RARE CASE IN WHICH A SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE PLAINTIFF AND THE CITY MAY RENDER THE CITY LIABLE FOR A DELAYED RESPONSE TO A 911 CALL; BECAUSE THE DELAY MAY NOT HAVE BEEN THE RESULT OF A DELIBERATE EXERCISE OF DISCRETION, THE DOCTRINE OF GOVERNMENTAL IMMUNITY MAY NOT APPLY (FIRST DEPT).
The First Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined plaintiff had sufficiently alleged the existence of a special relationship with the city and dismissal based on the doctrine of governmental function immunity was not appropriate. Plaintiff called 911 and was told the ambulance was on its way. Plaintiff had other options for assistance but relied on the 911 operator’s statement. Apparently the ambulance response was delayed. Absent a special relationship a municipality may not be held liable for breach of a duty owed to the general public. Governmental immunity generally protects discretionary actions. Here the delayed response may not have been due to the deliberate exercise of discretion and therefore may not be protected by the immunity doctrine:
Plaintiff’s allegations are sufficient to establish a special relationship between the City and the decedent that brings her claim within the exception to the general rule that a municipality may not be held liable to a person injured by the breach of a duty that it owes to the general public — such as the duty to provide ambulance service … . The allegation that the 911 operator told plaintiff that “we are on our way” is sufficient to establish defendants’ assumption of an affirmative duty to act on the decedent’s behalf … . Plaintiff sufficiently alleged justifiable reliance on the call operator’s statement through an affidavit submitted in opposition to defendants’ motion in which she listed several additional actions she would have taken to secure help but for the operator’s assurance … .
Dismissal is also not appropriate at this stage pursuant to the doctrine of governmental function immunity, which shields public entities from liability for “discretionary” actions taken during the performance of “governmental functions” … . It is undisputed that the provision of emergency care by FDNY EMTs constitutes a governmental function … . It is also clear that determinations of whether and when to dispatch an ambulance, the type of ambulance to dispatch and from where, and the route the ambulance should take are discretionary in nature … . However, it is not clear that the delay at issue here was due to an affirmative exercise of this discretion, rather than an unintentional failure to timely dispatch an ambulance … . Xenias v City of New York, 2021 NY Slip Op 00647, First Dept 2-4-21