2 No. 22
Antoinette Caristo et al.,
Appellants,
v.
Augustine Sanzone et al.,
Respondents.
2001 NY Int.
37
April 3, 2001
This
opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New
York Reports.
Arnold E. DiJoseph III, for appellants. Alan M. McLaughlin, for respondents. GRAFFEO, J.: The issue in
this motor vehicle accident negligence case is whether the trial court erred in
charging the jury on the emergency doctrine. Under the facts presented, we
conclude that defendants were not entitled to this instruction. At approximately 9:00 A.M. on the morning of the accident, defendant
Augustine Sanzone was driving a vehicle owned by his wife, defendant Patricia
Cinquemani, on Foster Road in Staten Island. At the same time, plaintiff Antoinette
Caristo was operating her automobile on Woodrow Road. Foster Road terminated at
a “T” intersection with Woodrow Road, and a stop sign controlled the flow of
traffic from Foster Road onto Woodrow Road. At trial, Sanzone testified that the weather conditions at 7:00 A.M. that
day consisted of snow, rain and freezing rain. This mixed precipitation was
unchanged when he and his family left their home at approximately 8:30 A.M. By
the time he drove to Foster Road, the weather had worsened. He described the conditions
as “more like frozen rain and hail at the time.” The temperature that morning
was established, by stipulation of the parties, at 22 degrees Fahrenheit. After cresting an incline on Foster Road, Sanzone proceeded downhill
toward the Woodrow Road intersection, traveling at 20 to 25 miles per hour. At
this juncture, his vehicle began to slide and he noticed there was “a sheet of
ice” on the hill. Despite Sanzone's effort to pump the brakes, the vehicle slid
175 to 200 feet, past the stop sign and into Woodrow Road. As plaintiff
approached the intersection at 15 to 20 miles per hour and saw defendants'
vehicle, she attempted to swerve to avoid a collision, but was unsuccessful.
Both Cinquemani and the police officer who responded to the scene of the accident
confirmed the icy conditions on Foster Road. Neither plaintiff nor Sanzone
experienced difficulty controlling their vehicles prior to this incident. Over plaintiff's objection, the trial court charged the jury on the
emergency doctrine. The jury returned a verdict in favor of defendants and the
trial court entered a judgment dismissing plaintiff's complaint. The Appellate
Division affirmed the judgment, with two Justices dissenting (274 2 406).
Plaintiff now appeals as a matter of right. More than a century ago, this Court first considered the reasonableness of
an actor's conduct when confronted with a sudden emergency situation (see,
Wynn v C.P., N.&E. R.R.R. Co., 133 NY 575). Since then, we have
articulated and applied the common-law emergency doctrine which “recognizes
that when an actor is faced with a sudden and unexpected circumstance which
leaves little or no time for thought, deliberation or consideration, or causes
the actor to be reasonably so disturbed that the actor must make a speedy decision
without weighing alternative courses of conduct, the actor may not be negligent
if the actions taken are reasonable and prudent in the emergency context” (Rivera v New York City Tr. Auth., , 77 NY2d 322,
327), provided the actor has not created the emergency. The rationale for this doctrine -- the need to instruct a jury that it may
consider the reasonableness of a party's conduct in light of the unexpected
emergency confronting that person -- has been somewhat eroded by the evolution
from contributory negligence to comparative negligence. With the advent of the
ability of juries to allocate fault and apportion damages, the viability of the
doctrine has been questioned by some jurisdictions, with a few states going so
far as to abolish it (see generally, Modern Status Of Sudden Emergency
Doctrine, Ann. 10 ALR5th 680). In New York, in addition to the elements of the charge, we have defined
the role of the Trial Judge in assessing the propriety of an emergency charge
request. We require the Judge to make the threshold determination that there is
some reasonable view of the evidence supporting the occurrence of a “qualifying
emergency” (Rivera v New York City Tr. Auth., supra, 77 NY2d, at 327). Only then is a jury
instructed to consider whether a defendant was faced with a sudden and
unforeseen emergency not of the actor's own making and, if so, whether
defendant's response to the situation was that of a reasonably prudent person (see,
PJI 2:14). The emergency instruction is, therefore, properly charged where the
evidence supports a finding that the party requesting the charge was confronted
by “a sudden and unexpected circumstance which leaves little or no time for
thought, deliberation or consideration” (Rivera v New York City Tr. Auth.,
supra, 77 NY2d, at 327; Kuci v Manhattan & Bronx Surface Tr. Operating Auth., , 88 NY2d 923,
924; see also, Restatement [Second] Torts § 296). Here, even
considering the evidence in a light most favorable to defendant (see, Kuci v Manhattan & Bronx Surface Tr. Operating Auth., supra, 88 NY2d, at 924), we hold as a matter of law
that there was no qualifying event which justified issuance of the emergency
instruction. Given Sanzone's admitted knowledge of the worsening weather
conditions, the presence of ice on the hill cannot be deemed a sudden and
unexpected emergency. Although Sanzone did not encounter patches of ice on the
roadways before losing control of his vehicle, at the time of the accident the
temperature was well below freezing and it had been snowing, raining and
hailing for at least two hours. As such, there was no reasonable view of the
evidence that would lead to the conclusion that the ice and slippery road
conditions on the Foster Road slope were sudden and unforeseen. Defendants were
not, therefore, entitled to an emergency instruction and the charge to the jury
constituted reversible error under these circumstances. The dissent contrasts our holding here with Ferrer v Harris (55 2
285), where we concluded defendant was entitled to an emergency doctrine
charge. Ferrer is clearly distinguishable in that defendant was
confronted by an unanticipated event when a four-year old child ran in front of
his vehicle from between two parked cars. The qualifying emergency -- a child
darting from a sidewalk into street traffic -- is simply not analogous to the
presence of ice and slippery conditions following at least two hours of inclement
weather with temperatures well below freezing. Accordingly, the order of
the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered.
Caristo v Sanzone No. 22 Rosenblatt, J. (dissenting): By holding it was
error to charge the emergency doctrine, the majority concludes as a matter
of law that defendant expected to encounter a 175 to 200 foot sheet of ice
while driving on an otherwise ice free road. In my view, it was for the jury,
and not the court, to determine whether this sheet of ice was
"unforeseen." I agree that the emergency doctrine should not be
charged merely for the asking; nor should it be charged in every foul weather
fender-bender case. But here the charge was justified. Accordingly, I dissent. Because we are required to view the evidence most favorably toward the
party requesting the emergency instruction (see, Kuci
v Manhattan & Bronx Surface Tr. Operating Auth., , 88 NY2d 923,
924), we must accept the following: First, defendant drove onto a sheet of ice
175 to 200 feet long. Second, the character of the ice was such that, despite
his efforts to stop the car, he slid the entire 175 to 200 foot distance -- a
journey approximately two-thirds the length of a football field. Third,
defendant was unable to see the sheet of ice until he was upon it. Fourth,
defendant was driving only 20 miles per hour when he encountered the ice.
Fifth, although the weather was bad (rain, snow, sleet and freezing
temperatures), neither plaintiff nor defendant had encountered ice in the
vicinity. In my view, this raises a question of fact as to whether defendant
was confronted with an emergency. It is settled law that an emergency doctrine charge must be given if,
under some reasonable view of the evidence, the party requesting it was
confronted with a "qualifying emergency" at the time of the alleged
tortious conduct (Rivera v New York City Transit Auth.,
, 77 NY2d 322,
327). A "qualifying emergency" is a "sudden and unforeseen
occurrence not of the actor's own making" (Rivera,
supra, 77 NY2d, at 327 [citing Ferrer v Harris, , 55 NY2d 285]).
Given these facts, the jury could reasonably have concluded -- as they
obviously did -- that encountering this enormous sheet of ice was "a
sudden and unforeseen occurrence." Over the course of a lifetime, few
winter drivers will ever encounter an ice hazard of that magnitude -- let alone
when the roads are otherwise free of ice. Accordingly, the trial court properly
gave the charge. In doing so, it did not conclude that an emergency existed. It
merely ruled that, on the evidence presented, the existence of an emergency was
debatable and allowed the jury to resolve the point.[1]Charging the emergency doctrine simply reminds the jury that it must
consider the reasonableness of a party's actions in light of the existing
circumstances (see, Ferrer v Harris, supra, , 55 NY2d 285,
292 (citing Wagner v International Ry. Co., 232 NY 176, 182 [Cardozo,
J.]).[2] As we noted in Rivera,
giving the emergency doctrine instruction is "by no means" a directed
verdict for the party requesting it (Rivera, supra,
at 435) or even a declaration that there was an emergency. Rather, the jury
still has the final say as to whether there actually was an emergency and, if
so, whether the party reacted to it reasonably (cf., Rodriquez
v New York State Thruway Auth., 82 AD2d 853, 854 [party's
actions still unreasonable even though he was confronted with an emergency]). In Ferrer v Harris (supra,
, 55 NY2d 285,
290-291), defendant was driving his car 20 miles per hour on a block filled
with children. Plaintiff, a young girl, darted into the street and was struck
by defendant's car. Defendant testified that he saw children playing on the
sidewalk before the accident. He even admitted seeing plaintiff step between
two parked cars seconds before she darted (Ferrer v Harris,
supra, 55 NY2d, at 290-291). The trial
court refused the emergency doctrine charge. We held that the trial court's failure
to charge it was reversible error because "it was more than conceivable
that a jury could conclude that this defendant was faced with an
emergency" (see, Ferrer v Harris, supra,
at 292 [emphasis added]). More recently, in Rivera, we again reversed for failure to
give the emergency doctrine charge. We concluded that "the jury could
reasonably have concluded" that the accident was sudden and unexpected (see,
Rivera, supra,
77 NY2d, at 327). Indeed, we have consistently authorized if not required the
charge so as to allow the jury to resolve whether an emergency occurred and
whether the party's actions were reasonable in the face of it (see, Kuci v Manhattan & Bronx Surface Tr. Operating Auth., supra, , 88 NY2d 923,
924 [trial court committed reversible error by failing to charge emergency
doctrine because driver testified that he "did not anticipate being
suddenly cut off by this particular car"]; Mas v Two
Bridges Assoc., , 75 NY2d 680,
686 [upholding trial court's emergency doctrine charge because "we think
that on the evidence in this case the emergency was not dissipated * * * as a
matter of law, and that the question was properly submitted to the jury"];
Amaro v City of New York, , 40 NY2d 30, 37
[emergency charge was properly given]). I recognize that retention of the emergency doctrine has been under
discussion nationally and that some jurisdictions have altered or abolished it.[3]
The doctrine, however, is still a part of New York law. That being so, I submit
that the trial court and the Appellate Division correctly applied it. The trial court and the Appellate Division majority concluded that the
matter was at least arguable, which is to say that there was "some
reasonable view of the evidence" that defendant was confronted with an
emergency. The jury went even beyond that; as fact-finders they concluded that
defendant was indeed confronted with an emergency and his actions were reasonable
in light of it. Their verdict does not strike me as irrational. Accordingly, I
would affirm the order of the Appellate Division.
Decided April
3, 2001
Footnotes
1 Courts in
other jurisdictions have held that the emergency charge should have been given
in factually similar circumstances (see, Trujillo v
Baldonado, 95 NM 321, 322-323, 621 P2d 1133 [1980] [although defendant
may have anticipated isolated patches of ice, question of fact existed as to
whether defendant anticipated the "sheet of ice" upon which she lost
control and collided with plaintiff's car]; Ballard v
Rickabaugh Orchards, Inc., 259 Ore 200, 204, 485 P2d 1080 [1971] [on a
cold stormy morning, plaintiff was driving 25 miles per hour over icy road and
lost control when she tried to avoid a stopped truck]; Tennyson
v Bandle, 181 NW2d 687, 690-691 [ND 1970] [defendant's car hit a
slippery patch of ice on a decline as he approached a stop sign going 15 miles
per hour and defendant had not previously encountered ice]; Francis v Beiber,
10 Ohio St 2 65, 69, 225 NE2d 251 [1967] [upon coming over a crest in the road
that was "icy and snowy," defendant lost control of her car and it
struck nearby parked cars]; Poe v Pittman, 150 WVa 179 182- 183, 144
SE2d 671 [1965] [plaintiff's truck was descending along a snow and ice-covered
road and lost control]; Keiffer v Strbac, 349 P2d 6, 7
[Okla 1960] [on a snowy and freezing afternoon, defendant's car hit an ice
patch on a highway, skidded out of control and overturned]; Ormsby
v Frankel, 54 Conn App 98 100, 734 A2d 575, 579 [1999] [without warning,
defendant's car hit a 250 foot ice patch on a highway]; Davis v Najm,
121 Ohio App 421 425, 203 NE2d 252, 256 [1963] [defendant was driving car at
night on "icy, snowy, slippery highway" and was confronted by a car
driving at him head on]; butsee, Moore v Spangler, 401
Mich 360 364, 258 NW2d 34 [1977] [emergency instruction was improper because
"even if we were to accept defendant's testimony that the pavement was in
fact icy, such a condition would not be unusual for a January day in
Michigan"]).
2Seealso,
Prosser and Keeton, Torts § 33, at 197 (5th ed); Harper, James and Gray, 3
Law of Torts § 16.11 at 487-488 (2d ed); NY PJI 2:14 [3d ed]; 5A Warren's
Negligence § 8.01(10), at 196-206.
3Seegenerally,
Dobbs, 1 Law of Torts § 132, 307-308; Prosser & Keeton, supra, at 197; Note, Wiles v Webb: The Abrupt End
of the Sudden Emergency Doctrine in Arkansas, 51 Ark L Rev 833 (1998).