From This Week’s “Latest Posts” Section (Below):
Are the NYS Cannabis Control Board’s Regulations Allowing Searches of Cannabis Retailers’ Places of Business Constitutional?
When Can the Procedures Employed by an Agency Be Reviewed by a Court Without Triggering the “Exhaustion of Remedies” Requirement?
Matter of Town of Carmel v New York City Water Bd., 2026 NY Slip Op 03680, Second Dept 6-10-26
Is the NYS Statute of Limitations for Toxic Torts Pre-Empted by Federal Law?
Klaus v Town of Brookhaven, 2026 NY Slip Op 03669, Second Dept 6-10-26
When Does the “Savings Clause,” Allowing Re-Filing of an Action Within 6 Months of Dismissal, Begin to Run If the Dismissal Is Appealed?
Lewis v TCPRNC, LLC, 2026 NY Slip Op 03635, First Dept 6-9-26
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PETTIONERS (LICENSED CANNABIS RETAILERS) DID NOT DEMONSTRATE THAT THE RESPONDENT AGENCY’S REGULATIONS CONCERNING INSPECTIONS, SEARCHES AND SEIZURES AT PETITIONERS’ PLACES OF BUSINESS ARE UNCONSTITUTIONAL; THE ALLEGATION THAT THE MANNER IN WHICH THE INSPECTIONS ARE CONDUCTED VIOLATES THE CONSTITUTION IS PREMATURE BECAUSE THE ALLEGATION HAS NOT YET BEEN SUBJECTED TO ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW, I.E., THE “EXHAUSTION OF REMEDIES” REQUIREMENT HAS NOT BEEN MET (THIRD DEPT).
The Third Department, reversing Supreme Court, in a full-fledged opinion by Justice Corcoran, determined the preliminary injunction prohibiting certain inspections of petitioners’ businesses, which are licensed for the retail sale of cannabis, should not have been granted. The respondent is an agency, the NYS Cannabis Control Board.
… [Re:] petitioners’ attempt to show the likelihood of a successful constitutional challenge, we find that Supreme Court abused its discretion in granting the preliminary injunction because petitioners failed to show that the statutory and regulatory scheme is invalid in all of its applications … . * * * When viewed as a whole, we find that the statutory and regulatory framework provides “meaningful limitation[s]” on an inspector’s discretion and ensures that “the search is limited in scope to that necessary to meet the interest that legitimized the search in the first place” … . …
To the extent petitioners challenge the manner in which inspections were applied to their particular businesses, these “as-applied” claims are premature because they have not been subjected to administrative review. A facial challenge requires examination of the statute “on a cold page” and without reference to the particular conduct … , whereas an “as-applied” challenge “requires an analysis of the facts of a particular case” … . Matter of Super Smoke N Save LLC v New York State Cannabis Control Bd., 2026 NY Slip Op 03715, Third Dept 6-11-26
Practice Point: A court can review an agency’s regulations which are alleged to be unconstitutional “on a cold page,” but a court cannot review the manner in which the regulations are applied absent an agency determination (the “exhaustion of remedies” rule in administrative law).
PETITIONER ALLEGED EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION BASED LARGELY ON THE EMPLOYER’S REFUSAL TO ACCOMMODATE PETITIONER’S DISABILITIES BY ALLOWING HER TO WORK REMOTELY FROM HOME; THE EMPLOYER DID NOT PRESENT SUFFICIENT FACTUAL INFORMATION TO WARRANT SUMMARY JUDGMENT; CRITERIA EXPLAINED (THIRD DEPT).
The Third Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined there were questions of fact precluding summary judgment on petitioner’s employment discrimination allegations which are based largely on the employer’s refusal to accommodate petitioner’s disabilities by allowing her to work remotely from home. The decision is too detailed to fairly summarize here. The decision lays out in detail what an employer must demonstrate to warrant summary judgment in this context:
“[T]he first step in providing a reasonable accommodation is to engage in a good faith interactive process that assesses the needs of the disabled individual and the reasonableness of the accommodation requested” … . “[T]he essential functions of the position need to be part of the interactive process the law requires, not a unilateral employer decision cloaked by business judgement” … . An employer generally cannot obtain summary judgment on a discrimination claim unless the record demonstrates that it engaged in a good faith interactive process … . * * *
To meet its prima facie burden on summary judgment, [the employer] sought to prove that petitioner could not perform those essential functions, even with an accommodation… .
Bereft of rudimentary discovery such as depositions of the parties, [the employer] failed to establish the essential functions of petitioner’s position. “To avoid unfounded reliance on uninformed assumptions, the identification of the essential functions of a job requires a fact-specific inquiry into both the employer’s description of a job and how the job is actually performed in practice” … . * * *
… [The employer] did not address which, if any, of petitioner’s duties must be performed in person. * * *
… [The employer] failed to demonstrate that petitioner’s requested accommodation would constitute an undue hardship. Matter of Smelyansky v New York State Off. of Gen. Servs., 2026 NY Slip Op 03708, Third Dept 6-11-26
Practice Point: Consult this decision for insight into what an employer must demonstrate to warrant summary judgment on an employment-discrimination action alleging the employer’s failure to accommodate petitioner’s disability.
DEFENDANT ALLEGED HIS ATTORNEY DELIBERATELY WITHHELD IMPEACHMENT EVIDENCE ABOUT AN EXPERT WITNESS WHEN HIS ATTORNEY PERSUADED HIM TO HIRE THE EXPERT; BECAUSE OF THE IMPORTANCE OF THE EXPERT’S TESTIMONY, A HEARING ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO VACATE HIS CONVICTION ON INEFFECTIVE-ASSISTANCE GROUNDS SHOULD HAVE BEEN HELD; MATTER REMITTED (THIRD DEPT).
The Third Department, reversing County Court, determined County Court should have held a hearing on defendant’s motion to vacate the judgment of conviction on ineffective-assistance grounds. Defendant alleged his attorney, Mary Rain, deliberately withheld impeachment information about an expert witness, Baerthlein, when persuading defendant to hire the expert:
… [D]efendant’s claim is that Rain was ineffective because she deliberately withheld impeachment evidence about Baerthlein when she persuaded defendant to hire him as an expert and the sole defense witness; that same impeachment evidence was ultimately used to vitiate Rain’s chosen defense; and that defendant would not have retained Baerthlein if Rain had disclosed the evidence in the first place. Given the central importance of Baerthlein’s credibility — particularly “in a case such as this, where casting doubt on the prosecution’s medical proof is the crux of the defense” … — Rain’s alleged failures, if true, were not the product of a legitimate but ill-advised trial strategy … . People v Thornton, 2026 NY Slip Op 03699, Third Dept 6-11-26
Practice Point: Here the allegation defense counsel deliberately withheld impeachment evidence about an expert witness while persuading defendant to hire the expert raised a factual question which required a hearing re: defendant’s motion to vacate his conviction on ineffective-assistance grounds.
DEFENDANT HAD SUFFICIENT CONTACTS WITH NEW YORK TO ALLOW THIS BREACH OF CONTRACT ACTION TO BE BROUGHT IN NEW YORK (FIRST DEPT).
The First Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined defendant, which issued preferred stock to plaintiff, had sufficient contacts with New York to bring the breach of contract action in New York:
Pursuant to the certificates of designation governing the preferred stock issued by defendant to plaintiff, defendant was required to provide dividends to a paying agent, which then provided the funds to a depository to pay the preferred stockholders. To facilitate dividend distributions, defendant designated entities located in New York as the paying agent and the depository. Further, defendant’s agreements with each of the depositories required the depository to maintain facilities in New York City. Defendant also contracted with multiple underwriters based in New York to sell the preferred stock. * * *
… [The] New York-based contacts are sufficiently related to plaintiff’s underlying breach of contract claim because “at least one element [of the cause of action] arises from the New York contacts” … . Defendant allegedly breached its duty under the certificates of designation not to sell stock to its affiliates “unless full cumulative dividends on the [preferred stock] . . . have been paid.” Defendant’s alleged breach consisted of not only its agreement to sell stock to one of its affiliates but also its failure to make full cumulative dividend payments to the preferred stockholders before completing the sale. … [D]efendant’s failure to make dividend payments, which necessarily would have been sent to its paying agent in New York, sufficiently connects defendant’s contacts with New York to the breach of contract cause of action … . Katz v Navios Mar. Holdings, Inc., 2026 NY Slip Op 03731, First Dept 6-11-26
Practice Point: Consult this decision for insight into when a defendant’s contacts with New York are sufficient to support a breach of contract action.brought in New York.
THE BELATED TURNING OVER OF ROSARIO MATERIAL PREJUDICED THE DEFENSE; NEW TRIAL ORDERED (SECOND DEPT).
The Second Department, reversing defendant’s conviction and ordering a new trial, determined the People’s belated turning over of Rosario material to the defense deprived defendant of a fair trial. The Rosario material consisted of notes taken by social workers describing the complainant’s therapy sessions. Defendant was prejudiced by the inability to adequately review the notes or to have an expert review them before the cross-examination of the complainant. The fact that the judge precluded the notes as a remedial measure was not helpful to the defendant:
… [D]efendant correctly contends that he is entitled to a new trial based on the People’s belated disclosure of certain notes between the complainant and social workers describing therapy sessions. The social workers were employed by the People, and their notes at all times had been in the People’s possession. The People must turn over to the defense any prior statements by a witness which relate to the subject matter of that witness’s testimony for use on cross-examination … . The material must be provided at a time when it can be useful to the defense … . When the late disclosure of Rosario material results in substantial prejudice to the defendant, a new trial is required … . Here, the defendant was substantially prejudiced by the late disclosure of these notes, as he was unable to sufficiently review the material or to retain an expert to do so. Moreover, the prejudice was not obviated by the remedial action taken by the Supreme Court, since the preclusion of the notes was not helpful to the defendant … . In light of the substantial prejudice to the defendant that resulted from the late disclosure of the Rosario material, a new trial is required … . People v Ibrahim, 2026 NY Slip Op 03687, Second Dept 6-10-26
Practice Point: The belated turning over of Rosario material deprived defendant of an adequate opportunity to review it before the cross-examination of the complainant warranting a new trial.
“EXHAUSTION OF REMEMDIES” IS NOT ALWAYS REQUIRED BEFORE AN AGENCY ACTION CAN BE CHALLENGED IN COURT; HERE THE CHALLENGE INVOLVED A PURE QUESTION OF LAW (SECOND DEPT).
The Second Department noted that the “exhaustion of remedies” rule does not apply to administrative actions where, as here, an agency’s action is challenged as either unconstitutional or beyond the agency’s power. Here petitioners alleged the respondent NYC Water Board overcharged for excess water consumption. That agency’s procedure was properly reviewed by the court (but the argument was ultimately rejected):
… “[E]xhaustion of administrative remedies is not required where an agency’s action is challenged as either unconstitutional or beyond its grant of power, or when resort to an administrative remedy would be futile, or when its pursuit would cause irreparable injury” … . This is because while review of some claims “hinges upon factual issues reviewable at the administrative level [which] must first be addressed to the agency so that a necessary factual record can be established” … , other claims present “a circumstance where the issue to be determined is purely a question of law” … . To the extent the fifth cause of action sought a declaration that the Water Board is acting in contravention of an established statutory scheme for setting rates for excess water consumption, exhaustion was not required … , and the court should not have dismissed that portion of the fifth cause of action on those procedural grounds. Matter of Town of Carmel v New York City Water Bd., 2026 NY Slip Op 03680, Second Dept 6-10-26
Practice Point: This decision presents an example of when a court challenge to an agency action does not trigger the “exhaustion of remedies” requirement. Here the challenge presented a pure question of law which did not require the development of a factual record at the agency level.
HERE THE STATE STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS FOR TOXIC TORTS ACTIONS WAS PRE-EMPTED BY A FEDERAL “DISCOVERY RULE” WHICH ALLOWS A TOXIC-TORT ACTION TO BE BROUGHT WITHIN ONE YEAR AFTER THE DATE PLAINTIFF KNEW OR REASONABLY SHOULD HAVE KNOWN THE CAUSE OF AN INJURY, EVEN IF MORE THAN FIVE YEARS HAVE ELAPSED SINCE THE DISCOVERY OF THE INJURY (SECOND DEPT).
The Second Department, in a full-fledged opinion by Justice Dowling, determined the federal “discovery rule” for toxic tort actions pre-empts the state statute of limitations. The lawsuit alleged a town landfill near a school emitted toxic materials causing illness among the school’s staff and students:
42 USC § 9658 has been deemed a “discovery rule” … , and “does not purport to create an entirely new statute of limitations framework for state toxic tort actions” … . Instead, the statute provides “a limited ‘[e]xception to State statutes’ [that] applies only if the state statute ‘provides a commencement date which is earlier than the federally required commencement date'” … . Thus, in New York, where suit was not brought within three years of the discovery-of-injury date as provided by CPLR 214-c(2), the primary effect of 42 USC § 9658 is to allow a plaintiff to bring suit within one year after “the date the plaintiff knew (or reasonably should have known)” the cause of an injury, even if more than five years have elapsed since discovery of the injury … . * * *
… [W]ith respect to those plaintiffs in this action who did not bring suit within three years of the discovery of their alleged injuries (see CPLR 214-c[2]), 42 USC § 9658 applies to allow those plaintiffs to bring suit within one year after “the date the plaintiff knew (or reasonably should have known)” the cause of an injury, even if more than five years have elapsed since discovery of the injury … . Klaus v Town of Brookhaven, 2026 NY Slip Op 03669, Second Dept 6-10-26
Practice Point: Here the state statute of limitations for toxic tort cases was pre-empted by a federal “discovery rule” which allows suit within one year after “the date the plaintiff knew (or reasonably should have known)” the cause of an injury, even if more than five years have elapsed since discovery of the injury.
THE BANK’S NOTICE OF DEFAULT WHICH STATED THE MORTGAGE DEBT WOULD BE ACCELERATED IF THE ARREARS WERE NOT PAID IN 32 DAYS WAS A STATEMENT OF FUTURE INTENT AND DID NOT SERVE TO ACCELERATE THE DEBT; THEREFORE THE NOTICE DID NOT TRIGGER THE SIX-YEAR STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS AND THE FORECLOSURE ACTION WAS TIMELY BROUGHT (SECOND DEPT).
The Second Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined the notice by the bank stating that the mortgage debt would be accelerated if the defendant did not pay the arrears withing 32 days was merely a statement of future intent and did not serve to accelerate the debt. Therefore the notice did not trigger the running of the six-year statute of limitations and the foreclosure action should not have been dismissed:
… [T]he July 31, 2010 default notice did not accelerate the debt. The language in the default notice, that the mortgage debt would be accelerated if Edmund J. Burns, Jr., did not pay the arrears within 32 days from the date of the default notice, was merely an expression of future intent that fell short of an actual acceleration of the mortgage debt … . The mortgage debt was not accelerated until the plaintiff commenced the first action on December 12, 2012, and elected in the complaint to call due the entire loan amount and demanded payment of the outstanding loan in full … . This action was timely commenced on June 29, 2017, prior to the expiration of the statute of limitations on December 12, 2018. Bank of N.Y. Mellon Trust Co., N.A. v Burns, 2026 NY Slip Op 03658, Second Dept 6-10-26
Practice Point: In a foreclosure action, a notice of default which states the mortgage debt will be accelerated if the arrears are not paid in 32 days does not accelerate the debt and therefore does not trigger the six-year statute of limitations.
A PLAINTIFF CAN USE THE SIX-MONTH “SAVINGS CLAUSE” IN CPLR 205(A) MORE THAN ONCE; WHEN THERE HAS BEEN AN APPEAL OF THE DISMISSAL OF THE COMPLAINT, THE SIX-MONTH PERIOD DOESN’T START TO RUN UNTIL 30 DAYS AFTER SERVICE OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION’S ORDER WITH NOTICE OF ENTRY (FIRST DEPT).
The First Department determined the dismissal of the complaint should have been “without prejudice” because plaintiff is entitled to use the six-month “savings clause” (CPLR 205(a)) more than once. The six-month period begins to run when when an appeal taken as of right is exhausted. Therefore the six-month period won’t start running until 30 days after the service of the First Department’s order with notice of entry:
The motion court properly determined that plaintiff did not have capacity to initiate this action because plaintiff has not yet obtained the necessary letters of administration. Dismissal of the action was therefore warranted. However, plaintiff is entitled to use the savings clause of CPLR 205(a) more than once … . Accordingly, we modify to make the dismissal without prejudice… .
Defendant’s contention that the grace period for plaintiff to bring a third action expired on December 3, 2025 (six months after the order appealed from was filed with notice of entry) is unavailing. “[A] prior action terminates for purposes of CPLR 205(a) when an appeal taken as of right is exhausted” … . Thus, “the six-month period for recommencing an action . . . begins to run once 30 days have elapsed following service of [our] order . . . with notice of entry” … . Lewis v TCPRNC, LLC, 2026 NY Slip Op 03635, First Dept 6-9-26
Practice Point: The six-month “savings clause” in CPR 205(a) can be used more than once.
Practice Point: Where, as here, there has been an appeal of the initial dismissal of the complaint, the CPLR 205(a) six-month period does not start to run until 30 days after the service of the appellate division’s order with notice of entry.
PLAINTIFF IN THIS SLIP AND FALL CASE DID NOT CALL HER TREATING PHYSICIAN AS A WITNESS AND DID NOT DEMONSTRATE THE PHYSICIAN WAS UNAVAILABLE OR THAT HIS TESTIMONY WOULD BE CUMULATIVE; PLAINTIFF RELIED SOLELY ON THE TESTIMONY OF A PSYCHIATRIST WHO FIRST SAW PLAINTIFF SIX YEARS AFTER THE ACCIDENT; DEFENDANT’S REQUEST FOR A “MISSING WITNESS” JURY INSTRUCTION SHOULD HAVE BEEN GRANTED; VERDICT SET ASIDE (FIRST DEPT).
The First Department, granting defendant’s motion to set aside the jury verdict and direct a new trial in this sidewalk slip and fall case, determined plaintiff’s failure to call her treating physician as a witness warranted the “missing witness” jury instruction. Plaintiff called only, Dr. Guy, a psychiatrist who saw plaintiff only a few times six years after the injury:
Plaintiff alleges that she was injured when she was walking on the sidewalk adjacent to defendant’s property when her foot became trapped in a hole, causing her to fall. At trial, plaintiff alleged that because of the accident, she suffered a cervical herniation that caused radiculopathy and required surgery. She further alleged that injuries to her knee and her lumbar spine would require future surgery.
The trial court should have given the jury a missing witness charge with regard to Dr. Jason Gallina, plaintiff’s treating physician and surgeon from the period beginning months after the accident until at least a year afterward. Dr. Gallina was the orthopedic surgeon who performed plaintiff’s cervical fusion surgery, and he was the doctor who allegedly recommended the lumbar surgery that plaintiff contended she would need in the future.
The law is well settled that a missing witness charge is warranted for the failure to call a treating physician as a witness at trial, unless the party opposing the inference shows that the witness is either unavailable or not under the party’s control, or that the witness’s testimony would be cumulative … . * * *
Although the burden was on plaintiff to show that Dr. Gallina was unavailable or not under her control, she made no such showing … . … [T]he testimony from Dr. Gallina would not have been cumulative. Dr. Guy is a physiatrist, while Dr. Gallina is the orthopedic surgeon who performed plaintiff’s surgery. Encarnacion v St. Barnabas Hosp., 2026 NY Slip Op 03630, First Dept 6-9-26
Practice Point: The plaintiff in a personal injury action must call the treating physician as a witness or adequately explain the failure to do so. In the absence of an adequate explanation, the defendant is entitled to a “missing witness” jury instruction.
ONLY A DEFECT APPARENT ON THE FACE OF THE NOTICE OF LIEN WARRANTS SUMMARY DISCHARGE OF A MECHANIC’S LIEN; ANY OTHER THEORY MUST AWAIT TRIAL OF THE FORECLOSURE ACTION (FIRST DEPT).
The First Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined petitioner should not have been awarded summary discharge of a mechanic’s lien. Summary discharge is available only when a defect in the lien is apparent on the face of the notice of lien. Any other theory must await trial of the foreclosure action:
The court should not have granted the petition for summary discharge of the mechanic’s lien that respondent placed on petitioner’s property. As relevant here, summary discharge of a lien is available “[w]here it appears from the face of the notice of lien that the claimant has no valid lien by reason of the character of the labor or materials furnished and for which a lien is claimed” (Lien Law § 19[6]). “[A] lien may be summarily discharged only for defects appearing on its face” … , and “any dispute regarding the validity of the lien must await trial of the foreclosure action” (… Matter of Northside Tower Realty, LLC v Klin Constr. Group, Inc., 73 AD3d 1072, 1072 [2d Dept 2010] [“A court has no inherent power to vacate or discharge a notice of lien except as authorized by Lien Law § 19(6)”]).
Petitioner identifies no defect appearing on the face of the notice of lien, raising instead lack of consent and other issues related to the validity of the lien. Those issues cannot be resolved under Lien Law § 19(6) … . Lien Law § 38 does not provide alternative grounds to affirm the lien discharge, as no court has issued an order requiring respondent to provide an itemized statement … . Matter of Broadway PT 1710 LLC v Kingdom Assoc., Inc., 2026 NY Slip Op 03624, First Dept 6-9-26
Practice Point: Any defect warranting summary discharge of a mechanic’s lien must be apparent on the face of the notice of lien.
THE ORAL COLLOQUY FOR THE WAIVER OF APPEAL WAS DEFECTIVE; THE DEFECT WAS NOT CURED BY THE WRITTEN WAIVER BECAUSE DEFENDANT WAS NOT ASKED WHETHER HE READ OR UNDERSTOOD IT BEFORE SIGNING; DEFENDANT DID NOT ADMIT TO HAVING AN INTENT TO COMMIT A CRIME WHEN HE ENTERED THE HOUSE, HE ADMITTED ONLY THE INTENT TO RETRIEVE HIS OWN PROPERTY; THE PLEA TO BURGLARY WAS VACATED (FOURTH DEPT).
The Fourth Department, vacating defendant’s guilty plea, determined defendant’s waiver of appeal was invalid and he did not admit to an essential element of burglary, the intent to commit a crime upon entering:
… [W]e agree with defendant that his waiver of the right to appeal is invalid. Supreme Court’s oral colloquy was overbroad inasmuch as the court told defendant that his waiver of the right to appeal marks the “end of the case.” Although the record establishes that defendant executed a written waiver of the right to appeal, the written waiver “does not cure the deficient oral colloquy because the court did not inquire of defendant whether he understood the written waiver or whether he had read the waiver before signing it” … .
Defendant contends that his plea is invalid because the plea allocution negated an element of the crime to which he pleaded guilty. As defendant acknowledges, he never moved to withdraw his plea, nor did he ever seek to vacate the judgment of conviction. This case, however, falls within the rare exception to the preservation requirement … . Burglary in the first degree requires that a person knowingly enter or remain unlawfully in a dwelling with the “intent to commit a crime therein” (Penal Law § 140.30). Here, defendant twice indicated during his factual allocution that he did not intend to commit any crimes when he entered the house in question and, while he admitted that he intended to retrieve his own property, retrieving one’s own property does not establish larcenous intent … . Although the court attempted to conduct an inquiry following defendant’s insistence that he did not intend to commit any crimes when he entered the house, such inquiry was insufficient … . The court therefore erred in accepting defendant’s guilty plea … . People v Small, 2026 NY Slip Op 03560, Fourth Dept 6-5-26
Practice Point: Re: a waiver of appeal, a defect in the oral appeal-waiver colloquy with the judge is not cured by a written waiver unless the defendant is asked whether he read and understood the written waiver before signing it.
Practice Point: Entering a home with the intent to retrieve one’s own property is not “burglary” because the entry was not accompanied by an intent to commit a crime.
HERE THE VILLAGE SOUGHT TO ANNUL THE CITY’S IMPOSITION OF HIGHER SEWER CHARGES; THE CITY INTERPOSED SEVERAL COUNTERCLAIMS THAT WERE BASED ON THEORIES NOT INCLUDED IN THE CITY’S EARLIER NOTICE OF CLAIM WHICH ALLEGED ONLY BREACH OF CONTRACT; BECAUSE THE COUNTERCLAIMS RAISED THEORIES NOT ENCOMPASSED BY THE CITY’S EARLIER NOTICE OF CLAIM, THEY WERE DISMISSED (FOURTH DEPT).
The Fourth Department, reversing (modifying) Supreme Court, determined all of the city’s counterclaims against the village should have been dismissed for failure to meet the “notice of claim” requirements. The village commenced this hybrid CPLR article 78 and declaratory judgment action seeking to annul the city’s determination to charge a higher rate for sewer services than had been charged under the parties “longtime agreement.” The city interposed counterclaims based on theories not encompassed by the city’s notice of claim. All the counterclaims should have been dismissed on that ground:
“CPLR 9802 sets forth the procedure by which certain actions against villages may be maintained” … . “In addition to providing for the maintenance of contract actions against villages, the statute also provides, in pertinent part, that ‘no other action shall be maintained against [a] village unless the same shall be commenced within one year after the cause of action therefor shall have accrued, nor unless a notice of claim shall have been made and served in compliance with [General Municipal Law § 50-e]’ ” …). Consequently, “[i]t is a condition precedent to, and indeed an essential element of, any cause of action . . . against a village that the [claimant] have served upon the village a notice of claim setting forth, inter alia, the nature of the claim and the items of damage or injuries claimed to have been sustained” … . “A claimant need not state a precise cause of action in haec verba in a notice of claim . . . , but a claimant may not raise in the [pleading] causes of action or legal theories that were not directly or indirectly mentioned in the notice of claim and that change the nature of the earlier claim or assert a new one” … . Furthermore, “the requirements of notice of claim statutes[, including CPLR 9802,] apply to the filing of counterclaims” … . “[T]he notice of claim requirements of CPLR 9802 [also] apply to . . . causes of action [or claims] for declaratory relief” … .
Here, the notice of claim was premised exclusively on the theory that the City was entitled to monetary damages and a declaratory judgment based on the Village’s alleged breach of the parties’ agreement. Conversely, the City’s first counterclaim seeks a declaration that the agreement had actually expired before the breach alleged in the notice of claim, and the third counterclaim seeks monetary damages for debt allegedly incurred by the Village after the purported expiration of the agreement. The fourth and fifth counterclaims for quantum meruit and unjust enrichment, respectively, are also premised on legal theories other than breach of contract. We thus conclude that those counterclaims improperly raise claims or legal theories “that were not directly or indirectly mentioned in the notice of claim and that change the nature of the earlier claim[s] or assert . . . new one[s]” … . Village of Allegany v City of Olean, 2026 NY Slip Op 03555, Fourth Dept 6-5-26
Practice Point: A condition precedent to an action against a village is the filing of a notice of claim. The condition applies to counterclaims and requests for declaratory judgments. Here the city’s earlier notice of claim against the village was based solely on an alleged breach of contract. The subsequent counterclaims raised by the city in response to the village’s Article 78 proceeding were based on theories not encompassed by the city’s earlier notice of claim and were dismissed on that ground.
MOTHER DEMONSTRATED THE SCHOOL DISTRICT HAD TIMELY ACTUAL KNOWLEDGE OF THE FACTS UNDERLYING THE ALLEGATION THE SCHOOL DISTRICT WAS NEGLIGENT IN ADDRESSING THE BULLYING OF HER SON; MOTHER’S APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO FILE A LATE NOTICE OF CLAIM SHOULD HAVE BEEN GRANTED (FOURTH DEPT).
The Fourth Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined claimant-mother demonstrated the school district had timely knowledge of the underlying facts of the potential negligence action against the district stemming from the bullying of her son. In addition, mother had a valid excuse for failing to file a timely notice of claim, i.e., she was involved in related Family Court proceedings against her son. Mother’s application for leave to file a late notice of claim should have been granted:
“General Municipal Law § 50-e (5) permits a court, in its discretion, to [grant leave] extend[ing] the time for a [claimant] to serve a notice of claim” (id. at 460-461). “The decision whether to grant such leave ‘compels consideration of all relevant facts and circumstances,’ including the ‘nonexhaustive list of factors’ in section 50-e (5)” … . ” ‘It is well settled that key factors for the court to consider in determining an application for leave to serve a late notice of claim are [1] whether the claimant has demonstrated a reasonable excuse for the delay, [2] whether the [school district] acquired actual knowledge of the essential facts constituting the claim within 90 days of its accrual or within a reasonable time thereafter, and [3] whether the delay would substantially prejudice the [school district] in maintaining a defense on the merits’ ” … . “The presence or absence of any given factor is not determinative of the application and, moreover, the factors are ‘directive rather than exclusive’ ” … .
We agree with claimant that respondent possessed actual knowledge of the essential facts constituting the claim within 90 days of its accrual … Claimant averred in her affidavit in support of the application that, during the relevant time period, she made numerous calls to the Waterloo Middle School and the Waterloo Village Police about the ongoing abuse and bullying of her son. Additionally, claimant submitted documentation pertaining to a Family Court proceeding that was brought against her son due to actions he took apparently out of his frustration with the alleged abuse and bullying. The documentation states that the school counselor was involved in that investigation and that claimant’s son was “well known” to him. The school counselor also expressed the opinion that the bullying incidents were “unfounded.” Cindy W. v Waterloo Cent. Sch. Dist., 2026 NY Slip Op 03554, Fourth Dept 6-5-26
Practice Point: Here, demonstrating that the school district had timely actual knowledge of the facts underling a negligence allegation against the district was a major factor in granting the application tor leave to file a late notice of claim.
HERE IN THIS PERSONAL INJURY ACTION, BASED ON PLAINTIFF’S ALLEGATION HE WAS AN INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR WORKING FOR THE INSURED EMPLOYER, THE INSURER WAS OBLIGATED TO DEFEND THE EMPLOYER; INSTEAD THE INSURER DISCLAIMED COVERAGE AND PLAINTIFF TOOK A DEFAULT JUDGMENT AGAINST THE EMPLOYER; ON APPEAL, THE INSURER WAS FOUND LIABLE FOR THE DEFAULT JUDGMENT UP TO THE POLICY LIMITS (FOURTH DEPT).
The Fourth Department, reversing (modifying) Supreme Court, determined defendant insurer was obligated to defend plaintiff’s personal injury action against plaintiff’s employer, Lipinski. Plaintiff alleged he was an independent contractor. The insurer disclaimed coverage on the ground plaintiff was an employee entitled to workers’ compensation. But, because of plaintiff’s allegation he was an independent contractor, the insurer was obligated to defend: The insurer was therefore obligated to pay the damages assessed in the default judgment against Lipinski up to the policy limits:
An insurer’s “duty to defend is exceedingly broad and an insurer will be called upon to provide a defense whenever the allegations of the complaint suggest . . . a reasonable possibility of coverage” … . “If, liberally construed, the claim is within the embrace of the policy, the insurer must come forward to defend its insured no matter how groundless, false or baseless the suit may be” … . Here, the complaint in the underlying personal injury action alleged that plaintiff was an employee of Lisinski but also included the alternative allegation that plaintiff was an independent contractor. Thus, defendant was required at least to provide Lisinski with a defense … . Instead, defendant disclaimed coverage on the ground, inter alia, that plaintiff was an employee and therefore a policy exclusion precluded coverage inasmuch as plaintiff would be covered by a workers’ compensation claim. * * *
An insurer’s “duty to defend is exceedingly broad and an insurer will be called upon to provide a defense whenever the allegations of the complaint suggest . . . a reasonable possibility of coverage” … . “If, liberally construed, the claim is within the embrace of the policy, the insurer must come forward to defend its insured no matter how groundless, false or baseless the suit may be” … . Here, the complaint in the underlying personal injury action alleged that plaintiff was an employee of Lisinski but also included the alternative allegation that plaintiff was an independent contractor. Thus, defendant was required at least to provide Lisinski with a defense … . Instead, defendant disclaimed coverage on the ground, inter alia, that plaintiff was an employee and therefore a policy exclusion precluded coverage inasmuch as plaintiff would be covered by a workers’ compensation claim. Shattuck v Dryden Mut. Ins. Co., 2026 NY Slip Op 03538, Fourth Dept 6-5-26
Practice Point: Consult this decision for insight into the risks taken by an insurer which wrongfully refuses to defend the insured and disclaims coverage. Plaintiff procured a default judgment against the insured and sued the insurer directly. The insurer was liable for the default judgment up to the policy limits.
EVIDENCE THAT THE A-FRAME LADDER WAS NOT SECURED AND WAS “IMPROPERLY PLACED” WARRANTED SUMMARY JUDGMENT IN THIS LADDER-FALL CASE ON THE LABOR LAW 240(1) CAUSE OF ACTION; THERE IS NO NEED TO DEMONSTRATE THE LADDER WAS DEFECTIVE (FOURTH DEPT).
The Fourth Department, reversing Supreme Court, over a two-justice dissent which argued there are triable issues of fact, determined plaintiff was entitled to summary judgment on the Labor Law 240(1) cause of action in this A-frame ladder-fall case. The court noted that plaintiff need not demonstrate the ladder was defective. It is sufficient to demonstrate the ladder was not secured and was “improperly placed:”
To establish a prima facie case of liability under Labor Law § 240 (1), a plaintiff must ” ‘show that the statute was violated and that the violation proximately caused [the] injury’ ” … . “Where a ladder is offered as a work-site safety device, it must be sufficient to provide proper protection. It is well settled that [the] failure to properly secure a ladder, to ensure that it remain[s] steady and erect while being used, constitutes a violation of Labor Law § 240 (1)” … . “[T]he fact that the ladder failed and [that the] plaintiff fell to the ground demonstrates that it was not so placed . . . as to give proper protection to [the plaintiff]” ( … “Evidence that the ladder was structurally sound and not defective is not relevant on the issue of whether it was properly placed” … ).
Here, plaintiff met his initial burden on the motion by submitting his deposition testimony wherein he testified that [an] … employee [of the lessor of the property] covered the ladder’s feet with socks [to protect the tile floor], that [the employee] instructed plaintiff to use the modified ladder, and that the socks caused the ladder to slide and plaintiff to fall. Plaintiff’s unrebutted testimony established that “the statute was violated and that the violation proximately caused his injury” … . Delisle v FBBT/US Props., LLC, 2026 NY Slip Op 03529, Fourth Dept 6-5-26
Practice Point: In this ladder-fall case, the unsecured ladder was not defective. Rather it was deemed “improperly placed” warranting summary judgment. It was alleged that socks placed over the feet of the ladder to protect the tile floor caused the ladder to slide.
A HEARING ON A DEFENDANT’S ELIGIBILITY FOR AN ALTERNATIVE SENTENCE PURSUANT TO THE DOMESTIC VIOLENCE SURVIVORS JUSTICE ACT (DVSJA) CANNOT BE WAIVED AS A CONDITION OF A PLEA AGREEMENT; SENTENCE VACATED AND MATTER REMITTED (FOURTH DEPT).
The Fourth Department, vacating defendant’s sentence and remitting the matter, determined defendant’s waiver of a hearing on whether he was eligible for an alternative sentence pursuant to the Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act (DVSJA) was invalid:
Defendant appeals from a judgment convicting him, upon his plea of guilty, of two counts of manslaughter in the first degree (Penal Law § 125.20 [1]). As a condition of his plea, defendant waived his right to a Penal Law § 60.12 hearing to determine his eligibility for an alternative sentence under the Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act. Inasmuch as “section 60.12 hearings are not waivable as a condition of a plea agreement” … , we agree with defendant that this matter must be remitted for further proceedings, including a Penal Law § 60.12 hearing should defendant request one … . We therefore modify the judgment by vacating the sentence, and we remit the matter to County Court for further proceedings…. . People v Jones, 2026 NY Slip Op 03527, Fourth Dept 6-5-26
Practice Point: A defendant cannot waive a hearing on eligibility for an alternative sentence pursuant to the DVSJA as a condition of a plea agreement. Here defendant’s sentence was vacated and the matter was remitted for a hearing if defendant requests it.
PETITIONER, THE GUARDIAN OF THE PERSON AND PROPERTY OF AN INCAPACITATED PERSON SINCE 2012, WAS ASKED TO RECERTIFY THE GUARDIANSHIP BY A NEW BANK WHICH TOOK OVER THE ACCOUNTS; PETITIONER SOUGHT TO CONTINUE THE TERMS OF THE 2012 ORDER; THE JUDGE SHOULD NOT HAVE, SUA SPONTE, MODIFIED THE TERMS OF THE ORIGINAL ORDER ABSENT A REQUEST FROM A PARTY TO DO SO (THIRD DEPT).
The Third Department, reversing (modifying) Supreme Court, determined the justice presiding over this guardianship proceeding should not have “sua sponte” changed the terms of the existing guardianship absent a request from a party to do so. The appellate courts do not like “sua sponte” rulings. The petitioner was appointed guardian of the person and property of an incapacitated person in 2012. This proceeding was prompted by a new bank which took over the incapacitated person’s accounts and requested that petitioner “recertify” his guardianship status. Petitioner brought this proceeding to continue the terms of the original 2012 order:
… [P]etitioner [the contends that Supreme Court erred in modifying the terms of the guardianship. We find this contention to have merit. As petitioner was appointed guardian in 2012, there was no basis to appoint a temporary guardian (see Mental Hygiene Law § 81.23 [a]). Nor was there a basis to remove the guardian (see Mental Hygiene Law § 81.35). Although a court may terminate or modify a guardian’s powers upon a showing that, “for some other reason, . . . the guardian is no longer necessary . . . or the powers of the guardian should be modified based upon changes in the circumstances of the incapacitated person” (Mental Hygiene Law § 81.36 [a] [4]), such application cannot be made sua sponte, but must “be made by the guardian, the incapacitated person, or any person entitled to commence a proceeding under this article” (Mental Hygiene Law § 81.36 [b] …). Nevertheless, when authorizing the powers that may be exercised by a guardian of the property, courts are to employ “the least restrictive form of intervention,” taking into consideration, among other things, the incapacitated “person’s wishes, preferences, and desires with regard to managing the activities of daily living” (Mental Hygiene Law § 81.21 [a]).
Here, there was no request before Supreme Court to modify the terms of the guardianship, as petitioner moved to continue the same terms of the original order to satisfy the requests of the new banking institution — specifically, petitioner’s access to “all bank accounts, annuity payments, entitlements and other financial resources in [respondent’s] possession or payable to her.” However, the order issued by Supreme Court failed to contain this language and otherwise did not conform to the requirements of the statute (see Mental Hygiene Law §§ 81.15 [c]; 81.16). To the extent that this order is further interpreted as increasing the powers of the guardian by requiring petitioner to now pay certain monthly expenses that respondent already successfully handles on her own, we agree with petitioner that the record does not support this change as being the least restrictive form of intervention (see Mental Hygiene Law § 81.21 [a]). Accordingly, this portion of Supreme Court’s order must be reversed and vacated. Matter of Karissa W., 2026 NY Slip Op 03490, Third Dept 6-4-26
Practice Point: The decision illustrates the appellate courts’ disapproval of sua sponte rulings, i.e,, rulings which are not precipitated by a party’s motion.