THE ACTIONS TAKEN BY THE 911 DISPATCHER AND THE EMERGENCY MEDICAL TECHNICIANS CONSTITUTED THE EXERCISE OF DISCRETION IN THE PERFORMANCE A GOVERNMENT FUNCTION; THE GOVERNMENT FUNCTION IMMUNITY DEFENSE INSULATED THE MUNICIPAL DEFENDANTS FROM LIABILITY (SECOND DEPT).
The Second Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined the municipal defendants were entitled to summary judgment dismissing the negligence action stemming from decisions made by emergency personnel in response to a 911 call. The emergency services, including the dispatch of a “Basic Life Support” (BLS), as opposed to an “Advanced Life Support” (ALS) ambulance, and the attempts to intubate the unresponsive plaintiff rather than to immediately transport her to the hospital, were deemed the exercise of discretion while performing a government function. Discretionary actions taken in performance of a government function are insulated from liability by the government-function-immunity defense:
“[W]hen both the special duty requirement and the governmental function immunity defense are asserted in a negligence case, the rule that emerges is that government action, if discretionary, may not be a basis for liability, while ministerial actions may be, but only if they violate a special duty owed to the plaintiff, apart from any duty to the public in general” … . In other words, in a negligence action where the municipality has raised the governmental function immunity defense, a plaintiff may only hold the municipality liable for actions taken in its governmental capacity where (1) a special duty exists and (2) the municipality’s actions were ministerial in nature and not the result of discretionary decision-making … . * * *
The defendants demonstrated that the 911 dispatcher’s decision, among other things, to send a BLS ambulance rather than an ALS ambulance “was discretionary and, therefore, protected by the doctrine of governmental immunity” … . Under the circumstances presented, the defendants also established that the EMTs exercised their discretion in declining to immediately transport [plaintiff] to the nearby hospital and to instead wait for the paramedics in the ALS ambulance to arrive. Similarly, the defendants demonstrated that the actions of the paramedics resulted from discretionary decision-making, including with regard to the type of treatment to render … . Walker-Rodriguez v City of New York, 2024 NY Slip Op 05237, Second Dept 10-23-24
Practice Point: Consult this decision for a concise but complete one-paragraph compilation of all the issues associated with municipal liability for negligence–proprietary versus government function, special duty, discretionary versus ministerial acts, etc.