, 303 N. Y. 691, 693.) In our view, it supports the findings and decision of the Court of Claims.
We are not unmindful that in a number of cases involving automobile accidents we have upheld judgments against the state or a municipality for failing to maintain a stop sign as required by statute. (See, e.g., Murphy v. De Revere, 304 N. Y. 922; Eastman v. State of New York, supra, 303 N. Y. 691; Nuss v. State of New York, 301 N. Y. 768. See Vehicle and Traffic Law, § 95-d.) In all of them, however, not only could the state or the municipality properly be deemed negligent in failing to maintain a sign, but the proof established that the drivers had proceeded into the intersection without stopping, in such a manner that it was reasonable to infer that such negligence was the proximate cause of the accident.
In the Eastman case (supra, 303 N. Y. 691), a truck, approaching a T intersection from the west and attempting to make a left-hand turn into the highway running approximately north and south, collided with a car driving south on that road. The east-west highway made a long curve into the north-south one in such a way that, without a stop sign, it was difficult to tell which driver should, or would, stop. The state traffic commis
In the present case, on the other hand, the circumstances were such that the absence of a stop sign had no bearing on the happening of the accident. Unlike the drivers in the other cases, Miss Steinmiller was fully aware of the dangerous intersection and of the need to stop.
It was a clear day, with good visibility, and she knew about the intersection. Aware that she was approaching 96A, she began to slow up some 20 feet from the corner; she glanced to her left and, her view partially obstructed, saw no car coming from that direction. She then looked to her right; she saw the Greyhound bus coming from the south and braked her car to a stop about a foot and a half on the pavement of 96A. She was undoubtedly waiting for the bus to go by in the furthermost lane, under the impression that there was no traffic in the lane where she had brought her car to a halt. She was, of course, in error, and, since — when she was on Fisk Road about 10 feet west of 96A — she had a sight distance of nearly 600 feet to the north, she would have seen the McGuire car had she looked again in that direction. Consequently, it becomes obvious, the accident occurred only because she neglected to look to the north at a point where the parked cars did not interfere with her view.
A moment’s analysis serves to confirm this. Had the stop sign been in place, we presume that Miss Steinmiller would have
In short, the physical conditions and the operator’s own awareness of them, and of what Avas required of her in making a left-hand turn, prescribed the same course of action as a stop sign would have. She went into the lip of 96A before bringing the car to rest, not because the sign was missing, but because she had failed to look north at a point where visibility was adequate. The absence of a stop sign contributed not one whit to the collision. The weight of evidence plainly supports the finding of the trial court that it was Miss Steinmiller’s negligence which was the sole and proximate cause of the accident.
The judgments of the Appellate DiAdsion should be reversed and those of the Court of Claims reinstated, without costs.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). We dissent and vote to affirm the judgments of the Appellate Division, upon the ground that the State Avas concurrently negligent Avitk Miss Steinmiller, and that
The Court of Claims found that Miss Steinmiller “ had never driven along Fisk Road toward Route 96-A in that direction prior to this occasion ”. She stated three times that she did not slow down until she saw she was entering Route 96A. She was then but 20 feet westerly therefrom. She did not come to a stop prior to reaching into Route 96A, when she saw the Greyhound bus approaching from her right. She was not sure whether she applied her brakes, nor whether she was at a standstill at the time when her car was 1% feet out into Route 96A and when she was hit by the McGuire car approaching from her left. Under these circumstances, it is crystal clear that Miss Steinmiller did not have, in the language of the majority, “ all the warning, all the notice of danger, that a stop sign would have afforded ”.
In the prevailing opinion it is said ‘ ‘ there is not the slightest basis ” for inferring that, had the sign been in place, Miss Steinmiller would have stopped before proceeding a foot and a half into the intersection, and that the purpose of a stop sign is simply to require a vehicle to “ ‘ pause at a point where visibility is adequate to assure safety in undertaking the crossing.’ ” The law is clearly otherwise. Section 95-d of the Vehicle and Traffic Law provides, so far as pertinent:
“ It shall be unlawful for the driver of any vehicle to enter upon or cross a state highway from an intersecting road or highway upon which such a stop sign is erected without first having brought the vehicle to a full stop at or close to the intersection of such state highway. A person having stopped as directed by such a stop sign shall proceed with caution so as not to interfere with or endanger traffic. A sign bearing the word ‘ stop ’, with or without explanatory words, shall be sufficient under this section to require a full stop.
Section 95-d also provides that such sign “ shall be plainly visible at all times for a distance of at least fifty feet ”. Since the location of the old sign was 36 feet from the intersection, Miss Steinmiller would have had adequate warning of this dangerous intersection, had the sign been in place, when she was at least 86 feet from Eoute 96A. She would then hayq,known it was necessary for her to come “ to a full stop at or close to the intersection ”, and that to have entered upon Eoute 96A without stopping would have been a violation of law.
The majority agree that had “ the stop sign been in place, we presume that Miss Steinmiller would have observed its injunction. But that is precisely what she did do ”. The facts are indisputably otherwise. She simply did not obey the mandate of the law, to wit, to bring her “ vehicle to a full stop at or close to the intersection ”. She went beyond it, and, because of this violation, the accident happened, and two lives were snuffed out. Thus the absence of the sign was the most proximate cause of this accident.
In the light of her testimony, the Court of Claims had no right to assume that she would not have obeyed the law, but it was undoubtedly influenced by the thought it expressed that “ the courts have gone a long way on inferring ”. Courts do not presume, either in civil or criminal cases, that people deliberately disobey the law when they are adequately cautioned. Such was the rationale behind our decisions in Murphy v. De Revere (304 N. Y. 922 [stop sign]); Eastman v. State of New York (303 N. Y. 691 [stop sign]); Nuss v. State of New York (301 N. Y. 768 [stop sign]); Foley v. State of New York (294 N. Y. 275 [traffic signal]); Barna v. State of New York (293 N. Y. 877 [warning sign]); Van de Walker v. State of New York (278 N. Y. 454 [warning sign]).
In those cases we held that the absence of an appropriate “ stop ” or warning sign constituted negligence on the part of the State or other governmental agency, and was a proximate cause of the accident that happened in each case. Such is the
The Appellate Division properly applied the law, and its determination of the facts was supported by the overwhelming-weight of the evidence. The judgments appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Desmond, Dye, Van Voorhis and Burke, JJ., concur with Fuld, J.; Frobssel, J., dissents in an opinion in which Conway, Oh. J., concurs.
Judgments reversed, etc.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Olive Applebee, as Administratrix of the Estate of Charles W. Applebee, Deceased, Respondent, v. State of New York, Appellant; Ruth I. McGuire, Individually and as Administratrix of the Estate of Charles J. McGuire, Deceased, Respondent, v. State of New York, Appellant
- Cited By
- 42 cases
- Status
- Published