This is an application for leave to serve a notice of claim against the City of Albany pursuant to subdivision 5 of section 50-e of the General Municipal Law. The applicant alleges that he was injured on the 16th day of December, 1950, by reason of the negligence of the City of. Albany
The applicant asks that by reason of his physical disability and mental and nervous condition, his failure to sooner file his claim be excused and that he be permitted at this time to file a claim against the city.
The city opposes his application and contends that the applicant was neither mentally nor physically disabled from filing a notice of claim within ninety days after the alleged accident and that this application does not come within the provisions of subdivision 5 of section 50-e of the General Municipal Law. The city submits affidavits of individuals who live in the same vicinity as the applicant who related their observations of and contact with the applicant during the period between December 16, 1950, and February, 1951; the city also submits transcripts of the testimony given by two individuals at hearings held before the comptroller of the City of Albany relative to the activities of the applicant prior to the time when his leg was amputated.
The courts have granted applications for the relief requested here in cases where the injured party was either mentally and/or physically disabled from the time of the accident to a time beyond the ninety-day period. (Matter of Colehammer v. City of Albany, 276 App. Div. 809; Matter of Stuto v. City of New York, 192 Misc. 935; Matter of Greenfield v. City of New York, 186 Misc. 903.)
The city contends that even assuming that the applicant did become either mentally and/or physically disabled on February 13th and that such disability continued beyond the statutory ninety-day period that inasmuch as the applicant had ample opportunity prior thereto to file his claim, he is not now entitled to the relief requested.
The applicant contends that since he was entitled to serve his claim, pursuant to the provisions of the statute, at any time within ninety days after the accident, he should not be denied the relief requested because he did not file within the first fifty-nine days following the accident when, thereafter, he became both mentally and physically disabled for a length of time extending beyond the ninety-day period following the happening of the accident.
This court feels that it would be a very harsh interpretation of the statute to say that if a claimant does not file soon after the happening of an accident and then becomes disabled for a period beyond the statutory time that he should not be entitled to relief, regardless of his showing of incapacity during the remaining days of the statutory period. To adopt such an interpretation would in fact require a claimant to immediately file his claim in order to protect his rights and would prevent him from waiting for any period of time lest he might become incapacitated and then forever be prevented from filing his claim. The courts have interpreted this section, subdivision 5 of section 50-e of the General Municipal Law, to mean that claimants shall have relief in cases in which the facts justify the same and that this statute is not to be construed so rigidly as to deny justice to claimants. (Matter of Hector
This court feels that in the interest of justice the application should he granted. The applicant here, because of the development of this more serious condition and incapacity, did not have the benefit of the ninety-day period. If he had been so incapacitated for the first eighty days of this period and had filed shortly after the expiration date there is no doubt, in view of the decisions of our courts, but that the relief would be granted. Here the incapacity occurred during the latter part of the statutory period and as soon as the applicant had recovered sufficiently to enable him to do so he seeks to file his claim.
Submit order accordingly.