Court Opinion

ID: 9388224
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-04-20 13:05:51.599892+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:18:18.935242
License: Public Domain

State of New York                                                       OPINION
Court of Appeals                                         This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision
                                                           before publication in the New York Reports.

 No. 16
 Courtney Anderson,
          Respondent,
       v.
 Commack Fire District,
          Appellant,
 et al.,
          Defendants.

 Timothy C. Hannigan, for appellant.
 Scott Szczesny, for respondent.
 Association of Fire Districts of the State of New York, amicus curiae.

 CANNATARO, J.:

       In recognition of the unique responsibilities placed on fire truck and other

 emergency vehicle operators to respond quickly to calls for aid, Vehicle and Traffic Law

 § 1104 grants such drivers the “privilege” to proceed past red lights when involved in

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                                              -2-                                        No. 16

emergency operations, as long as specified safety precautions are observed and they do not

act recklessly (see Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 [a]-[c], [e]). As pertains to volunteer

fire companies, General Municipal Law § 205-b makes fire districts1 vicariously liable “for

the negligence of volunteer firefighters” when they operate fire district vehicles in the

discharge of their duties. The question presented on this appeal is whether these statutes

authorize a claim against a fire district for the “negligence” of a volunteer firefighter when

the firefighter’s actions are otherwise privileged and subject to a heightened recklessness

standard under Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104. We hold that imposition of vicarious

liability for a driver’s negligence in this context would be contrary to legislative intent, this

Court’s precedent, and general principles of negligence law and vicarious liability.

                                               I.

       Plaintiff commenced this personal injury action after her vehicle collided with a fire

truck owned by defendant Commack Fire District (the District) and operated by a District

volunteer firefighter. The accident occurred at an intersection controlled by a traffic light

which, at the time of the accident, was illuminated green in plaintiff’s direction and red in

the fire truck’s direction. Following discovery, defendants moved for summary judgment,

arguing that neither the firefighter nor the District were liable because the firefighter’s

1
 A fire district is a political subdivision of the State whose employees may include paid
and volunteer firefighters (see Town Law § 174 [7]).

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                                              -3-                                        No. 16

actions were privileged under Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 and were not otherwise

reckless.

       Based on undisputed testimony that the firefighter was responding to an alarm of

fire, had activated the fire truck’s lights and sirens, stopped the fire truck before entering

the intersection, and proceeded slowly through the red light, Supreme Court held that the

firefighter had “established prima facie entitlement to the exemption in Vehicle and Traffic

Law § 1104,” and that plaintiff had failed to raise a triable issue in opposition as to whether

the firefighter acted with reckless disregard.       The court therefore granted summary

judgment to the firefighter. However, the court reached a different result with respect to

the vicarious liability of the District. Relying on General Municipal Law § 205-b, “which

states, in part, that ‘fire districts created pursuant to law shall be liable for the negligence

of volunteer firefighters,’” the court concluded that questions of fact existed regarding

whether the firefighter “was negligent in failing to see plaintiff’s vehicle approaching,”

and, thus, the District was not entitled to summary judgment.

       The District appealed and a divided Appellate Division affirmed.2 The majority

held that the District “was not limited to liability for conduct rising to the level of ‘reckless

disregard’ under Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104(e), and could be held liable for the

ordinary negligence of a volunteer firefighter operating the . . . vehicle” under General

Municipal Law § 205-b (195 AD3d 779, 780 [2d Dept 2021]). The dissent concluded that

2
  Plaintiff did not appeal from the portion of Supreme Court’s order that granted summary
judgment to the firefighter.

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                                            -4-                                       No. 16

Supreme Court should have applied the reckless disregard standard to determine the

District’s vicarious liability (id. at 781 [Barros, J., dissenting]). The Appellate Division

granted the District leave to appeal to this Court. We now reverse.

                                             II.

                                             A.

       Determination of how General Municipal Law § 205-b and Vehicle and Traffic Law

§ 1104 interact in this context requires examination of the history and purposes of those

statutes and related provisions.

       Prior to 1929, local subdivisions of the State enjoyed sovereign immunity from

liability, and thus were not vicariously liable for injuries caused by the negligence of their

firefighters (see Miller v Irondequoit, 243 AD 240, 241-242 [4th Dept 1935], affd without

op, 268 NY 578 [1935]; Snyder v Binghamton, 138 Misc 259, 260 [Sup Ct, Broome Cnty

1930], affd without op, 233 App Div 782 [3d Dept 1931]).3 That year, in response to rising

criticism against sovereign immunity and the growth of motorized transportation, the

Legislature began to enact a series of statutes to “creat[e] a partial remedy, at least so far

as the operation of [government] owned vehicles is concerned, in behalf of those who were

then without any redress” (see Ottmann v Rockville Ctr., 273 NY 205, 207 [1937]; see also

Poniatowski v New York, 14 NY2d 76, 80 [1964]). First, in Highway Law § 282-g—later

3
 Although the State waived its immunity from liability in 1929 in Court of Claims Act §
8, this waiver was not found to be applicable to the local subdivisions of the State until
1945 (see Thomas v Consol. Fire Dist. No. 1, 50 NY2d 143, 146 [1980]).

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re-enacted as General Municipal Law §§ 50-a, 50-b, and 50-c—the Legislature provided

that a municipality is vicariously liable “for the negligence” of its duly-appointed agents

when they operate municipally owned vehicles in the discharge of their duties (see

Poniatowski, 14 NY2d at 80).

       Fire districts remained immune until 1934, when the Legislature enacted General

Municipal Law § 205-b (L 1934, ch 489). As relevant here, that statute (i) broadly relieved

volunteer firefighters from civil liability for negligent acts committed in the performance

of their duties, which was considered “unfair and unjust” given their lack of compensation

(Assembly Mem in Support, Bill Jacket, L 1934, ch 489, at 3), and (ii) harmonized the

vicarious liability of fire districts with that of municipalities by providing that a fire district

shall be liable “for the negligence of [its] volunteer firefighters” when they operate fire

district-owned vehicles in the discharge of their duties (General Municipal Law § 205-b;

see Letter from Fireman’s Assn. of State of NY, Apr 28, 1934, id. at 4).

                                                B.

       Two decades later, in 1957, the Legislature enacted what is now title VII of the

Vehicle and Traffic Law—a collection of provisions “intended to create a uniform set of

traffic regulations, or the ‘rules of the road’ to update and replace the former traffic

regulations, and bring them into conformance with the Uniform Vehicle Code adopted in

other states” (Kabir v County of Monroe, 16 NY3d 217, 222 [2011] [quotation marks,

brackets, and ellipsis omitted]).

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       In enacting title VII, the Legislature recognized that drivers of emergency vehicles

have a “primary obligation to respond quickly to preserve life and property” which can

“conflict with the rules and laws that are intended to regulate citizens’ daily conduct,” and,

consequently, such drivers should be permitted “to disregard those laws where necessary

to carry out their important responsibilities” (Saarinen v Kerr, 84 NY2d 494, 497, 502

[1994]). The applicable definition of an emergency vehicle specifically encompasses fire

trucks “owned by . . . fire district[s].”4 Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 grants the drivers

of such vehicles “privileges” to disobey certain traffic laws when they are “involved in an

emergency operation”5 (see Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 [a]). One such privilege

permits the driver of a fire truck responding to an alarm of fire to “[p]roceed past a steady

red signal” as long as certain safety precautions are observed (see Vehicle and Traffic Law

§ 1104 [b] [2]; Saarinen, 84 NY2d at 499-500). Specifically, this privilege is available

only if the driver “slow[s] down as may be necessary for safe operation” and makes

prescribed use of sirens and lights (Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 [b] [2] & [c]).

4
  The statute applies “to drivers of all vehicles owned or operated by the United States, this
state, or any county, city, town, district, or any other political subdivision of the state”
(Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1103 [a]). The term “authorized emergency vehicle” is defined
to include a “fire vehicle” (id. § 101), which, in turn, is defined to mean, in pertinent part,
“[e]very vehicle operated for fire service purposes owned and identified as being owned
by the state, a public authority, a county, town, city, village or fire district . . .” (id. § 115-
a [emphasis added]).
5
 “Emergency operation” is defined to mean, in pertinent part, “[t]he operation . . . of an
authorized emergency vehicle, when such vehicle is engaged in . . . responding to, or
working or assisting at the scene of an . . . alarm of fire . . .” (Vehicle and Traffic Law §
114-b).

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       Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 (e) states that the provisions outlined above “shall

not relieve the driver . . . from the duty to drive with due regard for the safety of all persons,

nor . . . protect the driver from the consequences of his reckless disregard for the safety of

others.” As this Court has previously explained, section 1104 (e) makes conduct that is

privileged under the statute subject to a recklessness standard (Saarinen, 84 NY2d at 497,

500-503), but leaves in place the ordinary negligence standard of care for unprivileged

conduct (Kabir, 16 NY3d at 220, 228-231). Thus, for example, when drivers are not

involved in emergency operations, they must operate their vehicles pursuant to the normal

rules of the road and with the same reasonable care as other drivers (see id. at 230-231;

Modica v City of New York, 193 AD3d 845, 846 [2d Dept 2021]; Chessey v City of New

York, 88 AD3d 625, 625 [1st Dept 2011]). In contrast, when section 1104 is fully satisfied,

drivers’ actions are privileged and governed by a “reckless disregard” standard (see

Saarinen, 84 NY2d at 500-503).

       The “reckless disregard” standard demands “more than a showing of a lack of ‘due

care under the circumstances’—the showing typically associated with ordinary negligence

claims” (Saarinen, 84 NY2d at 501). Rather, “there must be evidence that the actor has

intentionally done an act of an unreasonable character in disregard of a known or obvious

risk that was so great as to make it highly probable that harm would follow and has done

so with conscious indifference to the outcome” (Frezzell v City of New York, 24 NY3d 213,

217 [2014] [quotation marks omitted]). This standard effectuates legislative intent by

“avoid[ing] ‘judicial second-guessing of the many split-second decisions that are made in

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the field under highly pressured conditions’ and mitigat[ing] the risk that possible liability

could ‘deter emergency personnel from acting decisively and taking calculated risks in

order to save life or property’” (id., quoting Saarinen, 84 NY2d at 502).

                                               III.

       Considering the text, history, and legislative purpose of the two statutes at issue, we

hold that the reckless disregard standard set forth in Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 (e)

applies when a fire district is alleged to be vicariously liable for conduct that is privileged

under that statute.

       A few basic principles of negligence law and vicarious liability are helpful to our

analysis of this question. First, it is black letter law that an essential element of a negligence

claim is the breach of a duty (see Ferreira v City of Binghamton, 38 NY3d 298, 308

[2022]). Second, while “liability in negligence is normally premised on a defendant’s

fault,” vicarious liability is “impute[d] . . . to a defendant for another person’s fault”

(Feliberty v Damon, 72 NY2d 112, 117-118 [1988]). A fire district’s liability under

General Municipal Law § 205-b “for the negligence of volunteer firefighters” is vicarious

in nature (see General Municipal Law § 205-b). Consequently, the focus of our analysis

must be on the duties of the volunteer firefighter—specifically, whether the firefighter

owed plaintiff a duty not to engage in the conduct which caused her injury.

       General Municipal Law § 205-b recognizes that volunteer firefighters can violate

ordinary duties of care in the broad course of their “operation of vehicles owned by the fire

district upon the public streets and highways of the fire district” (id.). The statute does not,

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                                            -9-                                       No. 16

however, purport to delineate the duties volunteer firefighters actually owe in any particular

situation, much less when they operate emergency vehicles in response to an alarm of fire.

That was not the statute’s purpose. As the dissenting Justice at the Appellate Division

correctly recognized, section 205-b “functions merely as a liability shifting statute, and

does not purport to define the rules of the road or the standard of care to be applied in any

particular circumstance”6 (see Anderson, 195 AD3d at 782 [Barros, J., dissenting]).

       The “carefully calibrated” provisions of Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 were

enacted twenty years after General Municipal Law § 205-b specifically to clarify the duties

of emergency vehicle drivers when involved in emergency operations (see Campbell v City

of Elmira, 84 NY2d 505, 512 [1994]). As noted above, section 1104 was enacted because

the Legislature saw a “conflict” between rules and laws “intended to regulate [all drivers’]

daily conduct” and the “primary obligation” of emergency vehicle drivers to respond

quickly to protect lives and property (see Saarinen, 84 NY2d at 497, 502). Section 1104

grants emergency vehicle drivers “qualified privileges” to “disregard” the duties imposed

by conflicting laws and to operate their vehicles in ways that ordinary members of the

6
  By “liability shifting,” we mean that section 205-b changed the party legally responsible
when a volunteer firefighter commits ordinary negligence. As discussed above, prior to
the statute’s enactment, volunteer firefighters themselves were personally liable for their
own negligence, and fire districts were believed to be protected from vicarious liability by
sovereign immunity. The statute “shift[ed]” the applicable rules by eliminating the
immunity fire districts enjoyed from vicariously liability for their volunteer firefighters’
ordinary negligence in the operation of fire district vehicles, and granted volunteer
firefighters statutory immunity from personal liability for ordinary negligence.

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public—and even these same drivers in non-emergency situations—cannot (see id. at 502;

Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 [a]-[b]). The legal definition of a “privilege” is

              “[a] special legal right, exemption, or immunity granted to a
              person or class of persons; an exception to a duty. A privilege
              grants someone the legal freedom to do or not to do a given
              act” (“Privilege,” Black’s Law Dictionary [11th ed. 2019]
              [emphasis added]).

Section 1104 (e) further expressly establishes a reckless disregard standard “for

determining . . . civil liability for damages resulting from the privileged operation of an

emergency vehicle” (Saarinen, 84 NY2d at 499-501).7

       In short, section 1104 does more than simply immunize firefighters from negligence

liability for otherwise privileged conduct (compare dissenting op at 2, 10). It modifies

their underlying duties in the defined contexts by (i) permitting categories of conduct which

would violate other drivers’ ordinary duty of care, (ii) specifying particular safety

precautions which must be observed when engaging in such conduct, and (iii) requiring

emergency vehicle drivers to avoid recklessness even when engaged in the privileged

conduct. When a volunteer firefighter’s actions satisfy all of these conditions and thus are

privileged, there is simply no breach of duty or negligence which can be imputed to a fire

district under General Municipal Law § 205-b.

7
  The imposition of a heightened standard in this context is consistent with common law
(see Eckert v Long Is. R. Co., 43 NY 502, 506 [1871] [“The law has so high a regard for
human life that it will not impute negligence to an effort to preserve it, unless made under
such circumstances as to constitute rashness in the judgment of prudent persons”]).

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       The dissent reaches a different conclusion based primarily on the observation that

Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 regulates emergency vehicle drivers and does not

specifically reference fire districts, whereas General Municipal Law § 205-b expressly

makes fire districts liable “for the negligence of volunteer firefighters” (see dissenting op

at 5). In the dissent’s view, because section 1104 does not mention fire districts, it cannot

govern their vicarious negligence liability (id.). As discussed, however, the vicarious

liability of a principal depends on the duties owed by the agent (see generally Feliberty, 72

NY2d at 117-118). Because Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 establishes the duties of

volunteer firefighters in this specific context—and is also the later-enacted statute—it is

indispensable to understanding the scope of a fire district’s vicarious negligence liability

under General Municipal Law § 205-b.

       The dissent’s failure to properly account for the privileges granted to volunteer

firefighters under Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 causes it to adopt an interpretation under

which a fire district assumes vicarious liability for conduct that does not actually breach

any underlying duty and therefore is not tortious. Nothing in General Municipal Law §

205-a supports such an interpretation.8

8
  The dissent observes that under General Municipal Law § 205-b, volunteer firefighters
remain liable for “wilful negligence or malfeasance,” demonstrating that “it is possible for
a volunteer firefighter and the fire district both to be liable for the firefighter’s conduct
based on different theories of liability—the firefighter for their individual conduct under a
reckless disregard standard and the district under respondeat superior and a negligence
standard” (dissenting op at 7-8). We agree that the Legislature can immunize a party from
individual liability for their breach of a duty while preserving another party’s vicarious
liability for that same breach (or vice versa)—as long as the underlying duty of care

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                                              IV.

       Our holding that the statutes in question do not impose vicarious negligence liability

on a fire district for conduct that is privileged under Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 is

consistent with this Court’s precedent addressing vicarious liability claims against

municipalities under that statute. Since its enactment in 1957, both litigants and this Court

have understood that section 1104 limits the vicarious liability of municipalities in the same

way it does the liability of their emergency vehicle drivers. In Saarinen v Kerr, this Court

unanimously held that the Village of Massena was entitled to summary judgment in an

action arising from a collision caused by a Village emergency vehicle (84 NY2d 494,

supra). The Court stated that “[w]ith respect to the Village’s vicarious liability for [the

driver’s] . . . conduct, the initial critical question is what standard should be applied in

evaluating the culpability of that conduct” (id. at 499 [emphases added]). The Court

concluded that Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 (e) “precludes the imposition of liability

for otherwise privileged conduct except where the conduct rises to the level of

recklessness” (id. at 497). Because the driver had not acted recklessly, the Court held that

the Village was entitled to summary judgment—in effect holding that the reckless

disregard standard applies to vicarious liability claims against municipalities as well as

direct claims against drivers (see id. at 503).

remains undisturbed. The fundamental flaw in the dissent’s analysis is its failure to
recognize that Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 modifies the ordinary duty of care when
privileged conduct is at issue, thereby eliminating any basis for either individual or
vicarious negligence liability.

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                                             - 13 -                                      No. 16

       Saarinen is not the only decision of this Court that evidences that understanding

(see Frezzell, 24 NY3d at 215 [affirming dismissal of negligence claims against New York

City based on showing that police officer’s conduct was privileged under section 1104 and

not reckless]; Campbell, 84 NY2d at 511 [affirming a jury verdict that the City of Elmira

was vicariously liable for the reckless driving of its fire truck driver, explaining that “(t)his

is not simply a case of a driver running a red light and committing mere negligence”]). 9

To be sure, none of these cases involved fire districts, and, thus, they understandably do

not mention General Municipal Law § 205-b (see dissenting op at 13-14). But General

Municipal Law §§ 50-a, 50-b, and 50-c are materially indistinguishable from section 205-

b insofar as they provide that municipalities are vicariously liable “for the negligence” of

authorized persons who drive their vehicles. Indeed, as noted above, section 205-b was

enacted in part to harmonize the vicarious liability of fire districts with that of

municipalities under sections 50-a through 50-c. Saarinen, Campell, and Frezzell are

incompatible with the proposition that sections 50-a through 50-c subject municipalities to

vicarious negligence liability for their drivers’ statutorily privileged conduct under Vehicle

and Traffic Law § 1104. And in the decades since Saarinen, the Legislature has not

amended any of the relevant statutes in response to our holdings applying the section 1104

(e) reckless disregard standard to vicarious liability claims. The fact that the recklessness

9
  The dissent characterizes these decisions as primarily involving direct claims against
drivers (see dissenting op at 13-14). However, the appeals in Saarinen and Campbell
involved only vicarious liability claims against municipalities, and Frezzell involved both
direct and vicarious liability claims.

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                                             - 14 -                                     No. 16

standard has for decades been understood by courts and the legal community to benefit

municipalities is telling. No convincing reason has been offered why fire districts should

be treated differently from municipalities in this regard.

       Our conclusion that political subdivisions (fire districts and municipalities) have no

vicarious liability for ordinary “negligence” in a driver’s exercise of a Vehicle and Traffic

Law § 1104 privilege is also consistent with the Legislature’s public policy judgments and

objectives in enacting that statute. As explained above, the Legislature’s reckless disregard

standard avoids judicial second-guessing of difficult and time-pressured decisions and

mitigates against the risk that the threat of liability will deter emergency vehicle drivers

from taking the types of calculated risks that are occasionally necessary to save lives (see

Frezzell, 24 NY3d at 217, citing Saarinen, 84 NY2d at 502). These concerns are equally

applicable where the vicarious liability of a political subdivision is at issue (as, in fact, it

was in both Frezzell and Saarinen). Application of an ordinary negligence standard to

claims against fire districts would require judges to dissect and second-guess the split-

second, high-pressure decisions of firefighters. Moreover, the possibility of incurring civil

vicarious liability for what amounts to a driver’s mere failure of judgment could lead fire

districts to discourage or even punish their firefighters for taking risks necessary to save

lives and property. As we stated in Saarinen, “[t]he ‘reckless disregard’ test, which

requires a showing of more than a momentary judgment lapse, is better suited to the

legislative goal of encouraging emergency personnel to act swiftly and resolutely while at

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the same time protecting the public’s safety to the extent practicable” (see 84 NY2d at

502).

        Accordingly, the order should be reversed, with costs, that branch of defendants’

motion seeking summary judgment dismissing the complaint insofar as asserted against

defendant Commack Fire District granted and certified question answered in the negative.

                                          - 15 -
RIVERA, J. (dissenting):

       Under General Municipal Law § 205-b, a fire district is vicariously liable for its

volunteer firefighters’ negligent discharge of their duties while operating the district’s

emergency vehicles. That standard abrogates the common law rule that municipalities are

not vicariously liable for the tortious conduct of their agents and employees. The legislature

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                                             -2-                                      No. 16

has taken a more protective approach to individual volunteer firefighters under General

Municipal Law § 205-b, shielding them from liability in the discharge of their duties when

operating an emergency vehicle, except for wilful negligence or malfeasance. Moreover,

under Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104, volunteer firefighters—and other emergency

responders—are further insulated from civil liability for violating certain specified rules of

the road, except when their conduct is in reckless disregard of public safety. The only

question on this appeal is whether the legislature—sub silentio—supplanted the negligence

standard for a fire district’s tort liability in General Municipal Law § 205-b with the

reckless disregard standard that defines an emergency vehicle driver’s liability under

Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104. The unambiguous text yields one answer: General

Municipal Law § 205-b sets a negligence standard for the tortious conduct of a fire district’s

volunteer firefighters at all times when they operate district vehicles in the discharge of

their duties.

       Unlike with emergency responders, no legislative policy justifies the majority’s

avoidance of our “rules of the road”—the well-established rules of statutory

interpretation—which bind the Court to follow the legislature’s carefully calibrated

statutory scheme for balancing the interests of local governments and injured parties. The

majority upsets this legislatively crafted balance and imposes a standard of liability on the

fire district not found in the legislative scheme. Therefore, I dissent.

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                                              -3-                                         No. 16

                                                I.

       Plaintiff Courtney Anderson sued defendants Commack Fire District and one of its

volunteer firefighters, alleging that she sustained personal injuries when the firefighter

drove the District’s vehicle through a red light en route to an emergency and collided with

plaintiff’s car. The parties agree that the standard of vicarious liability applicable to the

District has been legislatively set, but dispute whether General Municipal Law § 205-b or

Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 controls when a fire district’s volunteer firefighter ignores

traffic rules in the course of responding to an emergency.

                                               A.

       As with all questions of statutory interpretation, “[t]he starting point of our analysis

is the statutory text because the words of the statute are the best indicator of the legislature’s

intent. Where the language of the statute is unambiguous, we apply its plain meaning”

(People ex rel. Molinaro v Warden, Rikers Is., — NY3d —, —, 2022 NY Slip Op 07093,

*2 [2022] [citations omitted]). “[W]e give meaning to all the words of a statute and read

the statute as a whole, harmonizing all of its provisions” (id. [citations omitted]). “ ‘Absent

ambiguity the courts may not resort to rules of construction to [alter] the scope and

application of a statute’ because no such rule ‘gives the court discretion to declare the intent

of the law when the words are unequivocal’ ” (Kuzmich v 50 Murray St. Acquisition LLC,

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                                           -4-                                    No. 16

34 NY3d 84, 91 [2019], quoting Bender v Jamaica Hosp., 40 NY2d 560, 562 [1976]; see

McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes § 76).

      General Municipal Law § 205-b provides:

            “Members of duly organized volunteer fire companies in this
            state shall not be liable civilly for any act or acts done by them
            in the performance of their duty as volunteer firefighters,
            except for wilful negligence or malfeasance. Nothing in this
            section contained shall in any manner affect the liability
            imposed upon cities, towns and villages by sections fifty-a and
            fifty-b of this chapter, but fire districts created pursuant to law
            shall be liable for the negligence of volunteer firefighters duly
            appointed to serve therein in the operation of vehicles owned
            by the fire district upon the public streets and highways of the
            fire district, provided such volunteer firefighters, at the time of
            any accident or injury, were acting in the discharge of their
            duties. Judgments recovered against a fire district pursuant to
            this section shall be levied upon the taxable property of such
            district in the same manner as moneys raised for the support of
            the district.”

      In contrast, Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 provides, in relevant part:

            “(a) The driver of an authorized emergency vehicle, when
            involved in an emergency operation, may exercise the
            privileges set forth in this section, but subject to the conditions
            herein stated.

            “(b) The driver of an authorized emergency vehicle may: . . .

            “2. Proceed past a steady red signal, a flashing red signal or a
            stop sign, but only after slowing down as may be necessary for
            safe operation[.] . . .

            “(c) Except for an authorized emergency vehicle operated as a
            police vehicle or bicycle, the exemptions herein granted to an
            authorized emergency vehicle shall apply only when audible
            signals are sounded from any said vehicle while in motion by
            bell, horn, siren, electronic device or exhaust whistle as may
            be reasonably necessary, and when the vehicle is equipped
            with at least one lighted lamp so that from any direction, under

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                                             -5-                                       No. 16

              normal atmospheric conditions from a distance of five hundred
              feet from such vehicle, at least one red light will be displayed
              and visible. . . .

              “(e) The foregoing provisions shall not relieve the driver of an
              authorized emergency vehicle from the duty to drive with due
              regard for the safety of all persons, nor shall such provisions
              protect the driver from the consequences of his reckless
              disregard for the safety of others.”

The plain language of General Municipal Law § 205-b imposes liability on a fire district

for a volunteer firefighter’s “negligence . . . in the operation of vehicles owned by the fire

district” (General Municipal Law § 205-b). In contrast, Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104

does not address a fire district’s liability at all, but sets the standard of liability for the

statutorily privileged actions of a driver of an authorized emergency vehicle while engaged

in   an   emergency      operation,    including    volunteer    firefighters.   Put   simply,

General Municipal Law § 205-b—which expressly applies to fire districts—plainly

governs a fire district’s liability, whereas Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104—which governs

drivers—plainly does not.

                                              B.

       The negligence standard for the liability of a fire district comports with the purpose

of both sections. As this Court explained in Thomas v Consolidated Fire Dist. No. 1 of

Town of Niskayuna, when the legislature enacted General Municipal Law § 205-b in 1934,

the Court had not yet held that the waiver of immunity from liability in the Court of Claims

Act applied to local state subdivisions (see 50 NY2d 143, 146 [1980]). The State waived

its immunity in 1929 and, 16 years later, the Court clarified in Bernadine v City of New

                                             -5-
                                              -6-                                        No. 16

York that this waiver extended to local subdivisions (see 294 NY 361, 365-366 [1945]). In

enacting General Municipal Law § 205-b, “the [l]egislature sought to assure that there

would be some liability on the part of the fire districts where previously there had been

some doubt” (Thomas, 50 NY2d at 146). Additionally, “[t]he [l]egislature has recognized

the fact that volunteer fire[fighters] were liable for personal negligence by the enactment

of section 50 (c) and section 205 (b) of the General Municipal Law, by which the

municipalities expressly assumed that liability” (Ottmann v Village of Rockville Ctr., 275

NY 270, 274 [1937] [citation omitted]).1

       In so doing, General Municipal Law § 205-b abrogated the common law rule that

municipalities are not liable for the torts of their agents caused by performance of their

governmental duties (see Berger v City of New York, 260 App Div 402, 403 [2d Dept 1940]

[“Under the common law a municipality was not liable for the torts of a police( ) (officer)

or other agents engaged in performance of duties strictly governmental”], affd without op

285 NY 723 [1941]; Letter from Off of the Chairman of the Law Comm, Firemen’s Assn

of the St of NY, Bill Jacket, L 1934, ch 489 at 5 [explaining that “(u)nder the common

law(,) a fire district (was) not liable for the negligent actions of fire(fighters)”]; Dan Lamot,

Comment, Municipal Liability for Torts of Firemen, 31 Alb L Rev 256, 261-262 [1967]).

1
  Notably, under General Municipal Law § 50-c, fire districts are also liable for the
negligence of paid firefighters who are acting in the scope of their employment and
discharging their statutory duties, as imposed by the fire districts, in the operation of
vehicles on the public roadways within the fire districts. Thus, along with General
Municipal Law § 205-b, the statutory scheme exposes fire districts to liability for the
ordinary negligence of all its firefighters—volunteer and paid.
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                                              -7-                                        No. 16

       Consistent with that waiver of sovereign immunity, the legislature intended to

displace any common law rules that would prevent a fire district from being held liable.

Indeed, then-Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt vetoed an earlier version of the bill because

it did not go far enough in that it only “exempt[ed] volunteer fire[fighters] from civil

liability” without “mak[ing] the fire district[s] which they serve liable for their negligence”

(Letter from Off of the Chairman of the Law Comm, Firemen’s Assn of the St of NY, Bill

Jacket, L 1934, ch 489 at 5).

       Essentially, General Municipal Law § 205-b placed fire districts on par with

employers for claims sounding in tort stemming from employee conduct. Under established

principles of vicarious liability, an employer is liable for the tortious acts of its employee

acting within the scope of their employment (see Rivera v State of New York, 34 NY3d

383, 389 [2019], citing Judith M. v Sisters of Charity Hosp., 93 NY2d 932, 933 [1999],

Riviello v Waldron, 47 NY2d 297, 304 [1979], and Jones v State of New York, 33 NY2d

275 [1973]; Restatement [Third] of Agency § 7.07; Restatement [Second] of Agency § 219

[1]; see also Restatement [Third] of Torts: Apportionment of Liability § 13). Thus, contrary

to the majority’s view, General Municipal Law § 205-b is not a liability shifting statute

(see majority op at 9; id. n 7). General Municipal Law § 205-b does not “shift” liability

away from the volunteer firefighter at all, but instead sets the respective liabilities for the

volunteer firefighter and the fire district based on policy concerns. Under this statute, a

volunteer firefighter is not completely absolved of liability; instead their liability is limited

to “wilful negligence or malfeasance” (General Municipal Law § 205-b; cf. Xiang Fu He v

Troon Mgt., Inc., 34 NY3d 167, 176 [2019] [local ordinance “shift[ed] civil liability from

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                                               -8-                                         No. 16

the City to out-of-possession owners” for falls occurring on snow-or ice-covered sidewalks

abutting real estate]). Thus, it is possible for a volunteer firefighter and the fire district both

to be liable for the firefighter’s conduct based on different theories of liability—the

firefighter for their individual conduct under a reckless disregard standard and the district

under respondeat superior and a negligence standard.

       The majority also incorrectly frames Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 as setting the

duty of care and General Municipal Law § 205-b as merely providing that the district is

liable if a volunteer firefighter breaches that specific duty of care (see majority op at 8-9).

However, this formulation elides the fact that Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 (a) and (b)

set forth the privileged conduct—i.e., the actions legislatively permitted for an emergency

vehicle driver. As the majority acknowledges (see id. at 7-8), a different provision—

Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 (e)—sets the standard by which the exercise of that

privileged conduct is measured at reckless disregard for the public safety. Thus, an

emergency vehicle driver, like a volunteer firefighter, may be civilly liable for tortious

injury if they recklessly run a red light while responding to an emergency. Like the

“reckless disregard” standard of care in Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 (e), the reference

to “negligence” in General Municipal Law § 205-b articulates a traditional measure of tort

liability (see e.g. Ferreira v City of Binghamton, 38 NY3d 298, 308 [2022]; Solomon v City

of New York, 66 NY2d 1026, 1027 [1985]).

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                                            -9-                                       No. 16

                                             II.

       The legislative history of General Municipal Law § 205-b confirms this

straightforward reading. The assemblymember who introduced the bill explained that the

enacted scheme would correct the “unfair and unjust” situation whereby “volunteer

fire[fighters] who are performing a great and indispensable public service” could be held

liable under ordinary negligence principles (Assembly Introducer’s Mem in Support, Bill

Jacket, L 1934, ch 489 at 3). The Firemen’s Association of the State of New York, which

promoted the legislation, contended that the bill “reliev[ed] volunteer fire[fighters]

engaged in the performance of duty as such from civil liability, except in cases of wilful

negligence or malfeasance,” while “impos[ing] upon fire districts liability for negligence

on the part of volunteer fire[fighters] duly appointed to serve therein” (Letter from Off of

the Chairman of the Law Comm, Firemen’s Assn of the St of NY, Bill Jacket, L 1934, ch

489 at 4 [emphasis added]). In support of limiting volunteer firefighters’ tort liability, the

Firemen’s Association further stated:

              “It is manifestly unfair that volunteer fire[fighters] who serve
              without the hope of fee or reward and solely as a matter of civic
              duty should be held liable in damages for negligent acts
              occurring in the performance of their duties. This is
              particularly true in these days of high powered motor fire
              apparatus[es] and the congestion of motor traffic on the
              highways. A volunteer fire[fighter] owning a small homestead
              may have it taken away merely because an accident happens
              while [the firefighter] is engaged in driving the fire apparatus
              to the scene of the fire” (id.).

       In addition to balancing fire districts’ and volunteer firefighters’ interests in

apportioning their liabilities, General Municipal Law § 205-b also carefully balances

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                                            - 10 -                                     No. 16

volunteer firefighters’ and injured parties’ interests. The statute ensures a remedy for tort

plaintiffs by exposing fire districts to liability for the firefighter’s negligence while also

immunizing the individual volunteer firefighter from liability unless their conduct was the

result of “wilful negligence or malfeasance” (General Municipal Law § 205-b), both

heightened standards. “Wilful negligence” has been defined as negligence approaching

recklessness (see Black’s Law Dictionary [11th ed 2019], gross negligence), whereas

“malfeasance” is “[a] wrongful, unlawful, or dishonest act; esp[ecially], wrongdoing or

misconduct by a public official” (id., malfeasance). Thus, General Municipal Law § 205-b

immunizes volunteer firefighters in all but those cases involving intentionally egregious

conduct.

       In comparison, Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 does not refer to the liability of fire

districts or the driver’s employer for its own conduct, nor does subdivision (e) refer to a

fire districts’ vicarious liability. Instead, Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 applies to drivers

of   “authorized   emergency      vehicle[s]”—including      volunteer   firefighters—during

“emergency operation[s],” as defined by Vehicle and Traffic Law §§ 101 and 114-b. This

section provides limited immunity for drivers who, as relevant here, drive an authorized

emergency vehicle through a red light with sirens and lights activated during an emergency

operation (see Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 [b] [2], [c], [e]). In those circumstances,

the driver still has “the duty to drive with due regard for the safety of all persons” and is

liable for “the consequences of [the driver’s] reckless disregard for the safety of others”

(id. subd [e]).

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       Reckless disregard of public safety is a heightened standard of tort liability that

“demands more than a showing of a lack of due care under the circumstances—the showing

typically associated with ordinary negligence claims” (Frezzell v City of New York, 24

NY3d 213, 217 [2014] [internal quotation marks omitted], quoting Saarinen v Kerr, 84

NY2d 494, 501 [1994]). Under it, the driver must have “intentionally done an act of

unreasonable character in disregard of a known or obvious risk that as so great as to make

it highly probable that harm would follow and . . . with conscious indifference to the

outcome” (id. [internal quotation marks omitted], quoting Saarinen, 84 NY2d at 501, and

Prosser & Keeton, Torts § 34 at 213 [5th ed 1984]). But, again, this more demanding

reckless disregard standard applies only when the driver disregards certain traffic rules,

like running a red light, while responding to an emergency with the vehicle’s lights and

sirens activated (see Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 [b] [2], [c], [e]). “Any other injury-

causing conduct of [the] driver is governed by the principles of ordinary negligence” (Kabir

v County of Monroe, 16 NY3d 217, 220 [2011]). As the Court stated in Campbell v City of

Elmira, “the [l]egislature’s choice of words in Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 (e) reflects

a carefully calibrated standard” (84 NY2d 505, 512 [1994]). The majority upsets the

legislative   scheme      and     arrives     at     its   atextual   interpretation     that

Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 sets the standard of care for a fire district’s vicarious

liability in derogation of the principle that “[w]e are not at liberty to second-guess the

legislature’s determination, or to disregard—or rewrite—its statutory text” (Matter of New

York Civ. Liberties Union v New York City Police Dept., 32 NY3d 556, 567 [2018], citing

Matter of Wolpoff v Cuomo, 80 NY2d 70, 79 [1992]). Of course, only by legislative

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amendment, not judicial fiat, may the language of the statute be altered (see e.g. Matter of

Endara-Caicedo v New York State Dept. of Motor Vehicles, 38 NY3d 20, 34 [2022, Rivera,

J., dissenting]).

       The majority jettisons this principle in favor of an interpretation whereby the

legislatively-displaced common-law doctrine of vicarious liability is judicially resuscitated

to impute Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 (e)’s more protective standard for emergency

drivers to fire districts. Specifically, the majority relies on the fact that

Vehicle and Traffic § Law 1104 (e)’s reckless disregard standard applies “in a specific

context . . . and is also the later-enacted statute” to conclude that the reckless disregard

standard applies to the fire districts (see majority op at 11-12). But that fact has no bearing

on “the intention of the Legislature” which is of course “our primary consideration” (DCH

Auto v Town of Mamaroneck, 38 NY3d 278, 292 [2022]). True, the Court sometimes looks

to the order in which statutes are enacted to ascertain their meaning, but typically only to

confirm a plain-text reading (Matter of New York City Tr. Auth. v New York State Pub.

Empl. Relations Bd., 8 NY3d 226, 233 [2007]).              In any case, the fact that the

Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 (e) does not refer to both the firefighter and the fire

district’s   respective   liability,   despite   the    existing   statutory    structure   of

General Municipal Law § 205-b, confirms that the legislature did not silently adopt a

different standard for fire districts. Indeed, if the legislature had intended to impose the

same duty of care on fire districts under General Municipal Law § 205-b, “it would have

said so in the statute” (Cruz v TD Bank, N.A., 22 NY3d 61, 72 [2013]); see also Whitman

v Am. Trucking Associations, 531 US 457, 468 [2001] [noting that “Congress . . . does not

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                                               - 13 -                                       No. 16

alter the fundamental details of a regulatory scheme in vague terms or ancillary

provisions”]). Thus, the legislative intent behind the provisions at issue—expressed in

their plain texts—is the “convincing reason . . . why fire districts should be treated

differently from municipalities” (majority op at 14).

       In sum, the plain text of these respective statutes establish the following standards

of tort liability for volunteer firefighters and the fire districts they serve: (1) a volunteer

firefighter is liable for the reckless disregard of the safety of others when operating a fire

district’s authorized emergency vehicle involved in an emergency operation and the

firefighter “engages in the specific conduct exempted from the rules of the road by Vehicle

and Traffic Law § 1104 (b)” (Kabir, 16 NY3d at 220); (2) at all other times during the

performance of their duties a volunteer firefighter is liable for “wilful negligence or

malfeasance” (General Municipal Law § 205-b) in the operation of the district’s vehicle;

and (3) the fire district where the volunteer firefighter serves is liable for the negligent

conduct of that firefighter when operating the district’s vehicle “in the discharge of [the

firefighter’s] duties” (id.), including when driving an emergency vehicle under the

conditions set forth in Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104.

                                                III.

       Contrary to the majority’s view (see majority op at 12-14), our prior case law does

not foreclose this interpretation of the respective statutes. Campbell, Saarinen, Kabir, and

Frezzell did not involve fire districts’ liability for their volunteer firefighters. In those cases,

the Court had no occasion to consider the applicability of General Municipal Law § 205-b,

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                                            - 14 -                                     No. 16

and instead clarified the applicability and scope of Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 as

litigated by those parties. Campbell involved a City of Elmira firetruck driver and presented

the question of whether the evidence supported the jury verdict that the driver acted with

reckless disregard of the safety of others in violation of Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104

(e) (see 84 NY2d at 507-508). The Court held the evidence sufficient (see id. at 511-513).

In Saarinen, the Court determined that the standard applicable to privileged conduct by a

Village of Massena police officer was Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104’s “reckless

disregard” standard, a more demanding standard than that implicated by the “due care

under the circumstances” language set forth in that same section (84 NY2d at 501).

       In Kabir, which involved a Monroe County deputy sheriff, the Court clarified that

the recklessness standard in Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 (e) applies solely to the

privileged conduct in Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 (b) when performed under the

conditions in subdivision (c) (see 16 NY3d at 222-223). In Frezzell, the Court concluded

that the defendants met their burden of establishing that a New York City police officer’s

conduct did not amount to reckless disregard for liability under Vehicle and Traffic Law

§ 1104 (e) (see 24 NY3d at 217-219).

       The majority attempts to liken this case to those cases because they too “address[ed]

. . . claims against municipalities under [Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104]” (majority op at

12) and, in addition to this sweeping generality, offers an observation that, since the Court

decided those cases, the legislature has not amended other provisions of the General

Municipal Law—sections 50-a, 50-b, and 50-c (id. at 14). Plainly, none of this is relevant

to the correct construction of the statutes at issue here. To be sure, “the legislative history

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                                             - 15 -                                    No. 16

of a particular enactment must be reviewed in light of the existing decisional law which

the Legislature is presumed to be familiar with and to the extent it left it unchanged, that it

accepted[,]” (Matter of Knight-Ridder Broadcasting, Inc. v Greenberg, 70 NY2d 151, 157

[1987]), but in none of these cases—Saarinen, Campbell, or Frezzell, or Kabir—did the

Court so much as mention General Municipal Law § 205-b, let alone opine on whether

Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 supplanted it regarding the district’s vicarious liability for

the conduct of its volunteer firefighters.

                                              IV.

       The legislative intent to shield volunteer firefighters from liability for tortious acts

that are not wilful or malicious—while imposing liability on the fire district for its

volunteer firefighters’ ordinary negligence—and principles of vicarious liability support

the conclusion that General Municipal Law § 205-b sets the fire district’s liability and

refute the majority’s mistaken conclusion that Vehicle and Traffic Law § 1104 displaces

this liability sub silentio. Accordingly, I would answer the certified question in the

affirmative.

Order reversed, with costs, that branch of defendants' motion seeking summary judgment
dismissing the complaint insofar as asserted against defendant Commack Fire District
granted and certified question answered in the negative. Opinion by Judge Cannataro.
Judges Garcia, Singas and Troutman concur. Judge Rivera dissents and votes to affirm in
an opinion, in which Chief Judge Wilson concurs. Judge Halligan took no part.

Decided April 20, 2023

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