2 No. 4
Desiree Rios,
Respondent, v. Frank Smith, Jr., et al.,
Defendants,
Theodore Persico, a/k/a Teddy
Persico,
Appellant.
2001 NY Int. 12
February 13, 2001
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before
publication in the New York Reports.
Renee Himmel, for appellant. Peter J. Maloney, for respondent.
GRAFFEO, J.:
Plaintiff Desiree Rios commenced a negligence action
against several defendants to recover damages for injuries she
sustained as a passenger on an all-terrain vehicle (ATV) that
collided with a tree. The primary issue in this case is whether
the jury verdict, which found defendant Theodore Persico's
(Persico) negligence to be a proximate cause of the accident, can
stand as a matter of law. Under the facts and circumstances
presented, we decline to disturb the determination of liability.
In 1983, plaintiff, then 17 years old, and her younger
sister accompanied 16-year-old defendant Frank Smith, Jr. and 17-
year-old defendant Theodore Persico, Jr. (Persico, Jr.) to a farm
owned by defendant Alphonse Persico in Saugerties, New York. The
adolescents stayed at one of the residences located on the
premises that had been occupied by Persico's family as a seasonal
residence for a number of years. Persico owned at least two
three-wheel ATVs, for use by his five sons, which he kept at this
residence. On the day of the accident, Persico was not present at
the farm. Persico, Jr. and Smith, each operating an ATV, asked
plaintiff and her sister to go for a ride on the vehicles. When
the young women consented, plaintiff climbed aboard the ATV
driven by Smith and her sister rode with Persico, Jr. At some
point during the excursion, the operators rode the vehicles onto
a blacktop pathway that was lined with trees, and proceeded to
perform wheelies, lifting the front wheel of the vehicle off
the ground. As the young men then began to race, Smith drove the
ATV he was operating off the pathway and up a grassy incline.
Plaintiff suffered serious injuries when the vehicle hit a tree,
causing her to be thrown against the tree trunk, with the ATV
coming to rest on top of her.[1]Plaintiff's complaint asserted, among other claims, a
cause of action against Persico sounding in negligent entrustment
of a dangerous instrument to a minor. Persico answered and
interposed a cross claim against Smith for common-law
indemnification and contribution. Following the liability phase of the bifurcated trial,
Supreme Court instructed the jury to determine whether Persico
failed to use reasonable care in entrusting the ATVs to his son,
with knowledge that his son's use could involve lending an ATV to
his companion, and whether such use created an unreasonable risk
of harm to others. Persico objected to the instructions,
asserting that a parent could be liable under such a theory only
if the dangerous instrument was entrusted to his or her own
child, not to another child. He also challenged the order in
which the charges were given, requesting that Frank Smith be
named first, since he is the first named defendant on the
caption. Supreme Court rejected both contentions. The jury returned a verdict in plaintiff's favor and
apportioned 35% of the fault to Persico, 40% to Smith and 25% to
plaintiff. At the conclusion of proof regarding damages,
plaintiff was awarded $6,800,000 for her past pain and suffering
and $2,250,000 for her future pain and suffering. Supreme Court
denied Persico's motion to set aside the verdict as to liability,
but granted reductions in the pain and suffering damages award.
Persico appealed from the order insofar as it denied his motion
to set aside the determination of liability and failed to reduce
damages to the extent he had requested. The Appellate Division
rejected the challenge to the liability finding but modified
Supreme Court's order by further reducing the damages award,
ordering a new trial on the issue unless plaintiff consented to a
reduction in damages for past pain and suffering to $2,000,000
and future pain and suffering to $1,000,000 (see, Rios v Smith,
267 AD2d 369). After plaintiff stipulated to these reductions,
we granted Persico leave to appeal to this Court (, 95 NY2d 755).
Our analysis begins with an examination of the precedents
relevant to the theory of negligence asserted in this case.
Based on the holding enunciated in Holodook v Spencer (, 36 NY2d 35), we have long recognized that a parent's negligence in
failing to properly supervise and control a child will generally
not constitute a tort actionable by the child. This principle
was grounded in fundamental concerns regarding the detrimental
effects of potential liability on the parent-child relationship.
In particular, the Court cautioned that, if negligent supervision
claims were allowed, it would be the rare parent who could not
conceivably be called to account in the courts for his [or her]
conduct toward his [or her] child, either by the child directly
or through a third-party action for indemnification and
apportionment (id., at 45-46). Recognizing this potential strain
on familial relations, we held that a claim on behalf of an
infant against a parent, or by a party seeking contribution or
indemnification against a parent, predicated on the parent's
negligent failure to supervise that child would not lie. In examining the duties arising from the parent-child
relationship, however, the Holodook court noted that [f]ailure
to supervise may entail legal consequence where injury to a third
party results, for example, under circumstances where a parent
negligently entrusts to his [or her] child a dangerous
instrument, or an instrument potentially dangerous in the child's
hands, so as to create an unreasonable risk to others (id., at
45). This duty was further explored in Nolechek v Gesuale (, 46 NY2d 332). In Nolechek, a father sued various parties for the
wrongful death of his son as the result of a motorcycle accident,
alleging that defendants had negligently permitted a dangerous
condition to exist without any warnings or safeguards (see, id.,
at 335-337). Interposing a counterclaim, one of the defendants
contended that the father had negligently entrusted the
motorcycle to his child, who was blind in one eye and had
impaired vision in the other eye. In reinstating defendant's
counterclaim, this Court held that although Holodook stood for
the proposition that [a] minor child has no cause of action
against his [or her] parent for negligent supervision in general,
or for negligently entrusting him [or her] with a dangerous
instrument in particular[,] * * * [t]here is, however, a duty by
a parent to protect third parties from harm resulting from an
infant child's improvident use of a dangerous instrument, at
least, and perhaps especially, when the parent is aware of and
capable of controlling its use (id., at 336). Most recently, in LaTorre v Genesee Mgt. (90 2
576), we explained that Nolechek provides a very specific and
narrow complement to the predominant Holodook principle (id., at
581). In LaTorre, we concluded that, as a matter of law, a
mother could not be held liable for leaving her child
unsupervised at a shopping mall, despite her knowledge of the
child's propensity for violent physical outbursts. In
acknowledging the policy concerns underlying Holodook, we again
emphasized that it is unreasonable to burden parents and
guardians * * * by exposing them to rebound liability, flowing
from a child's or adult's natural deficits or personal qualities
based merely on general allegations (id., at 582). In order to
establish the basis for liability, a plaintiff must prove the
extraordinariness or patent foreseeability of the particular
situation (id., at 584). Thus, LaTorre made clear that parental
liability for negligent entrustment is limited to circumstances
where a parent's conduct creates a particularized danger to third
persons that is plainly foreseeable. Here, Persico asserts that under the holding in
Nolechek he may not be held liable for negligent entrustment
because Smith, the operator of the ATV at issue, is unrelated to
him. However, this contention places strictures on the
controlling precedent that simply do not exist. As the Court
stated in Nolechek and echoed in LaTorre, a parent owes a duty to
protect third parties from harm that is clearly foreseeable from
the child's improvident use or operation of a dangerous
instrument, where such use is found to be subject to the parent's
control (see, Nolechek v Gesuale, supra, 46 NY2d, at 340; LaTorre
v Genesee Mgt., supra, 90 NY2d, at 584; see also, Ripton v
Gracie, 266 AD2d 885; Paladino v Isasi, 123 AD2d 379).
At trial, none of the defendants testified but
Persico's deposition testimony was admitted into evidence. His
testimony revealed that he was aware that his sons had driven the
ATVs in the past with passengers on the vehicles and it was
likely that his sons had performed wheelies while riding the
ATVs. He further acknowledged that Smith had probably driven one
of the ATVs on prior occasions as he had been a frequent visitor
to the farm. Persico admitted that he established no rules
regarding his sons' use of the ATVs, and did not limit his sons'
ability to lend the ATVs to others. The operation of the ATVs
was not restricted to particular areas on the farm either. In
light of this evidence, Persico could have clearly foreseen that
his son's access to and use of the ATVs could involve riding one
of the vehicles while lending the other to a friend and that such
use might expose passengers on the ATVs to injury. Thus, the
evidence was legally sufficient for the jury to determine that
Persico created an unreasonable risk of harm to plaintiff by
negligently entrusting the ATVs to his son, whose use of the
vehicles involved lending one of the ATVs to Smith, another
minor. Persico also contends that as a matter of law the ATV
was not a dangerous instrument. Whether a particular object
qualifies as a dangerous instrument depends on the nature of the
instrument and the facts pertaining to its use, including the
particular attributes of the minor using or operating the item
(see, 45 NY Jur 2d, Domestic Relations, § 534; see also, Craft v
Mid Is. Dept. Stores, 112 AD2d 969, 970; Alessi v Alessi, 103
AD2d 1023, 1024). While this is often a fact-based
determination, items that are commonly used by children, of
suitable age in a manner consistent with their intended use, may
not, as a matter of law, be classified as dangerous instruments
(see, Sorto v Flores, 241 AD2d 446, 447; Barocas v F.W. Woolworth
Co., 207 AD2d 145, 148; Santalucia v County of Broome, 205 AD2d
969, 970-971, lv dismissed , 84 NY2d 923). Under the particular
facts and circumstances presented here, however, the issue of
whether the ATV was a dangerous instrument was a question of fact
properly submitted for jury determination. The record revealed
that Persico estimated that the ATVs could attain speeds of 20 to
30 miles per hour and a passenger would ride the vehicle by
holding onto the driver. His testimony described the
unrestricted use of the ATVs on the approximately 40 acres of
rural property, including use of the vehicles off paved surfaces.
He was aware his sons operated the vehicles with passengers and
had performed wheelies. In light of this proof, it was not
improper for Supreme Court to submit this issue to the jury for
resolution.
Finally, Persico's challenge to the jury instructions
on the basis that a parent's liability for negligent entrustment
should not be considered by the jury before the infant's
negligence is determined is unpreserved as the objection at trial
was on a wholly different ground (see, Harvey v Mazal Am.
Partners, , 79 NY2d 218, 225). Furthermore, to the extent Persico
contends that the award of damages was excessive, this raises an
issue beyond the scope of our powers of review. Accordingly, the judgment appealed from and the order
of the Appellate Division brought up for review should be
affirmed, with costs.
Footnotes
1 This accident predates the enactment of Article 48-B of the
Vehicle and Traffic Law which pertains to the registration and
operation of all-terrain vehicles.