Williamson v. Board of Education
Williamson v. Board of Education
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). I would reverse the order of the Appellate Division. In my view, it was error to introduce into evidence a photograph depicting an uninvolved student driving a motorcycle in a reckless fashion at a time and place remote from the accident which injured the plaintiff. In addition, the trial court failed to charge the jury properly with respect to the kind of notice necessary to trigger the liability of the school board.
Plaintiff Guy Williamson was a member of the senior class at the Berne-Knox Junior-Senior High School. As is traditional in high schools across the Country, the senior class at Berne-Knox published a yearbook which would include photographs of the graduating seniors. The yearbook was the responsibility of members of the student body and the project was managed entirely by the students, with members of the faculty serving in an advisory capacity. The individual student portraits were taken by a commercial photographer who was paid by the students and their families according to the orders submitted. The faculty advisers were responsible for making the arrrangements with the photographer. However, this arrangement was for the convenience of the students and actual photographic sessions were not a part of any yearbook-related school activity.
The students in Guy Williamson’s class, following a national trend, elected to have their photographs taken in a natural
At the trial of the damage action, the plaintiffs introduced into evidence a photograph from the yearbook depicting Michael Stevens driving a motorcycle with its front wheel high in the air. There was proof that this photograph had been taken prior to plaintiff’s accident. The court admitted the photograph, over objection, on the limited ground that "this was the type of activity in which the students were engaged generally at the time these photographs were being taken for yearbook purposes, and which was the time when this plaintiff was allegedly injured.” Later, the court declined to charge the jury, as defendants requested, that the board and the school district would not be liable unless they had actual notice that
I agree with the dissenters at the Appellate Division that the introduction of the photograph was a grave and reversible error. It is old law that photographs, as with other forms of real evidence, may not be admitted into evidence unless their probative value outweighs the danger of undue prejudice. (Smith v Lehigh Val. R. R. Co., 177 NY 379, 384; Richardson, Evidence [10th ed], § 131, p 104.) Here, the prejudicial effect was great and the probative value nonexistent. The photograph depicts an underaged youth driving a large motorcycle down a narrow path in a patently dangerous fashion. The driver depicted on the photograph was not the same student who drove into the plaintiff, nor was the vehicle being driven in the same manner as the vehicle that struck the plaintiff. There is no claim, nor is there any evidence, that the vehicle involved in the accident was in fact being operated in the manner depicted on the photograph.
The trial court, perceiving the potential for prejudice, thought that the photograph was admissible to show the activity that students were engaging in at or near the scene of the photograph taking. However, there was no connection between the photographically related activity and the accident which injured plaintiff. The only similarity is that both the photograph and the accident involved a motorcycle. At the time of the accident, the vehicle was different, the driver was different, the manner of operation was different, the location was different, and the time was different. Moreover, there was ample proof, without the photograph, to the effect that Pritchard, as well as Stevens, performed stunts prior to the accident.
On this appeal the plaintiffs do.not rely on the theory of the trial court, but instead contend that the photograph was competent to prove notice on the part of the faculty. This argument is not persuasive because there was no proof that any faculty member observed this particular photograph being taken or actually witnessed the performance of the particular stunt that it depicts. Nor is the photograph one that shows a teacher as a bystander. The evidence that the teachers had knowledge of motorcycle operation came from wholly outside the photograph. In short, the photograph is not proof that anyone had notice of anything. The photograph was without probative value and should have been excluded.
In my view, the court also failed to charge the jury properly with respect to the question of defendants’ liability. The defendants’ requested charge was a proper and correct statement of the law. A school is responsible to supervise the children within its charge and is required to "take energetic steps to intervene * * * if dangerous play comes to its notice while children are within its area of responsibility.” (Lawes v Board of Educ., 16 NY2d 302, 305.) The school must take steps to protect children from the threatened negligence of a third party provided that the children are in its charge. (Pratt v Robinson, 39 NY2d 554, 560.) Here, there was no proof whatsoever that the children were in the charge of the school. The taking of yearbook photographs was not a school activity. If the photographs had not been taken in the park, they would have been taken at a commercial studio. The photographs were taken by a commercial photographer, paid for directly by the students, and the arrangements were made by the faculty advisers simply as a convenience to the many students involved. The photographs were taken on a weekend, not on school time, and at a site distant from the school premises. The students arrived at the park on their own timetable and were not under any compulsion of school authorities to participate at all. The students were not in the control or in the custody of the school and its employees. The teachers were, however, on the scene, in an advisory capacity. Hence, in my view, the school would be responsible only for accidents aris
Order affirmed, etc.
Opinion of the Court
Order affirmed, with costs, on the memorandum at the Appellate Division (50 AD2d 667).
Concur: Chief Judge Breitel and Judges Gabrielli, Jones, Wachtler, Fuchsberg and Cooke. Judge Jasen dissents and votes to reverse in the following opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Guy Williamson, by His Parent and Natural Guardian, Merlin Williamson v. Board of Education of Berne-Knox Jr.-Sr. High School
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published