Staten Island Ferry damage claims now uncappable

by mardoux | February 26, 2007 at 04:21 pm
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Staten Island Ferry

Staten Island Ferry

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This is very good news for families and current victims of the horrible crash; shame on the city for trying to implement an age-old rule with little current applicability.

A federal judge today rejected New York City’s attempt to use an obscure 19th-century maritime law to cap its liability in the 2003 crash of the Staten Island Ferry at $14 million.

The ruling exposes the city to tens of millions of dollars in damage awards to relatives of those killed and to scores of people injured when the boat, the Andrew J. Barberi, crashed into a maintenance pier at the Staten Island ferry terminal.

The city had argued that the accident was covered by an 1851 act, aimed at encouraging investment in the shipbuilding industry, that limited a boat owner’s liability to the value of the boat minus the repair costs — in this case $14.4 million.

The city has already paid out $27.6 million to settle two-thirds of the 186 damage claims. Of the 11 people killed in the crash, the estates of only two have settled with the city, for $3 million and $450,000.

The amounts of many settlements were held down, lawyers for the plaintiffs said, by the city’s argument that if it succeeded in capping the liability, the plaintiffs stood to win relatively little.

“The courthouse door is now open for all of the claimants to get just and proper compensation,” said Anthony Bisignano III, a lawyer for 10 of the remaining 65 plaintiffs. Mr. Bisignano said that in addition to the nine outstanding death claims, there were many claims from passengers with serious injuries, including amputations and paralysis.

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scottcrumpler

Thanks for posting this.  It would be nice if New York City could start accepting some accountability for the decline of its transit system over the past 5 years, but at least this shows that the courts won't let them off the hook when accidents happen.  And they're certainly more likely to happen when the whole system is in decline, so who knows; maybe the city will start to shape up.

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