Case ID: ad2d_18/html/0649-06.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Sam Zausner et al., Respondents, v. Fotochrome, Inc., et al., Appellants.
   Order entered July 2, 1962, denying defendants’ motion to dismiss several of the causes of action in the complaint under rules 103 and 106 of the Rules of Civil Practice, unanimously modified, on the law, with $20 costs and disbursements to defendants, to the extent of dismissing the fourth, fifth, and sixth causes of action, and, in the exercise of discretion, with leave to plaintiffs to replead all dismissed causes of action within 20 days of the service of the order herein, with notice of entry thereof. The causes of action dismissed are deficient for failure to allege special damages. Generally, when causes of action are pleaded in tort for intentional harms falling outside the categories of the conventional ” or traditional ” torts, special damages must be alleged and subsequently proven. Liability depends upon the causing of actual damages which are not presumed from the intention or the overt acts effecting the intention (see Penn-Ohio Steel v. Allis-Chalmers Mfg., 7 A D 2d 441, 444-445; cf. Restatement, Torts, § 912, and Comments). In the fifth cause of action, the allegation of discharge without more is not a sufficient specification of actual damages (Gersh v. Kaspar & Esh, 11 A D 2d 1005; cf. Hartmann v. Winchell, 296 N. Y. 296, 298). -Special damages must be alleged with sufficient particularity to identify actual losses and related causally to the allegedly tortious acts (13 N. Y. Jur., Damages, §§ 12-13; Clark, New York Law of Damages, §§ 3, 760; 2 Greenleaf, Evidence [16th ed.], § 254). The fourth cause of action is additionally insufficient. It alleges merely that defendants said they did certain harmful acts; this is not equivalent to alleging that defendants, in fact, did the things they said they had. The mental injuries asserted in the sixth cause of action are insufficiently alleged. The rules demark the recoverability for such injuries, especially when it is not alleged that such mental injuries were intended and were the result of intentional conduct of the most grievous character (Prosser, Torts [2d ed], §§ 11, 37; Restatement, Torts [1948 Supp.], § 46, and Comments; see Garrison v. Sun Print. & Pub. Assn., 207 N. Y. 1, 8-9; 13 N. Y. Jur., Damages, § 126). Concur — Botein, P. J., Breitel, Valente, McNally and Eager, JJ.