This ease falls within the well-defined and long-established pattern of school liability premised upon either a failure to have adequate rules, or if such rules, the failure to properly enforce them.
The reversal by the majority is based upon the sole ground that the intervention of a fellow student was a direct cause of the accident and created no liability as to the school board. To so hold; under the present facts, is contrary to many cases where liability has been found as the result of some form of intervention, to wit, baseball bat, bicycle, a fellow student or a teacher, and others. The majority give no consideration to the failure to have adequate rules, or failure to enforce them, or the foreseeability of an accident on the slide.
In Selleck v. Board of Educ. (276 App. Div. 263, motion for leave to appeal denied 300 N. Y. 764) the plaintiff was waiting for a bus, and when still on the *689school lawn near a sidewalk, he became engaged in a scuffle with another boy who pushed him toward the ground. As he was falling, he was struck by a bicycle ridden by an older boy. There were no rules or regulations prescribed by the Board of Education concerning the operation of bicycles on the school grounds and the principal had made none. The court said at page 267: “ There was no proof in the present ease of a dangerous condition of the school property but the jury might find that unrestricted bicycle riding on that part of the grounds where small pupils congregated created a dangerous situation. It is practically conceded that neither the board nor the principal made any rules or regulations relative thereto. In the absence of such rules and regulations the jury might also find that the supervision provided was entirely inadequate. Whether the failure of the defendants in these respects was a proximate cause of the accident is an issue over which reasonable minds might differ, and hence an issue of fact arose which was for the jury to resolve. So far as the issue of notice is concerned it was for the jury to say whether defendants in the light of all the circumstances should have known that a situation of some danger existed.” (Emphasis supplied.)
In Germond v. Board of Educ. (10 A D 2d 139) the plaintiff, seven years of age, was injured on the school playground when she was struck in the face by an older girl playing softball. In that ease, this court said at page 141: “ Thus, both on the failure to enforce adequate rules in respect of the playing of games on the playground and upon the failure to provide adequate supervision a case prima facie has been made out against the defendant Board of Education sufficient to * * * [justify] a verdict for plaintiff.”
This court further said at page 141: “ Reasonable efforts must be made by the board to enforce salutary and adequate rules; and a liability may be incurred for a failure to enforce, as well as to make, a rule.”
The cases cited by the majority are not applicable to the present factual situation; tripping over a wire, an assault or other act not necessarily associated with school vigilance. Such acts were not readily foreseeable as distinguished from the present circumstances where the board had both prior notice and knowledge of the dangerous practice of going down slides standing up. The record clearly demonstrates that under proper supervision the children were not allowed to pursue such practice but were required to sit on the slide. If the rule had been enforced, a bump by an intervener would not have caused the injuries sustained by this plaintiff.
The defendant school had a general dismissal at 3:15 in the afternoon. The majority of the children went directly to their buses but the plaintiff was one of the students who waited for a 3:25 bus, referred to in the record as a “ late bus ”. The record establishes that the principal, under the aegis of the school board, established certain rules; one of which related to the late bus children who were left without supervision between 3:15 and 3 :25 and which rule directed that they remain next to the school building. The plaintiff and other children denied knowledge of such rule while other children admitted knowledge of the same.
The icy slide was built on a steep bank 100 feet from the school entrance and within the periphery of the playground. On the day in question, the plaintiff and a number of other children went directly to the slide, which appears not to be unusual. While the plaintiff was going down the slide standing up — contrary to the rule of the school — he came in contact with another pupil, causing him to lose his balance, fall down and sustain the injuries herein. There was no teacher present at the time.
The record shows that it was known that the children waiting for the late bus went to the playground after dismissal from school. The record further shows that the slide was dangerous; that a dangerous practice was involved in by the *690children going down standing up; that a teacher was stationed there during the noon hour to prevent such practice and that the principal had knowledge of the after-school activities on the slide but had not undertaken to provide supervision. The facts in this ease made the happening of a possible accident readily foreseeable. (Waldorf v. Sorbo, 10 A D 2d 226, affd. 9 N Y 2d. 703.) It appears from the record that one of the main purposes of supervision at the slide was to prevent such horseplay and scuffling as occurred here and the jury had the right to find that if there had been such proper supervision, the accident would not have happened.
To answer the argument of the majority, the intervention by a fellow student at the slide was foreseeable and a reason for providing the supervision, at other times, but lacking on this occasion and thereby causing the accident. One of the teachers was questioned as follows: “Q. But, even having had the instruction some pupils did that, didn’t they, slide down standing up ? A. Not if you could possibly avoid them doing it. Q. But some of them have done it, have they not, while you have been supervising the play-ground? A. But they were punished if they did it. Q. Yes, all right. Now, what would you do for punishment? A. Personally, I sent them in from the playground, in to the teacher who had a noon-hour duty and they didn’t come out until perhaps a week. Q. I see. There was usually some severe discipline given for that, correct? A. I don’t know if it was severe, but it was what they thought was appropriate. Q. That is what I mean. Have you ever seen the children, while playing on the bank, while you were on outside supervision, duty, scuffling or pushing or grabbing at one other, doing that sort of thing, children, while playing on the bank? A. Have I seen them scuffling? Q. Yes. A. Yes. Q. And then you would stop that or caution them not to continue it? A. True. Q. And would it be correct, Mrs. Greyer, to say that by your being there on the playground and particularly on the ice slope, supervising there, that probably accidents and occurrences of that type were prevented, would that be fair? A. Yes.”
Here the authorities had knowledge of the dangerous practice, and knew that proper supervision was necessary and essential to enforce its rule against going down the slide standing up and to deter the horseplay and scuffling. The hiatus in supervision between dismissal and the late bus was known to the authorities.
The facts in this ease seem to fit within Decker v. Dundee Cent. School Dist. (4 N Y 2d 462) where the court said at page 464: “The duty of the board as to supervision * * * is unqualified, and has been construed as mandatory [citing cases]. The jury could reasonably infer that, had there been adequate supervision in the past, the danger would have come to the attention of some person in authority, and steps taken to prevent its repetition.”
Under the facts in this case, the intervention was something that had been anticipated and required proper supervision, which was lacking at the time the plaintiff sustained the injury.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Bergan, P. J., Gibson, Reynolds and Taylor, JJ., concur in Memorandum by the Court; Herlihy, J., dissents, and votes, to affirm, in a memorandum.
Judgment reversed on the law and complaint dismissed, without costs.