Opinion
December 22, 1953.
Appeal from Court of Claims.
Present — Foster, P.J., Bergan, Coon, Halpern and Imrie, JJ.
The two decedents were last seen alive shortly before they started upon an automobile ride on a State highway paralleling the Oswegatchie River. Several weeks later, the automobile and the bodies of two decedents were found in the river. No one knows the circumstances under which the automobile left the highway. The only claim of negligence is that there was no guardrail between the highway and the bank of the river. The road was level and straight in the vicinity of the apparent accident; there was no showing of any special danger which required the erection of a guardrail. Furthermore, the claimants' theory was entirely speculative; there was no evidence that the absence of a guardrail was one of the proximate causes of the accident. Judgments unanimously affirmed, without costs.