Citation Numbers: 107 N.E. 716, 213 N.Y. 397
Judges: Collin
Filed Date: 1/12/1915
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The action is for negligence. The infant plaintiff was, when injured on September 28, 1910, five years old. The question presented arises from a failure of the plaintiff to comply with section 341 of the General Village Law (Laws of 1909, chap. 64; Cons. Laws, ch. 64). The language of the section is:
"No action shall be maintained against the village for damages for a personal injury or an injury to property alleged to have been sustained by reason of the negligence of the village or of any officer, agent or employee thereof, unless the same shall be commenced within one year after the cause of action therefor shall have accrued nor unless a written verified statement of the nature of the claim and of the time and place at which such injury is alleged to have been received shall have been filed with the village clerk within sixty days after the cause of action shall have accrued. An action on such a claim shall not be commenced until the expiration of thirty days after it is presented."
A written verified statement under and complying with the requirements of the section, except the requirement that it be filed within sixty days after the cause of action shall have accrued, was filed August 5, 1912; that is, about twenty-three months after the injury. The appellant presents the sole question (duly preserved by an *Page 400 exception to the admission of the statement in evidence) whether or not the failure to file the statement within sixty days after the injury is a bar to the maintenance of the action.
The plaintiff was defeated in a former action against the Delaware and Hudson Company to recover for this injury. (See
In Winter v. City of Niagara Falls (
The requirement of the statute, however, as Judge GRAY wrote, is not absolute and unyielding. Judge GRAY further said: "The question was well discussed below and I think it needs no further discussion here." The court below said: "No rigid rule can be established. If an infant of ten years is injured, with no one capable of presenting a claim to the common council, the strict limitation of the statute should not be raised against him. If twenty years of age and mature, and not disabled unduly by his injuries, then the statutory requirements should be applicable. ``Each case must be a law unto itself' within reasonable limits." The Appellate Division held in the case at bar "that a child five years of age is not precluded from bringing an action against a village by failure to file, within the time prescribed by law, the notice specified in section 341 of the Village Law, and, further, that a child of that age should not be prejudiced by the failure of its father or mother to file the same."
In this state the maxim that the law does not seek to compel a man to do that which he cannot possibly perform has been made the basis for the principle that physical and mental inability to comply with a statutory provision of the kind under consideration excuses the non-compliance. (Walden v. City of Jamestown,
This court has not declared that infancy creates or is a condition of mental or physical inability. There are two suggestive judicial utterances. The one of Judge GRAY in theWinter case: "The plaintiff was eighteen years of age and, so far as the complaint shows, presumably, was able to cause a claim to be filed, and the statute makes *Page 403 no exception as to persons." The other of Judge SPRING in the opinion of the Appellate Division in the Winter case: "If an infant of ten years is injured, with no one capable of presenting a claim to the common council, the strict limitation of the statute should not be raised against him. If twenty years of age and mature, and not disabled unduly by his injuries, then the statutory requirements should be applicable." There are cases holding that a parent is the natural guardian and protector of the rights of his infant child. It cannot, however, be justly held, we think, that rights accorded by the law to infants are forfeited because a parent did not perform for an infant where performance was excused because of the infancy.
We are of the opinion that immature infancy, which includes the age of five years, is, as a matter of law, a condition of physical and mental inability excusing compliance with the requirement of section 341. It is reasonable to conclude that inability is attributable to a first period of infancy and ability is attributable to a final period, as a matter of law, and through a period lying between those two the question of ability is a question of fact to be submitted to and determined by the jury. (See Forsyth v. City of Oswego,
Our conclusion is not in accord with the rule enforced in some jurisdictions that infants are not excepted from the operation of the statutory requirement and that the *Page 404
mere fact that the injured person is an infant is not sufficient to excuse failure to give the statutory notice. (Peoples v.City of Valpariso,
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., CHASE, CUDDEBACK, MILLER and CARDOZO, JJ., concur; HISCOCK, J., absent.
Judgment affirmed.
Turner v. Staggs , 89 Nev. 230 ( 1973 )
Szroka v. Northwestern Bell Telephone Co. , 171 Minn. 57 ( 1927 )
Will v. Jessen , 273 Wis. 495 ( 1956 )
Randolph v. City of Springfield , 302 Mo. 33 ( 1923 )
Hunter v. North Mason High School , 12 Wash. App. 304 ( 1974 )
Lazich v. Belanger , 111 Mont. 48 ( 1940 )
Gallegos Ex Rel. Gallegos v. Midvale City , 27 Utah 2d 27 ( 1972 )
O'NEIL v. City of Parkersburg , 160 W. Va. 694 ( 1977 )