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You are here: Home1 / DISAGREEING WITH THE FIRST DEPARTMENT, THE SECOND DEPARTMENT HELD THAT...

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/ Medical Malpractice, Negligence

DISAGREEING WITH THE FIRST DEPARTMENT, THE SECOND DEPARTMENT HELD THAT DAMAGES FOR “PRE-IMPACT TERROR” ARE NOT APPROPRIATE IN A MED MAL CASE; HERE PLAINTIFF SUFFERED A HEART ATTACK IN 2008 AND DIED IN 2011 (SECOND DEPT).

The Second Department, reversing (modifying) Supreme Court in the med mal case, in a full-fledged opinion by Justice Maltese, determined the damages for “pre-impact terror” were not appropriate. Plaintiff suffered a heart attack in 2008 and died in 2011:

… [P]re-impact terror delineated as emotional pain and suffering as a separate item of damages is inappropriate in this medical malpractice and wrongful death action and would represent an inappropriate extension of the law with respect to this issue. Traditionally, damages for pre-impact terror have been awarded in cases involving motor vehicle accidents and other types of accidents … . Here, where the “impact” was the decedent’s heart attack, the damages for emotional pain and suffering cannot accurately be characterized as damages for pre-impact terror, because they were intended to compensate for the fear the decedent experienced after the heart attack occurred in January 2008 at Westchester Medical Center until his death more than three years later on October 27, 2011, at Yale-New Haven Hospital. Further, unlike a motor vehicle accident where the defendant driver causes the impact, the WMC defendants did not cause the decedent’s heart attack. To the extent that the Appellate Division, First Department, determined otherwise in Small v City of New York (213 AD3d 475), we decline to follow that decision. Molina v Goldberg, 2024 NY Slip Op 03818, Second Dept 7-17-24

Practice Point: Disagreeing with the First Department, the Second Department held damages for “pre-impact terror” are not appropriate in the med mal case.

 

July 17, 2024
/ Landlord-Tenant, Negligence

QUESTIONS OF FACT WHETHER DEFENDANT WAS AN OUT-OF-POSSESSION LANDLORD PRECLUDED SUMMARY JUDGMENT IN FAVOR OF THE LANDLORD IN THIS SLIP AND FALL CASE (SECOND DEPT). ​

The Second Department, reversing Supreme Court in this slip and fall case, determined there were questions of fact whether the landlord was an out-of-possession landlord:

“A property owner has a duty to maintain its premises in a reasonably safe condition” … . “That duty is premised on the landowner’s exercise of control over the property, as the person in possession and control of property is best able to identify and prevent any harm to others” … . “It has been held uniformly that control is the test which measures generally the responsibility in tort of the owner of real property” … . “Thus, a landowner who has transferred possession and control is generally not liable for injuries caused by dangerous conditions on the property” … .

… [D]efendants failed to establish their prima facie entitlement to judgment as a matter of law dismissing the complaint insofar as asserted against them on the ground that they were out-of-possession landlords. Although the defendants submitted a lease establishing that a tenant leased the entire office building and was responsible for the maintenance of vestibules and entrances, the defendants’ submissions also demonstrated that they maintained an office in the building and that, each work day, the defendants’ employee used the building entrance where the plaintiff’s slip and fall occurred. The defendants’ submissions further demonstrated that this employee would report any defects in the building to the building’s security, and the tenant would then remedy those defects. Under these circumstances, triable issues of fact exist as to the defendants’ control of the subject property and whether they were out-of-possession landlords … . Grullon v 57-115 Assoc., L.P., 2024 NY Slip Op 03811, Second Dept 7-17-24

Practice Point: Here, even though the lease made the tenant responsible for maintenance, the fact that the landlord had an office in the building raised a question of fact whether the landlord could escape liability for a slip and fall as an out-of-possession landlord.​

 

July 17, 2024
/ Negligence

DEFENDANT PROPERTY-OWNER HAD ACTUAL KNOWLEDGE OF THE RECURRING RAINWATER LEAKS; PLAINTIFF ENTITLED TO SUMMARY JUDGMENT IN THIS SLIP AND FALL CASE (SECOND DEPT).

The Second Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined plaintiff was entitled to summary judgment in this slip and fall case:

… Karen Myers [was] the defendants’ supervisor caretaker assigned to the subject building. At her deposition, the plaintiff testified that, while walking in the hallway of the floor that she resided on, she slipped as a result of rainwater that had leaked into the building from an outside terrace. She also testified that during periods of rainfall, she had noticed water leaking into the hallway from underneath the terrace door on numerous occasions over the years she had resided in the building and had observed building employees mopping the area “a lot of times.” Myers testified that she had been aware of the recurring leak for at least one year prior to the plaintiff’s accident and that the only remedial measure taken by building employees in response was “spot mopping.” She conceded that the recurring leak caused a “slip and fall” “hazard,” which she expected employees to “mop up.” Based upon this testimony, the plaintiff “established as a matter of law that [the defendants] had actual knowledge of a recurring dangerous and defective condition and, therefore, could be charged with constructive knowledge of each specific recurrence of the condition, which was a proximate cause of the accident” … . Graham v New York City Hous. Auth., 2024 NY Slip Op 03810, Second Dept 7-17-24

Practice Point: A property-owner’s actual knowledge of a recurring dangerous condition which causes a slip and fall entitles plaintiff to summary judgment.

 

​

July 17, 2024
/ Civil Procedure, Contract Law

THE DENTISTS’ FEE-SPLITTING AGREEMENT VIOLATED THE EDUCATION LAW; A COURT WILL NOT ENFORCE AN ILLEGAL CONTRACT (SECOND DEPT).

The Second Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined the complaint seeking to enforce an illegal contract should have been dismissed:

… [T]he plaintiff entered into an asset purchase agreement (hereinafter the APA) to sell certain assets of its dental practice to the defendant, a licensed dentist who retained his own separate practice. The APA specified a purchase price of $250,000. A portion of that amount was to be paid as a percentage of the monthly revenue generated by the plaintiff’s practice or, under certain conditions, a percentage of the revenue generated from a potential sale of the defendant’s separate practice. * * *

The defendant established his entitlement to dismissal of the causes of action alleging breach of contract and unjust enrichment pursuant to CPLR 3211(a)(7). As the defendant correctly contends, the APA constituted a voluntary prospective arrangement for the splitting of fees in violation of the Education Law because it required the defendant to pay the plaintiff a percentage of revenue generated by the plaintiff’s practice and, under certain conditions, the defendant’s own separate dental practice (see Education Law §§ 6509-a, 6530[19] …). “‘It is the settled law of this State (and probably of every other State) that a party to an illegal contract cannot ask a court of law to help him or her carry out his or her illegal object, nor can such a person plead or prove in any court a case in which he or she, as a basis for his or her claim, must show forth his or her illegal purpose'” … . “‘Where the parties’ arrangement is illegal the law will not extend its aid to either of the parties . . . or listen to their complaints against each other, but will leave them where their own acts have placed them'” … . Advanced Dental of Ardsley, PLLC v Brown, 2024 NY Slip Op 03804, Second Dept 7-17-24

Practice Point: A fee-splitting agreement between dentists violates the Education Law.

Practice Point: A court will not enforce an illegal contract.

 

July 17, 2024
/ Administrative Law, Freedom of Information Law (FOIL)

THE REGULATION WHICH PROVIDES THAT THE TRANSCRIPTS OF PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS BOARD (PERB) HEARINGS ARE THE PROPERTY OF THE STENOGRAPHER CONFLICTS WITH THE ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE ACT AND THE PUBLIC-ACCESS PRINCIPLES UNDERLYING FOIL (THIRD DEPT). ​

The Third Department, reversing (modifying) Supreme Court, determined the Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) regulation (4 NYCRR 208.3 (c)) which provides that PERB hearing transcripts are the property of the stenographer conflicts with the Administrative Procedure Act and the public-access principles underlying FOIL:

“It is established as a general proposition that a regulation cannot be inconsistent with a statutory scheme” … . Here, 4 NYCRR 208.3 (c) is inconsistent with State Administrative Procedure Act § 302 (2), which imposes a duty on the agency to furnish a copy of the transcript to a party upon request.…  Moreover, it is inconsistent with the statutory scheme of FOIL, which “imposes a broad standard of open disclosure in order to achieve maximum public access to government documents” … . Courts must construe FOIL liberally, to “require[ ] government agencies to make available for public inspection and copying all records” … . Accordingly, Supreme Court improperly granted PERB’s motion to dismiss and we remit the matter to Supreme Court for PERB to file an answer pursuant to CPLR 7804 (f). Matter of DeWolf v Wirenius, 2024 NY Slip Op 03790,, Second Dept 7-11-24

Practice Point: A regulation cannot be inconsistent with a statutory scheme.

 

July 11, 2024
/ Contract Law, Corporation Law, Fraud

WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE FRAUD CAUSE OF ACTION, THE NONRECOURSE CLAUSE PRECLUDED THIS LAWSUIT AGAINST THE PRINCIPALS OF DEFENDANT CORPORATION; PLAINTIFF HAD WON AN ARBITRATION AWARD AGAINST DEFENDANT FOR OVER $200 MILLION AND BROUGHT THIS ACTION AFTER DEFENDANT FILED FOR BANKRUPTCY (FIRST DEPT). ​

The First Department, in a full-fledged opinion by Justice Higgitt, determined the nonrecourse clause in the contract between two sophisticated, commercial parties precluded plaintiff’s action. Plaintiff had won an arbitration award for over $200 million against defendant (Footprint) and this suit against Footprint’s principals was brought after Footprint filed for bankruptcy:

Plaintiff, a sophisticated commercial actor, knew that it was entering into a significant contractual undertaking with a special-purpose entity, and the contract provided for a specific dispute-resolution mechanism — arbitration — that carried with it a risk that the special-purpose entity would not be able to satisfy an ensuing award. Plaintiff could have bargained for protections to avoid or mitigate losses occasioned by the conduct of a judgment-proof special-purpose entity (e.g., conditions on Footprint’s ability to draw on the letter of credit, a payment guaranty from one or more of defendants, a narrow nonrecourse provision), but it chose to enter into the contract as written … . We cannot provide rough justice to plaintiff by dint of distorting the plain meaning of the contract to relieve plaintiff of the consequences of its contractual arrangement … . Similarly, we cannot, under the guise of contractual interpretation, disturb the clear, detailed allocation-of-risk-of-economic-loss scheme agreed upon by the parties … . Ultimately, plaintiff got the benefit of its bargain: arbitration on its cognizable claims against Footprint, which proceeding yielded a sizable award that was converted to a judgment. Iberdrola Energy Projects v Oaktree Capital Mgt. L.P., 2024 NY Slip Op 03798, First Dept 7-11-24

Practice Point: Sophisticated corporate commercial parties will be held to an unambiguous nonrecourse provision in their contract.​

 

July 11, 2024
/ Family Law, Judges

FAMILY COURT HAD THE AUTHORITY TO ORDER VISITATION WITH THE CHILDREN’S FORMER FOSTER MOTHER; A STRONG DISSENT ARGUED THE COURT DID NOT HAVE THE POWER TO ORDER VISITATION WITH A “LEGAL STRANGER” (FIRST DEPT). ​

The First Department, over an extensive and comprehensive dissent, determined Family Court properly allowed visitation with the children by their former foster mother. The dissent argued the court did not have the power to order visitation with the former foster mother, a “legal stranger:”

Commonly, visitation plans for children in foster care involve parents, grandparents or siblings, all of whom have standing to commence visitation proceedings. However, in this case, there was no visitation petition or proceeding before the court at the time of the permanency hearing. Rather,the court ordered visitation between the children and the former foster mother in order to advance the children’s “well-being” as it is required to do under Family Court Act § 1086. To accomplish that, the court gave special attention to the unique, undisputed circumstances of these children: (1) the children suffered from PTSD and other mental health issues following removal from their biological mother in 2016; (2) they each improved remarkably during the nearly six years they were cared for by the former foster mother; (3) removal from her care in December 2021 was traumatic for them; (4) at the time of the order, the children had only been in their current foster home for a few months; (5) ACS [Administration for Children’s Services] and the foster care agency had previously consented to and facilitated visits with the former foster mother for approximately two years; and (6) the children remained strongly bonded to her as the only adult who had been a consistent positive presence in their lives at the time of the 2023 permanency hearing that resulted in the order.

… [A]s Family Court explained on the record, “there is no legal path where the children end up in [the] care” of the former foster mother. However, the court expressed concern that discontinuing all contact with her at this time would be contrary to their well-being. The court noted that it was troubled “that we didn’t have more details [presented at the hearing] about the children’s therapy and medication” and that there was no testimony that “cutting off all contact with [the former foster mother] . . . is therapeutically beneficial.” Under these circumstances, Family Court’s continuation of visitation with the former foster mother was an appropriate exercise of its authority under Family Court Act § 1089, was tailored to the particular circumstances of these children, and was in keeping with the legislative goal of ensuring foster children’s well-being. Matter of AL.C., 2024 NY Slip Op 03799, First Dept 7-11-24

Practice Point: Here Family Court properly ordered visitation with the children by their former foster mother, based primarily upon the children’s improvement while in her care and the strong bond between her and the children. The dissent argued the court did not have the authority to order visitation with a “legal stranger.”

 

July 11, 2024
/ Banking Law, Civil Procedure, Fraud, Negligence

PLAINTIFF, UNDER NEW JERSEY LAW, SUFFICIENTLY PLED A SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP WITH DEFENDANT BANK GIVING RISE TO A DUTY TO ENFORCE ITS ANTI-FRAUD PROCEDURES; PLAINTIFF WIRED $300,000 TO AN ACCOUNT WHICH HAD BEEN SET UP TO DEFRAUD PLAINTIFF (FIRST DEPT).

The First Department, over a comprehensive dissent, determined defendant JPMorgan Chase Bank owed a duty to plaintiff based upon its anti-fraud polices advertised on the bank’s website. Defendant David Tate opened an account at a New Jersey Chase bank in the name of his business, Alchemy. Tate did not provide any personal identification or any corporate documentation to the bank. Plaintiff, thinking she was investing in Alchemy, wired $300,000 to the Alchemy account which was appropriated by Tate:

Under New Jersey law, a bank and its depositor have an arm’s-length, debtor-creditor relationship … . Banks do not have a duty to protect depositors from the wrongful conduct of third parties with whom the bank has done business .. .

Nonetheless, a bank may have a duty of care “where a special relationship has been established from which a duty can be deemed to flow” … . A special relationship may be formed “by agreement, undertaking or contact” … . As pertinent here, an “undertaking” is “the willing assumption of an obligation by one party with respect to another or a pledge to take or refrain from taking particular action” … .

Crediting plaintiff’s factual allegations, construing the complaint liberally, and according it the benefit of every possible favorable inference …, we find that the complaint adequately pleaded that Chase assumed a duty to abide by the anti-fraud procedures that it publicized.

… [P]laintiff has adequately pleaded the existence of a special relationship with Chase, giving rise to a duty to plaintiff to enforce its anti-fraud procedures … . Plaintiff has likewise stated a claim against Chase in negligence, based on its alleged failure to abide by these safeguards when Tate opened Alchemy’s account with Chase … . Ben-Dor v Alchemy Consultant LLC, 2024 NY Slip Op 03797, Second Dept 7-11-24

Practice Point: In New Jersey, to sue a bank for the wrongful conduct of a third party, here the use of a bank account to defraud plaintiff, the bank must owe plaintiff a special duty. The majority held the anti-fraud policies on the bank’s website may be the basis for such a special duty. There was an extensive and comprehensive dissent.

 

July 11, 2024
/ Appeals, Criminal Law, Judges

IT WAS REVERSIBLE ERROR TO EMPANEL AN ANONYMOUS JURY; ALTHOUGH THE ERROR WAS NOT PRESERVED, NEW TRIAL GRANTED IN THE INTEREST OF JUSTICE (THIRD DEPT).

The Third Department, reversing defendant’s assault-related convictions and ordering a new trial, determined it was error to empanel an anonymous jury:

… [C]onsistent with our recent holding in People v Heidrich (226 AD3d 1096 [3d Dept 2024]), we find merit to defendant’s contention that County Court’s empaneling of an anonymous jury in his case was in error. We again note that the practice of empaneling an anonymous jury contains no statutory justification, as CPL 270.15 (1-a) merely permits the withholding of residential or business addresses of prospective jurors upon a showing of good cause … . While the Court of Appeals has not explicitly sanctioned the practice, it has suggested that, at the very least, “doing so is error where no ‘factual predicate for the extraordinary procedure’ has been shown” … . To that end, the People concede, and we agree, that the record contains no factual support for utilizing an anonymous jury in this case. Instead, the People focus their arguments on defendant’s failure to preserve the issue by consenting to the practice, alongside the contention that the error was, in any event, harmless. On the latter point, we need only note that we recently rejected the applicability of a harmless error analysis to this manner of error … . As to preservation, although defendant concedes his failure to object during pretrial proceedings, he asks that we take corrective action in the interest of justice (see CPL 470.15 [6] [a] …) Considering the totality of circumstances, including the potential effect on the fairness of trial that flows from the decision to utilize an anonymous jury without any justification … , we find such action is appropriate. We therefore exercise our interest of justice jurisdiction and grant defendant a new trial. People v Tenace, 2024 NY Slip Op 03784, Third Dept 7-11-24

Practice Point: Absent factual support for the procedure in the record, it is reversible error to empanel an anonymous jury.​

 

July 11, 2024
/ Retirement and Social Security Law

PETITIONER, A POLICE PARAMEDIC, INJURED HIS SHOULDER WHEN THE RETRACTABLE PORTION OF A STRETCHER JAMMED; THE UNEXPECTED EQUIPMENT MALFUNCTION WAS AN “ACCIDENT” ENTITLING PETITIONER TO ACCIDENTAL DISABILITY RETIREMENT BENEFITS (THIRD DEPT).

The Third Department, over a partial concurrence and dissent, determined petitioner, a police paramedic, was entitled to accidental disability retirement benefits based on an injury caused by the malfunction of the retractable portion of a stretcher:

For purposes of accidental disability retirement benefits, “an accident is defined as ‘a sudden, fortuitous mischance, unexpected, out of the ordinary, and injurious in impact’ ” * * *. “An injury which occurs without an unexpected event as the result of activity undertaken in the performance of ordinary employment duties, considered in view of the particular employment in question, is not an accidental injury” … . * * *

… [P]etitioner testified that when he squeezed the handle to extend the retractable head portion of the stretcher and pulled, which petitioner noted usually required “a little bit of force to push it in and out,” he was able to extend it a little bit before it unexpectedly jammed — something that petitioner testified had never happened before. Petitioner testified that thereafter it took four firefighters banging on the handle with tools to finally extend the head section to the proper position. Although extending the retractable head portion of the stretcher was no doubt part of petitioner’s job duties, the precipitating external event, i.e., the jamming of the retractable head section of the stretcher, was sudden, unexpected and not a risk in his ordinary employment duties. As petitioner’s testimony reflects, this appears to have been a malfunction in the equipment … . Matter of Hamblin v DiNapoli, 2024 NY Slip Op 03787, Third Dept 7-11-24

Practice Point: Injury caused by an equipment malfunction can constitute a compensable “accident” under the Retirement and Social Security Law.

 

July 11, 2024
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