Filed Date: 3/25/2008
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Plaintiff Angelette Coffey and decedents were injured on New Year’s Eve 1998 when their automobile was rear-ended by a vehicle driven by defendant Rodriguez, a city correction officer later determined to be intoxicated. The record reflects that Rodriguez had been sent for inpatient alcohol rehabilitation three years earlier, due to persistent lateness and absenteeism. After release, he failed to continue treatment on an outpatient basis. His record of employment reveals various infractions and a prior accident on the job, but with no alcohol involvement. Rodriguez testified at deposition that he had been given two drinks by a fellow correction officer while on the job that night, and after work he met two other officers and consumed two beers. The accident occurred two hours after he left work, as he headed home.
Plaintiffs seek to hold the City liable on the ground that it negligently retained Rodriguez despite his history of alcohol abuse. They further allege the City breached its duty of care to third parties when it failed to ensure the completion of his alcohol rehabilitation program. Rodriguez adds that the City should be held responsible for the actions of the fellow employee who plied him with alcohol while on the job.
Recovery on a negligent hiring or retention theory requires a showing that the employer was on notice of the relevant tortious propensities of the wrongdoing employee (see Gomez v City of New York, 304 AD2d 374 [2003]). The only apparent consequence of Rodriguez’s history of problems with alcohol was his lateness and absenteeism. There is no evidence that the City knew of his propensity for drunk driving, and it could not reasonably have foreseen that he would drive while under the influence of alcohol (see Cygan v City of New York, 165 AD2d 58 [1991], lv denied 78 NY2d 855 [1991]).