Court Opinion

ID: 5949831
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-13 06:16:51.815816+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:47:36.928711
License: Public Domain

Crew III, J.
Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Tait, Jr., J.), entered July 30, 1991 in Madison County, which granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint.
Viewed most favorably to plaintiffs, the evidence revealed that on January 20, 1989 plaintiff Anthony M. Darmento (hereinafter Darmento) was driving south on State Route 13 with his wife, plaintiff Matilda T. Darmento, in the Town of De Ruyter, Madison County. The road was icy, slippery and completely covered with snow. While plaintiffs were driving down Route 13 at about 30 miles per hour, defendant Walter J. Finlay, Sr., who was employed by defendant Pacific Molasses Company, Inc. as a truck driver, pulled up behind plaintiffs’ vehicle with his tractor trailer. The distance between the two vehicles was about one car length for some three to four miles. Darmento was aware of the truck’s presence and apparently disconcerted about the proximity of the truck behind him. When Darmento started into a right curve in the road, plaintiffs’ vehicle slid from the southbound lane of traffic across the center line and into the northbound lane of traffic, crashed into and bounced off of a guardrail, and slid back across Route 13 into the southbound lane of traffic where it collided with the front of the rear tandem of the tractor trailer.
In April 1990, plaintiffs commenced this action against defendants seeking damages for personal injuries sustained by Matilda Darmento in the motor vehicle accident. After issue was joined and depositions were taken, defendants moved for summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ complaint on the ground that there was no evidentiary proof which demon*1091strated that they were the proximate cause of the personal injuries sustained. Supreme Court granted defendants’ motion and dismissed the complaint. This appeal by plaintiffs ensued.
We reverse. Defendants contend, and we agree, that there is no evidence from which a jury could reasonably conclude that Finlay’s actions caused plaintiffs’ vehicle to slide out of control into the guardrail on the opposite side of the road. There is, however, evidence that Finlay was following too closely and that he did not have his vehicle under control. Finlay testified that when he observed plaintiffs’ vehicle sliding out of control, he attempted to stop his truck but could not do so because it began to "jackknife”. In order to arrest that process, instead of bringing his vehicle to a stop Finlay accelerated, pulled his vehicle to the right and then came to a stop, during the process of which plaintiffs’ vehicle collided with his. Thus, there are present factual and credibility issues with regard to whether Finlay was tailgating plaintiffs’ vehicle and did not have his vehicle under control, thereby preventing him from stopping his vehicle in time to avoid the collision. Unquestionably, Finlay’s alleged negligence is not the sole cause of the accident. The failure of Darmento to have his vehicle under proper control is a proximate cause of the accident, as found by Supreme Court. It is axiomatic, however, that there may be more than one proximate cause of an accident (see, e.g., Sweet v Perkins, 196 NY 482, 485). In the case at bar, we cannot say, as a matter of law, that Finlay’s conduct did not contribute to the happening of the accident. Summary judgment was, therefore, not appropriate.
Weiss, P. J., and Mikoll, J., concur.