Sheehy v. City of New York

Rumsey, J.:

Mrs. Sheehy brought this action to recover for personal injuries which she claimed to have received by falling into a hole in the sidewalk upon a street in the city of New York, alleging that the hole constituted a serious defect and that it was permitted to exist because of the negligence of the defendant. Her complaint contained the usual allegations in such cases, and also set forth that, before the action was begun, the claim upon which it was founded was presented to the comptroller for- adjustment, but that he paid no attention to it and no part of it had beeif paid. It contained a further allegation that before the action was begun notice of an intention to begin the action and of the'time and place at which the injuries were received had been filed with the corporation counsel. Upon the trial, after giving evidence as to her injuries and the defect which she claimed to have existed in the sidewalk, the plaintiff swore as a witness a clerk in the office of the corporation counsel who produced a book kept in that office in which notices of intention to sue are entered when the same have been filed. The heading of the page and the entry under it were as follows:

“ Notices oe Intention to Commence Action.

Chapter 572, Laws of 1886.

“Nov. 10. Agnes Sheehy, R. E. J. O’Gforman, 49-51 Chambers St. Sept. 22/94.

“ West side-of Washington Ave., bet. 174-th & 175th St. Personal injuries caused by falling into a deep hole in sidewalk.” ' 5,000 claimed.

*265This evidence was not received, and the plaintiff excepted to its rejection. The plaintiff then offered in evidence a paper produced by the corporation counsel, of which the following is a copy:

“In the Matter of the Claim of Agnes Sheehy against

The Mayor, Aldermen and Commonalty of the City of New York.

“ Gentlemen.— Please take notice that Agnes Sheehy claims and demands from the mayor, aldermen and commonalty of the city of New York'five thousand dollars damages for personal injuries sustained by her by falling upon the sidewalk on the west side of Washington avenue, in the city of New York, between One Hundred and Seventy-fourth and One Hundred and Seventy-fifth streets, on the 22d day of September, 1894, there being at the time a deep hold* or depression in the sidewalk at that point, and the street gas lights not being lit.

“Dated New York, November 10th, 1894.

“ Respectfully yours,

“AGNES SHEEHY,

“Claimant.

“ R. E. & E. J. O’GORMAN,

“Attorneys for Agnes Sheehy, • “49 and 51 Chambers street,. New York City.

“ To Hon. Ashbel P. Fitch,

“ Comptroller, and “Hon. William H. Clark,

Counsel to the Corporation.”

This paper was read in evidence. The court ruléd .that this notice was not a compliance with the statute cited above, dismissed the complaint and ordered the exceptions on that ruling to be heard in the first instance in the Appellate Division.

Section 1 of chapter 572 of the Laws of 1886 provides that no action shall be maintained against the city of New York for dam*266ages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by its negligence, unless it shall have been commenced within one year after the canse of action shall have accrued, nor unless notice of the intention to begin the action and of the time and place at which the injuries were received, shall have been tiled with the counsel to the corporation or other proper law officer thereof, wifhin six months after such cause of action shall have accrued. The single question presented is, whether the notice quoted above was a compliance "with the provisions of this statute. The effect of the law is that no cause of action exists until the notice required by this statute has been filed. (Curry v. City of Buffalo, 135 N. Y. 368.) The requirement of the statute is imperative. It cannot be waived by any official, but it stands at the threshhold of the action as an essential condition to its maintenance; and unless that section has been complied with, as it is required by the law, no right of action exists. The entry in the book of the corporation counsel, which was offered and rejected, showing the construction which the clerk who made the entry put upon the notice, is a matter of no importance. As the law does not give to the corporation counsel, or to a clerk in his office, the right to waive the filing of this notice, it certainly does not give to him the right to construe an insufficient paper as the notice required by the statute ; but in all cases the question is, whether the notice, which is shown to have been tiled, complies with the requirements imposed by the law. The entry in the book of the corporation counsel would be evidence that a notice had been tiled; and if the notice itself were not produced, such- entry might be some evidence of its contents; but when the paper itself is produced, its sufficiency depends upon what is in it; and an insufficient notice is not to be helped out because the corporation counsel or anybody else has seen tit to accept something which does not comply with the requirements of the statute. So we are brought to the consideration of the paper itself. The complaint alleges the service of two notices, one upon the comptroller, and one upon the corporation counsel. The paper in question was evidently served upon each officer, because it is directed to each one. The notice to the comptroller is one provided for by section 123 of the Consolidation Act (Chap. 410, Laws of 1882). That is simply the presentation of the claim, giving the comptroller information *267as to tlie manner in which the claim accrued, that he may, if necessary, take steps for its examination and adjustment. But that is not the notice required by the act of 1886 (Babcock v. The Mayor, 56 Hun, 196); and a notice to the comptroller is not a sufficient notice of an intention to sue, as was held in the case last cited. Tlie difference between the two notices is this: The one served upon the comptroller need only state the fact of the claim, with the circumstances under which it accrued, so that he may proceed to adjust it. The one served upon the corporation counsel is to state, not only these facts, but the additional fact of an intention to commence an action; and in the requirement of a notice of intention to commence an action lies the distinction between the two notices. The Legislature has seen fit to provide expressly that in the notice to the corporation counsel should be stated, not only the time and place at which tlie injuries were received, but a notice of an intention to commence the action. One is just as essential as the other, and both are expressly required by the provisions of the statute. It has been held more than once that this statute is to be strictly construed. (Foley v. The Mayor, 1 App. Div. 586; Missano v. The Mayor, 17 id. 536; Burford v. The Mayor, 26 id. 225.) In the case last cited it was said that while the point may seem to be technical, yet it is of prime importance to the city that a compliance with the statute should be insisted upon. It is clear that this notice contains in words nothing which corresponds with the notice of an intention to commence an action. It is not claimed by the plaintiff that it does; but it is said that such an intention is fairly to be inferred because the notice contains information of the injuries and of the place, time and manner in which they were received, and because it is signed, not only by the claimant herself, but by her attorneys, and is addressed to the law officer of the corporation. But the law officer of the corporation is not the attorney for the corporation in the action of Sheehy against the city until that action has been began by tlie service of a summons. While'he is the attorney for the city, yet he does not stand towards it in the relation of an attorney in a pending action until the action has actually been begun. This paper is served upon him not because he represents the city as its attorney in this particular action, but because the statute requires the service to be made upon this particular official. When the serv*268ice is made, the question of its sufficiency does not depend upon the person upon whom the service is made, and a defect is. not to be helped out because he is described as attorney, but the question is to be determined by what is in the notice served. It may well be that the corporation counsel had reason to believe, judging from his knowledge of the conditions, that this notice would be followed by the commencement- of an action; but the statute does not make the liability of the city depend upon a conclusion or inference drawn by any official. The right to bring an action depends upon the service of a particular notice containing a particular statement; and that notice must be so framed that the facts appear by necessary statements or by necessary inference from what is stated, or else the notice does not comply with the statute. The inference of intention to begin an action is sought to be drawn from the facts which the law requires to be stated in addition to the fact of intention. Thus the requirement of a notice is expunged from the law, although the Legislature has especially directed it to be inserted in addition to the facts which are contained in this notice.

The requirements are clear and plain. The paper must contain a notice of cm detention to commence an action. That particular thing is required by law. In each case the question presented is whether, looking at the notice, there is contained in it the statement required. It is not to be helped out by an inference from what is ordinarily done by men or by a suggestion that, unless. such intention existed, the notice would have been served. The simple question is whether the notice itself contains the essential statement. To go outside of the paper itself and to permit that question to be determined by inferences not contained in it would be to add an element of uncertainty to each one of these cases, which is not required or permitted. There is nothing complicated or difficult about the requirements of the statute, and the only safe rule to be adopted in our judgment is that the notice must contain substantially the thing prescribed in the law, and an intention to sue, if it can be inferred at all, must arise necessarily from the words contained in the notice itself, and it cannot be inferred from the mere fact of serving an insufficient notice addressed to the corporation counsel.

For these reasons we think the exceptions should be overruled, *269the motion for a new trial denied, and judgment ordered for the defendant upon the verdict.

Van Brunt, P. J., and McLaughlin, J., concurred; Barrett and Ingraham, JJ., dissented.

Sic.