NY court allows Canada's law in bus crash
ALBANY -- New York's top court ruled Thursday that Canada's limit on damages for pain and suffering applies to claims against the Canadian charter bus company and driver deemed 90 percent liable for the 2005 crash that killed three passengers traveling with an Ontario women's youth hockey team. But the Court of Appeals said New York's law with no limit on damages applies to the Pennsylvania company whose tractor-trailer parked on the highway shoulder was hit by the bus in western New York, killing the truck driver. The trucking defendants were deemed 10 percent responsible.
Dissenting judges in the 5-2 ruling said it allows for "a patently absurd result" where the truckers could pay more despite having only 10 percent liability, and New York laws should apply to both groups.
The bus was carrying the youth hockey team from Windsor, Ontario, when it swerved off Interstate 390 about 30 miles south of Rochester in January 2005. Another 19 people on the bus were injured.
Last year, a Livingston County jury awarded $2.25 million in damages to three injured passengers after a six-day trial. Several other damages cases are pending.
The rules for tort liability "with multi-state contacts" require examining each party individually to determine which laws apply, according to the court majority.
Under Canada's laws, the bus company would pay no more than about $310,000 -- the cap as of two years ago.
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