GRAFFEO, J.
When a municipality provides ambulance service by emergency medical technicians in response to a 911 call for assistance, it performs a governmental function and cannot be held
In 1998, plaintiff Tiffany Applewhite suffered from uveitis, an eye condition, which required the intravenous administration of a prescribed medication. After a visiting nurse injected Tiffany with the drug at her home, the 12-year-old girl experienced an episode of anaphylactic shock. When Tiffany's breathing difficulties worsened, her mother dialed 911 seeking assistance. While the nurse performed whatever emergency care that she could provide, Tiffany had a seizure followed by cardiac arrest.
Within minutes after the 911 call was placed, two emergency medical technicians (EMTs) employed by the New York City Fire Department arrived at the Applewhite apartment, having traveled in a basic life support ambulance. The EMTs had been dispatched because no advanced life support (ALS) ambulance transporting paramedics was available at the time. One EMT immediately began performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) on Tiffany while the other called for an ALS ambulance and then retrieved equipment from the ambulance.
At some point, Tiffany's mother allegedly requested that the EMTs transport Tiffany to nearby Montefiore Hospital. The EMT continued to conduct CPR on Tiffany until paramedics from a private hospital, who arrived in an ALS ambulance, appeared at the scene. The paramedics injected Tiffany with epinephrine to counter the effects of anaphylactic shock, intubated her, administered oxygen and then transported her to Montefiore Hospital. Tiffany survived the ordeal but tragically suffered serious brain damage.
Tiffany and her mother commenced this action against the nurse, her employer (Accuhealth, Inc.), and the City of New York and its emergency medical services (EMS). Accuhealth dissolved in bankruptcy and the lawsuit against the nurse was settled. Thus, the only claims that remain outstanding are those against the municipal defendants (referred to collectively as the City).
The City moved for summary judgment, primarily contending that it was immune from liability because it did not owe a special duty to plaintiffs. In the alternative, the City maintained
The Appellate Division reversed and reinstated the claims against the City (90 A.D.3d 501 [1st Dept 2011]). It determined that the City's emergency medical response was governmental in nature, but found that plaintiffs raised triable issues of fact as to whether the City had assumed a special duty to plaintiffs and whether it proximately caused their injuries. The Appellate Division certified a question to us asking if its decision was correct.
When a negligence claim is asserted against a municipality, the first issue for a court to decide is whether the municipal entity was engaged in a proprietary function or acted in a governmental capacity at the time the claim arose. If the municipality's actions fall in the proprietary realm, it is subject to suit under the ordinary rules of negligence applicable to nongovernmental parties (see Matter of World Trade Ctr. Bombing Litig., 17 N.Y.3d 428, 446-447 [2011], cert denied sub nom. Ruiz v Port Auth. of New York & New Jersey, 568 US ___, 133 S.Ct. 133 [2012]). A government entity performs a purely proprietary role when its "activities essentially substitute for or supplement traditionally private enterprises" (Sebastian v State of New York, 93 N.Y.2d 790, 793 [1999] [internal quotation marks omitted]). In contrast, a municipality will be deemed to have been engaged in a governmental function when its acts are "undertaken for the protection and safety of the public pursuant to the general police powers" (id. [internal quotation marks omitted]).
Because this dichotomy is easier to state than to apply in some factual scenarios, the determination categorizing the conduct of a municipality may present a close question for the courts to decide (see Matter of World Trade Ctr. Bombing Litig., 17 NY3d at 446-447; Sebastian, 93 NY2d at 793-794). Police and fire protection are examples of long-recognized, quintessential governmental functions (see e.g. Valdez v City of New York, 18 N.Y.3d 69, 75 [2011]; Harland Enters. v Commander Oil Corp., 64 N.Y.2d 708, 709 [1984]). Additional examples include security operations at the World Trade Center (see Matter of World Trade
If it is determined that a municipality was exercising a governmental function, the next inquiry focuses on the extent to which the municipality owed a "special duty" to the injured party. The core principle is that to "`sustain liability against a municipality, the duty breached must be more than that owed the public generally'" (Valdez, 18 NY3d at 75, quoting Lauer v City of New York, 95 N.Y.2d 95, 100 [2000]). We have recognized that a special duty can arise in three situations: (1) the plaintiff belonged to a class for whose benefit a statute was enacted; (2) the government entity voluntarily assumed a duty to the plaintiff beyond what was owed to the public generally; or (3) the municipality took positive control of a known and dangerous safety condition (see e.g. Metz, 20 NY3d at 180). It is the plaintiff's obligation to prove that the government defendant owed a special duty of care to the injured party because duty is an essential element of the negligence claim itself (see Lauer, 95 NY2d at 100; see also Valdez, 18 NY3d at 75). In situations where the plaintiff fails to meet this burden, the analysis ends and liability may not be imputed to the municipality that acted in a governmental capacity.
In this case, the parties dispute whether the City exercised a governmental or proprietary function when the EMTs initiated emergency care. The City asserts that the provision of 911 referrals and emergency medical service responses are within the traditional responsibilities of municipal government, similar in nature to emergency fire protection services. Plaintiffs, however, maintain that the governmental function terminated with the arrival of the EMTs at Tiffany's home and a proprietary function arose once emergency medical care was undertaken since treatment of this nature is generally offered by private parties (e.g., doctors and hospital personnel) and the City charges fees for its ambulance services. Consistent with their respective arguments, the City asserts that plaintiffs failed, as a matter of law, to establish triable issues of fact pertaining to the creation of a special relationship,
In Laratro v City of New York (8 N.Y.3d 79 [2006]), the plaintiff sued the City for responding too slowly to a 911 call (the ambulance took 35 minutes to arrive, as opposed to the several-minute response time in this case). Our analysis began with the recognition that "[p]rotecting health and safety is one of municipal government's most important duties" (id. at 81) and this responsibility extends to "the duty to provide police protection, fire protection or ambulance service" to the general public (id. at 82-83 [emphasis added]). We proceeded to determine whether the plaintiff had sufficiently established the existence of a special duty — an inquiry that would have been unnecessary had we viewed the City's response to the 911 call as a proprietary function. Hence, we have previously viewed municipal emergency systems and responses to 911 calls to be within the sphere of governmental functions.
Our concurring colleagues contend that the EMTs acted in a proprietary capacity when they began to render aid, equating their conduct with medical services such as mental health care
Consistent with this view and our reasoning in Laratro (8 N.Y.3d 79), we believe that publicly-employed, front-line EMTs and other first responders, who routinely place their own safety and lives in peril in order to rescue others, surely fulfill a government function — certainly no less so than municipal garbage collectors and school playground supervisors (see Nehrbas, 2 NY2d at 194-195; Bonner, 73 NY2d at 932; see also Edwards v City of Portsmouth, 237 Va at 171, 375 SE2d at 750) — because they exist "for the protection and safety of the public" and not as a "substitute for ... private enterprises" (Sebastian, 93 NY2d at 793 [internal quotation marks omitted]). The facts of this case reinforce this view since the purportedly negligent EMTs were employees of the City's fire department using City resources in an effort to fulfill the City's obligation to answer an emergency 911 dispatch and attempt to save Tiffany Applewhite's life. And contrary to the belief expressed in the concurring opinions, the fact that private entities operate ambulance services in New York City is not determinative because those companies provide supplemental support for a critical governmental duty rather than vice versa (see Edwards v City of Portsmouth, 237 Va at 171-172, 375 SE2d at 750 ["the test cannot be whether the same thing is done by private entities, but rather whether, in providing such services, the governmental entity is exercising the powers and duties of
Moreover, and unlike the types of medical providers identified by the concurrences, the EMTs employed by the New York City Fire Department (FDNY) and deployed via the 911 system receive training in basic life support techniques and their range of approved emergency services is limited by law (see Public Health Law § 3001 [6] [defining the term "emergency medical technician"]; 10 NYCRR 800.6 [c] [listing eight types of emergency medical services personnel]; 10 NYCRR 800.20 [c] [5] [i] [describing the required curricula for various classes of first responders]). Basic EMTs function in a "pre-hospital setting" and their activities are generally restricted to "CPR, oxygen administration, bleeding control, foreign body airway obstruction removal, and spinal immobilization."
Hence, we hold that a municipal emergency response system — including the ambulance assistance rendered by first responders such as the FDNY EMTs in this case — should be viewed as "a classic governmental, rather than proprietary, function" (Valdez, 18 NY3d at 75).
Our conclusion does not necessarily immunize the City from liability because plaintiffs may yet establish that a special duty was owed to them. Of the three ways that a plaintiff may prove the existence of a special duty, only the second is at issue in this appeal — whether the City voluntarily assumed a "special relationship" with the plaintiffs beyond the duty that is owed to the public generally. The response to that question requires the presence of four elements:
A plaintiff must satisfy each of these factors in order to establish a special relationship. Here, the parties' dispute centers on the first and fourth elements. We agree with the Appellate Division that plaintiffs have adequately presented questions of fact on both of these factors.
Tiffany's mother recalled that once she realized the treatment provided by the EMTs would be limited to CPR, she "asked them to please take Tiffany to Montefiore Hospital right away, because it was only a few minutes away from our house at that time." The EMT apparently continued performing CPR and allegedly indicated that he was awaiting the arrival of ALS ambulance personnel. This poses a question of fact as to whether the EMTs, through their actions or promises, assumed an affirmative duty in deciding to have ALS paramedics undertake more sophisticated medical treatment rather than transporting the child to a hospital.
A factual resolution by a jury is also necessary to resolve the justifiable reliance element. It is possible that a fact finder could conclude that it was reasonable for Tiffany's mother to rely on the EMTs' alleged assurances rather than seek an alternative method for transporting Tiffany to the nearby hospital since the child's mother claims that she was not informed that it would take about 20 minutes for the ALS ambulance to arrive. Although it is true, as the City contends, that plaintiffs have not specifically identified any "`other available avenues of protection'" to which the mother could have resorted (Dinardo v City of New York, 13 N.Y.3d 872, 874 [2009], quoting Cuffy, 69 NY2d at 261), the allegations raise the question of whether the EMTs may have "lulled" plaintiffs "into a false sense of security" (Dinardo, 13 NY3d at 874 [internal quotation marks omitted]). Plaintiffs are therefore entitled to show how the EMTs' statements or "conduct deprived [plaintiffs] of assistance that reasonably could have been expected from another source" (Merced v City of New York, 75 N.Y.2d 798, 800 [1990]). In this regard, plaintiffs have the ultimate burden of establishing that some other reasonable alternative was available (see Valdez, 18 NY3d at 75).
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs, and the certified question answered in the affirmative.
SMITH, J. (concurring).
I concur in the result, but not the reasoning, of the majority opinion. I am unable to find in this record evidence either of a promise (implicit or explicit) by the EMTs to do anything other than what they in fact did, or of any justifiable reliance by either plaintiff on such a promise. I would vote to dismiss the complaint if I thought, as the majority does, that the EMTs were performing a governmental function.
But the provision of medical care — including emergency medical care — is not something that only government does or can do. I think the label "proprietary" better suits the activity of the EMTs here, and thus I conclude that the doctrine of governmental immunity does not apply to this case.
The doctrine has always been limited to those functions that are unique to government. For example, we have held that, in the absence of a special duty, a suit cannot be based on negligence in providing police protection (Valdez v City of New York, 18 N.Y.3d 69 [2011]); maintaining a registry of child care centers (McLean v City of New York, 12 N.Y.3d 194 [2009]); performing safety inspections of public vessels (Metz v State of New York, 20 N.Y.3d 175 [2012]); or issuing a death certificate (Lauer v City of New York, 95 N.Y.2d 95 [2000]). Governmental immunity does not apply when a public employee, acting in the course of his or her employment, commits an ordinary tort that anyone else might commit — for example, when the employee is negligent in driving a car (Dooley v State of New York, 254 App Div 381 [1938], aff'd 280 N.Y. 748 [1939]) or firing a gun (Buckley v City of New York, 56 N.Y.2d 300 [1982]). There are difficult, borderline cases: when a public entity is sued for failing to protect from harm the occupants of a building that it owns, it may not be obvious whether it is acting as a landlord providing security — in which case it is held to the same standards as a private landlord (Miller v State of New York, 62 N.Y.2d 506 [1984]) — or as a government deciding on the allocation of police resources — in which case it may claim immunity (Matter of World Trade Ctr. Bombing Litig., 17 N.Y.3d 428 [2011]).
Yet the majority today concludes that the emergency medical care provided by the City-employed EMTs in this case was a governmental function, because the EMTs arrived at plaintiffs' home in a City ambulance. The majority points out that in Laratro v City of New York (8 N.Y.3d 79, 82-83 [2006]) we listed "the duty to provide ... ambulance service" as among those that "the municipality owes to the general public," and accordingly applied the governmental immunity doctrine (majority op at 427). But the service we were referring to in Laratro was the dispatching of an ambulance in response to a 911 call; the claim in Laratro, which we held barred by governmental immunity, was that a City-employed 911 operator was negligent in transmitting a request for emergency help. Answering a 911 call and seeing that help, where needed, is promptly sent is clearly a governmental function — so clearly that Laratro does not even discuss the governmental-proprietary distinction. The majority also relies on a number of out-of-state cases (see majority op at 428-429), but many of those are more similar to Laratro than to this case; only one, Smyser v City of Peoria (215 Ariz. 428, 435-436, 160 P.3d 1186, 1193-1194 [Ct App 2007]), involved alleged negligence in providing emergency medical care after an ambulance arrived.
Where that is the allegation, I see no reason why immunity should be more available to a city than if city employees were
The majority emphasizes "public policy considerations" (majority op at 430), arguing essentially that tort liability will burden municipalities excessively, and dissuade them from offering life-saving services. I agree that this is a legitimate concern — but it seems to me to apply no less to the equally important services provided in municipal hospitals. In general, it may well be a bad idea, where no special duty is found, to subject municipalities to potentially huge liability in cases involving such catastrophic injuries as the one suffered by the child plaintiff here. But it may be an even worse idea to exempt municipal agencies from that liability without also exempting their competitors in the private sector. If the burden is too heavy for the taxpayers to bear, why should the owner of a private ambulance service be asked to bear it? And if government is to be exempt from such liability when private providers are not, does that not invite the government to load excessive burdens on the private sector, without worrying about the consequences to itself?
I am not an uncritical admirer of our tort system, but I think it is best administered when public and private parties similarly situated are bound by the same rules. I therefore disagree with the favored treatment that the majority would accord to public entities that provide emergency medical care.
ABDUS-SALAAM, J. (concurring).
This Court must balance the important public policy of insulating the government from tort liability for essential services it provides to the public, with the equally important principle that those who undertake to provide medical treatment must do so with reasonable care. While I agree that the Appellate Division properly reinstated the complaint against the City, I believe that the majority's rationale is incorrect. I would hold that the EMTs performed a proprietary function, and that there is a triable issue of fact concerning proximate cause.
My reading of the decision is that the Appellate Division determined that the City "assumed a special duty toward th[ese] plaintiff[s]" (90 A.D.3d 501, 504 [1st Dept 2011]), and that no issues of fact remained as to this point. The court held that the EMTs' "assurances and advice" that it would be best to wait for the ALS ambulance rather than transport Tiffany to the hospital "constituted an assumption, through promises or actions, to act on behalf of infant plaintiff" (id. [internal alterations and quotation marks omitted]), and that "[t]he mother justifiably relied on the EMS technicians, who had taken control of the emergency situation, and who elected to await the arrival of the ALS ambulance" (id. at 505). There was no dispute between the parties as to whether the remaining two factors required for a special relationship were satisfied. Thus, the dispositive issue of fact discerned by the Appellate Division was with respect to proximate cause, not special relationship.
I disagree with the majority's conclusion that municipal EMTs perform a governmental function. The provision of medical treatment, whether by an EMT or a doctor, either in an emergency or a non-emergency situation, simply is not a governmental function.
Here, the City, by dispatching an ambulance to plaintiffs' home where EMTs treated Tiffany, acted in a dual proprietary and governmental capacity. As we observed in Matter of World Trade Ctr. Bombing Litig. (17 N.Y.3d 428 [2011]):
Nor does our decision in Laratro mandate that the entire EMS operation be considered a governmental function. In Laratro, we determined that, absent a special relationship, the City could not be held liable for the alleged negligence of a 911 operator because the dispatch of ambulances in response to 911 calls is a governmental function (see 8 NY3d at 82-83). This case does not involve a 911 operator's delay in responding to an emergency call; rather, it concerns the allegedly negligent medical care and treatment rendered by the EMTs once they arrived at plaintiffs' home. Thus, as plaintiffs and my concurring colleagues point out, Laratro does not necessarily extend to, or control the outcome, in this case.
It is beyond dispute that in New York, government hospitals are subject to liability for negligent medical treatment without any required showing by a plaintiff of a special relationship (see e.g. Schrempf, 66 NY2d at 293-294; Sukhraj v New York City Health & Hosps. Corp., 106 A.D.3d 809 [2d Dept 2013]).
I share the concerns of my colleagues that tort liability for negligent treatment rendered by municipal EMTs and other medical personnel will burden the public fisc and possibly dissuade municipalities from continuing to provide emergency medical treatment in connection with their ambulance services. However, I do not believe this concern should cause us to employ a strained legal analysis in order to reach a desired result.
In the majority's view, defining medical treatment by EMTs as a governmental function, and requiring plaintiffs to demonstrate that a special duty exists, advances public policy by limiting the exposure of municipalities to excessive tort recoveries. This decision will not achieve the majority's goal. It will be the
In that regard, unlike my concurring colleagues who find no record evidence of a special relationship, I think the facts of this case demonstrate that the EMTs assumed a special duty toward plaintiffs (see 90 AD3d at 504). Merely by undertaking to treat Tiffany, the EMTs assumed an affirmative duty to act on her behalf (see Cuffy, 69 NY2d at 260 [a municipality assumes an affirmative duty to act "through promises or actions"]) and plaintiffs justifiably relied on the EMTs "who had taken control of the emergency situation" (90 AD3d at 505). Even if I could agree with the majority that the EMTs were performing a governmental function, I would nonetheless conclude that there is no triable issue regarding a special relationship between plaintiffs and the EMTs.
Order affirmed, with costs, and certified question answered in the affirmative.