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You are here: Home1 / RESTITUTION IN EXCESS OF THE STATUTORY CAP FOR LOST WAGES WAS IMPROPERLY...

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/ Criminal Law

RESTITUTION IN EXCESS OF THE STATUTORY CAP FOR LOST WAGES WAS IMPROPERLY AWARDED BECAUSE “LOST WAGES” DOES NOT FIT ANY OF THE EXCEPTIONS TO THE CAP RESTRICTION (FOURTH DEPT).

The Fourth Department, modifying County Court, determined the restitution amount which exceeded the statutory cap did not fit into any of the statutory exceptions to the cap restriction. The victim was improperly awarded an amount for lost wages:

… [T]he court erred in imposing restitution and reparation in excess of the statutory cap for the second victim’s past lost earnings because, under the plain meaning of the statute, that form of loss does not fall within the exception to the statutory cap pursuant to Penal Law § 60.27 (5) (b) … . In particular, contrary to the court’s determination, inasmuch as past lost earnings are wages, salary, or other income that the second victim could have, but did not, earn (see Black’s Law Dictionary [11th ed 2019], lost earnings), the excess amount ordered as restitution and reparation for that loss does not constitute reimbursement for “the return of the [second] victim’s property” or equivalent thereof (§ 60.27 [5] [b] …). People v Witherow, 2022 NY Slip Op 01691, Fourth Dept 3-11-22

Practice Point: Restitution for lost wages was improperly awarded because “lost wages” does not fit any of the statutory exceptions to the restitution-cap restriction.

 

March 11, 2022
/ Attorneys, Civil Procedure, Foreclosure, Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law (RPAPL)

DEFENDANT NEVER PHYSICALLY POSSESSED THE NOTE UNDERLYING THE MORTGAGE AND WAS NEVER ASSIGNED THE NOTE; THEREFORE DEFENDANT DOES NOT HAVE STANDING TO FORECLOSE ON THE MORTGAGE; AN ATTORNEY’S FAILURE TO APPEAR AT A FULLY BRIEFED MOTION ARGUMENT IS NOT A DEFAULT (FOURTH DEPT).

The Fourth Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined defendant does not own the note underlying the mortgage and therefore has no right to foreclose. The Fourth Department noted that an attorney’s failure to appear at a full briefed motion argument does not constitute a default:

… [D]efendant lacks noteholder standing because the promissory note upon which defendant relies is neither endorsed in blank nor specially endorsed to defendant … . … [E]ven had the note been endorsed in blank or specially endorsed to defendant, defendant’s admitted failure to physically possess the original note would independently preclude it from foreclosing as a noteholder … . …

Nor does defendant have assignee standing. The affidavits submitted on defendant’s behalf do not aver that the subject note was ever assigned to defendant … . …

… [A]n action to quiet title pursuant to RPAPL article 15 is a proper procedural vehicle for determining defendant’s standing to foreclose (see RPAPL 1501 [1], [5] … ). Hummel v Cilici, LLC, 2022 NY Slip Op 01690, Fourth Dept 3-11-22

Practice Point: An attorney’s failure to appear at a fully briefed motion argument is not a default.

Practice Point: A party who never physically possessed the note underlying the mortgage does not have standing to foreclose.

 

March 11, 2022
/ Criminal Law, Sex Offender Registration Act (SORA)

THE JUDGE SHOULD NOT HAVE, SUA SPONTE, WITHOUT NOTICE TO THE DEFENDANT, ASSESSED 12 POINTS FOR FAILURE TO ACCEPT RESPONSIBILITY; DEFENDANT ACCEPTED RESPONSIBILITY BY PLEADING GUILTY (FOURTH DEPT).

The Fourth Department, reversing County Court, determined the judge should not have, sua sponte, without prior notice to the defendant, assessed 12 points for failure to accept responsibility in this SORA risk level proceeding. The Fourth Department noted defendant pled guilty to statutory rape. Although defendant stated he thought the 16-year-old victim was 18, the guilty plea was an adequate acceptance of responsibility:

… [I]t is well established that ” ‘[a] defendant has both a statutory and constitutional right to notice of points sought to be assigned to him or her so as to be afforded a meaningful opportunity to respond to that assessment’ ” … . As a result, “a court’s sua sponte departure from the Board’s recommendation at the hearing, without prior notice, deprives the defendant of a meaningful opportunity to respond” … . …

… [T]he court erred in assessing him 10 points under risk factor 12, for failure to accept responsibility, given that he pleaded guilty and admitted his guilt … . …

… [D]efendant was not afforded a meaningful opportunity to argue against the override [recommended by the board] or in favor of a downward departure … . People v Ritchie, 2022 NY Slip Op 01635, Fourth Dept 3-10-22

Practice Point: In a SORA risk assessment proceeding, the judge cannot, sua sponte, without notice to the defendant, assess points in a category not recommended by the board.

Practice Point: In a SORA risk assessment proceeding, where a defendant has pled guilty, an assessment of 12 points for failure to accept responsibility is not warranted.

 

March 11, 2022
/ Appeals, Civil Procedure, Family Law

ALTHOUGH THE APPELLANT WAS IN JAPAN, THE 1ST DEPARTMENT REFUSED TO DISMISS THE APPEAL PURSUANT TO THE FUGITIVE DISENTITLEMENT DOCTRINE IN THIS FAMILY COURT CIVIL-CONTEMPT MATTER; APPELLANT HAD APPEARED VIRTUALLY IN COURT PROCEEDINGS AND STATED HE WOULD RETURN TO NEW YORK TO COMPLY WITH ANY COURT ORDER (FIRST DEPT).

The First Department refused to dismiss the appeal of this Family Court civil contempt matter pursuant to the fugitive disentitlement doctrine (which authorizes the dismissal of an appeal if the appellant has left the jurisdiction). Here father was in Japan:

Although the father is in Japan, we decline to dismiss the appeal pursuant to the fugitive disentitlement doctrine. There is no “nexus” connecting the father’s fugitive status and these proceedings … . The father has continued to appear virtually in court, communicate with his counsel, and consent to relief sought by the mother. He has complied with the terms of his probation and submitted an affidavit stating that he will return to New York to comply with any court order. Under these circumstances, we find that the father has not “flout[ed] the judicial process,” frustrated the operation of the courts, or prejudiced the mother’s rights by leaving the jurisdiction to warrant dismissal of the appeal … .Matter of Hilary C. v Michael K., 2022 NY Slip Op 01512, First Dept 3-10-22

Practice Point: If an appellant leaves the court’s jurisdiction (here father went to Japan), the appeal may be dismissed pursuant to the fugitive disentitlement doctrine. The doctrine was not applied in this Family Court civil contempt case because father participated in court proceedings virtually and stated he would return to New York to comply with any court order.

 

March 10, 2022
/ Civil Procedure, Civil Rights Law

THE 2020 AMENDMENTS TO CIVIL RIGHTS LAW 70, THE ANTI-SLAPP LAW, DO NOT APPLY RETROACTIVELY TO THE PLAINTIFF’S PENDING DEFAMATION ACTION AGAINST DEFENDANT (FIRST DEPT).

The First Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined the 2020 amendments to the anti-strategic lawsuit against public participation (anti-SLAPP) law (Civil Rights Law section 70) should not be applied retroactively to cover plaintiff’s defamation claims against defendant. Therefore defendant’s motion for a ruling that the anti-SLAPP amendments applied retroactively should not have been granted:

… [T]here is insufficient evidence supporting the conclusion that the legislature intended its 2020 amendments to the anti-strategic lawsuit against public participation (anti-SLAPP) law (see Civil Rights Law § 70 et seq.) to apply retroactively to pending claims such as the defamation claims asserted by plaintiffs in this action.

The Court of Appeals has stated, in general terms, that “ameliorative or remedial legislation” should be given “retroactive effect in order to effectuate its beneficial purpose” … . * * * … “[C]lassifying a statute as remedial does not automatically overcome the strong presumption of prospectivity since the term may broadly encompass any attempt to supply some defect or abridge some superfluity in the former law” … . …

In light of …. the factual evidence that the amendments to New York’s anti-SLAPP law were intended to better advance the purposes of the legislation by correcting the narrow scope of the prior anti-SLAPP law, we find that the presumption of prospective application of the amendments has not been defeated. The legislature acted to broaden the scope of the law almost 30 years after the law was originally enacted, purportedly to advance an underlying remedial purpose that was not adequately addressed in the original legislative language. The legislature did not specify that the new legislation was to be applied retroactively. The fact that the amended statute is remedial, and that the legislature provided that the amendments shall take effect immediately, does not support the conclusion that the legislature intended retroactive application of the amendments. Gottwald v Sebert,  2022 NY Slip Op 01515, First Dept 3-10-22

Practice Point: The fact that a statute is deemed “remedial” in nature does not necessarily support a retroactive application of the statute. Here the 2020 amendments to the anti-SLAPP law, although “remedial,” were not applied retroactively to cover plaintiff’s pending defamation action against the defendant. The defendant’s motion for a ruling applying the amendments retroactively should not have been granted.

 

March 10, 2022
/ Evidence, Labor Law-Construction Law

THERE WAS NO DIRECT OR CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE OF THE CAUSE OF PLAINTIFF’S-DECEDENT’S FALL FROM A LADDER; ONLY A DEFECTIVE OR UNSAFE LADDER GIVES RISE TO LABOR LAW 240(1) LIABILITY; THE TRIER OF FACT WOULD HAVE TO RESORT TO SPECULATION; THE ACTION SHOULD HAVE BEEN DISMISSED (FIRST DEPT).

The First Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined plaintiff-decedent’s Labor Law 240(1) and 241(6) causes of action should have been dismissed. Plaintiff’s decedent fell from a ladder, but there were no witnesses and no evidence of the cause of the fall. The trier of fact would have been forced to speculate about whether the ladder was defective in some way:

[Defendants] Casur and 124 Ridge established their prima facie entitlement to judgment as a matter of law by demonstrating that no one was in a position to establish the cause of the accident, as there was no direct or circumstantial evidence as to how the accident happened … . In opposition, plaintiff failed to raise a triable issue of fact. Since the accident may well have been caused by a misstep or loss of balance, rather than by a defective or improperly secured ladder, any determination by the trier of fact as to the cause of the accident would be based upon speculation … . The Noseworthy doctrine (see Noseworthy v City of New York, 298 NY 76, 80-81 [1948])is not applicable to this case, since Casur and 124 Ridge’s knowledge as to the cause of the accident is no greater than plaintiff’s … Public Adm’r of Queens County v 124 Ridge LLC, 2022 NY Slip Op 01522, First Dept 3-10-22

Practice Point: Falling from a ladder does not automatically trigger Labor Law 240(1) liability. There must be proof the ladder was defective or failed to protect the plaintiff in some way. Here there was no proof of the cause of plaintiff’s decedent’s fall so the action should have been dismissed.

 

March 10, 2022
/ Civil Procedure, Constitutional Law, Debtor-Creditor

SUPREME COURT SHOULD NOT HAVE DISMISSED AN ACTION TO ENFORCE A MONEY JUDGMENT OBTAINED IN THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA (PRC) ON THE IMPLICIT GROUND THE DEFENDANTS WERE NOT AFFORDED DUE PROCESS IN THE PRC; THE US STATE DEPARTMENT DOCUMENTS UPON WHICH SUPREME COURT’S RULING WAS BASED DO NOT CONSTITUTE DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE; THE COMPLAINT SUFFICIENTLY ALLEGED DEFENDANTS HAD AN OPPORTUNITY TO BE HEARD, WERE REPRESENTED BY COUNSEL AND HAD THE OPPORTUNITY TO APPEAL IN THE PRC ACTION (FIRST DEPT).

The First Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined the complaint sufficiently alleged that the money judgment obtained by plaintiff in the People’s Republic of China (PRC) comported with the principles of due process. The complaint alleged the defendants had an opportunity to be heard, were represented by counsel, and had a right to appeal the underlying proceeding in the PRC. Plaintiff’s action to enforce the foreign judgment should not have been dismissed based upon US State Department reports alleging a lack of judicial independence in the PRC:

The court should not have dismissed the action on the ground that the U.S. State Department’s 2018 and 2019 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices (Country Reports) conclusively refuted plaintiff’s allegation that the PRC judgment was rendered under a system that comported with the requirements of due process. The Country Reports do not constitute “documentary evidence” under CPLR 3211(a)(1) … . In any event, the reports, which primarily discuss the lack of judicial independence in proceedings involving politically sensitive matters, do not utterly refute plaintiff’s allegation that the civil law system governing this breach of contract business dispute was fair. Shanghai Yongrun Inv. Mgt. Co., Ltd v Maodong Xu, 2022 NY Slip Op 01523, First Dept 3-10-22

Practice Point: Plaintiff obtained a money judgment in the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and sought to enforce it in New York. The complaint should not have been dismissed based upon US State Department reports alleging a lack of judicial independence in the PRC. The reports are not “documentary evidence” and the complaint adequately alleged defendants were afforded due process in the PRC.

March 10, 2022
/ Civil Procedure, Debtor-Creditor

IN AN ACTION SEEKING TO ENFORCE A JUDGMENT AGAINST NON-DEBTORS PURSUANT TO CPLR ARTICLE 52, THE PETITIONERS ARE NOT ENTITLED TO A JURY TRIAL; THE ACTION IS EQUITABLE IN NATURE, DESPITE THE DEMAND FOR MONETARY DAMAGES (FIRST DEPT). ​

The First Department determined petitioner’s request for a jury trial in this action seeking to compel non-debtors to make assets accessible for execution should have been stricken. Even though money damages were demanded, the essence of the action is equitable:

Petitioners commenced a “turnover” special proceeding under CPLR article 52 and sought a judgment among other things, “seeking . . ‘turnover’ of [defendant] NYGFI assets to satisfy [p]etitioners’ judgment . . . compelling the non-debtor [r]espondents to disclose, bring within the jurisdiction, and make accessible for execution . . . all cash, income, distributions and funds . . . including all membership interests in limited lability companies . . . and shares in corporations and interests in partnerships . . . and granting the appointment of a CPLR [a]rticle 52 receiver.”

… “[A] [p]laintiff is not entitled to a jury trial . . . [when] he seeks to enforce a judgment against a party other than the judgment debtor, which is an equitable claim” … .

… “[T]he rule is fundamental that where a plaintiff seeks legal and equitable relief in respect of the same wrong, his right to trial by jury is lost” … . Moreover, “[i]nclusion of a demand for money damages in the [pleading] does not, in and of itself, guarantee entitlement to a jury trial. Rather, it must be determined whether the main thrust of the action is for legal damages or for equitable relief” … . Matter of Uni-Rty Corp. v New York Guangdong Fin., 2022 NY Slip Op 01525, First Dept 3-10-22

Practice Point: An action pursuant to CPLR Article 52 to enforce a judgment against non-debtors is equitable in nature. A jury trial is therefore not available. The demand for money damages (legal relief) did not alter the fact that petitioners are primarily seeking equitable relief.

 

March 10, 2022
/ Civil Procedure, Corporation Law

ALTHOUGH THIS SHAREHOLDERS’ DERIVATIVE ACTION AGAINST A SWISS CORPORATION REQUIRES THE APPLICATION OF SWISS LAW, NEW YORK IS THE PROPER FORUM; MOST ON THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS ARE RESIDENTS OF NEW YORK AND THE ALLEGATIONS IN THE COMPLAINT REFLECT A SUBSTANTIAL NEXUS TO NEW YORK (FIRST DEPT).

The First Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined New York, not Switzerland, was the proper forum for this shareholders’ derivative action against a Swiss corporation, despite the need to apply Swiss law:

Defendants did not establish that in the interest of substantial justice, this action should be heard in another forum, namely, Switzerland (see generally CPLR 327[a] …). Adjudication of plaintiffs’ claims, which are undisputedly governed by Swiss law, will not place an undue burden on New York courts … . New York courts are frequently called on to apply the laws of foreign jurisdictions and in this case, there is no indication that the relevant law, which is from only one foreign jurisdiction, is in dispute or is distinctly abstruse … . That plaintiffs seek certain nonmonetary relief that may not be available or enforceable in Switzerland does not cut in favor of dismissal because defendants can seek to limit the damages sought and plaintiffs are now willing to withdraw their requests for nonmonetary relief as against [defendant corporation].

Defendants do not claim that litigation in New York will cause them any hardship and although this matter could be litigated in Switzerland, Swiss courts do not permit trial by jury, which could pose some hardship to plaintiffs … . Moreover, most of defendant-board members are residents of New York and none are residents of Switzerland … . The allegations in the complaint make clear that this action has a substantial nexus to New York and at this point, it appears that the majority of the witnesses and evidence will be located in the United States, principally New York … . Wormwood Capital LLC v Mulleady, 2022 NY Slip Op 01526, First Dept 3-10-22

​Practice Point: Although this shareholders’ derivative action is against a Swiss corporation and requires the application of Swiss law, New York is the proper forum. Most of the directors live in New York, most of the witnesses are in the US and New York, most of the evidence is located in New York, and allegations in the complaint demonstrate a substantial nexus to New York. Defendants did not show they will suffer any prejudice if the suit is heard here.

 

March 10, 2022
/ Administrative Law, Workers' Compensation

ALTHOUGH THE EMPLOYER WAIVED ITS OWN INDEPENDENT MEDICAL EXAMINATION, THE EMPLOYER RAISED SPECIFIC, SUBSTANTIVE OBJECTIONS TO CLAIMANT’S ORTHOPEDIST’S PERMANENCY FINDINGS, INCLUDING THE ALLEGATIONS THE ORTHOPEDIST DID NOT COMPLETELY REVIEW THE MEDICAL RECORDS AND DID NOT FOLLOW THE RELEVANT GUIDELINES; THE BOARD’S FAILURE TO ADDRESS THE EMPLOYER’S OBJECTIONS REQUIRED REVERSAL AND REMITTAL (THIRD DEPT).

The Third Department, reversing the Workers’ Compensation Board and remitting the matter, determined the board should have addressed the employer’s specific objections to the permanency findings of claimant’s orthopedist (Capiola), even though the employer did not produce its own independent medical report:

Upon administrative review, the employer renewed its objections that the credibility of the medical opinion was not based on a complete review of claimant’s medical records, that claimant had not reached MMI [maximum medical improvement], that the guidelines were not followed in rendering the medical opinion and that there was inconsistency between claimant’s medical condition and his physical restrictions. …

In its decision, the Board sets forth in detail the parties’ opposing positions and then adopted the findings and decision of the WCLJ [Workers’ Compensation Law Judge]. Neither the decision of the Board nor that of the WCLJ sets forth any reasoning or analysis of the substantive issues raised by the employer. Although there was no opposing medical opinion and the Board “may not reject an uncontradicted opinion that is properly rendered” … , the issues raised by the employer in its application for review challenged the propriety and reliability of Capiola’s permanency findings. The Board’s failure to specifically address the claims raised by the employer “depriv[ed] the employer . . . of the opportunity to have the Board consider the merits of . . . issue[s] that [were] properly preserved” and precludes any meaningful review by this Court … . Matter of Ippolito v NYC Tr. Auth., 2022 NY Slip Op 01493, Third Dept 3-10-22

Practice Point: Even though the employer waived the production of its own independent medical examination in this Workers’ Compensation case, the Workers’ Compensation Board should have considered the employer’s substantive objections to the permanency findings of the claimant’s orthopedist, including allegations the orthopedist did not review all the medical records and did not follow the relevant guidelines.

 

March 10, 2022
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