C.L. v. County of Oneida

2024 NY Slip Op 24149
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Oneida County
DecidedMay 17, 2024
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 24149 (C.L. v. County of Oneida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Oneida County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C.L. v. County of Oneida, 2024 NY Slip Op 24149 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

C.L. v County of Oneida (2024 NY Slip Op 24149) [*1]
C.L. v County of Oneida
2024 NY Slip Op 24149
Decided on May 17, 2024
Supreme Court, Oneida County
Clark, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on May 17, 2024
Supreme Court, Oneida County


C.L., Plaintiff,

against

County of Oneida, ONEIDA COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT,
AND ONEIDA COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY, Defendants.




Index No. EFCA2023-003270

Margaret E. Cordner, Esq.
Marc J. Bern & Partners, LLP
Attorney for Plaintiff
One Grand Central Place
60 East 42nd Street, Suite 950
New York, New York 10165
(212) 702-5000

Edward J. Smith, III, Esq.
Joseph A. Gaetano, Esq.
Smith, Sovik, Kendrick & Sugnet, P.C.
Attorneys for Defendants
205 South Clinton Street, Suite 600
Syracuse, New York 13202
(315) 474-2911 Bernadette T. Clark, J.

Plaintiff C.L. commenced this action against defendants County of Oneida, Oneida [*2]County Sheriff's Department (hereinafter, "OCSD"), and Oneida County Correctional Facility (hereinafter "OCCF") by summons and complaint dated and filed December 20, 2023. In her complaint, plaintiff alleges that between September 13, 2011 and July 25, 2012, while she was incarcerated as an inmate at OCCF, employees of that facility subjected her to repeated acts of rape and sexual abuse. In her complaint, plaintiff asserts causes of action for negligence, negligent hiring, negligent training, negligent retention, negligent supervision, gross negligence/willful misconduct, cruel and unusual punishment, and violations of the New York State Human Rights Law. Plaintiff purports to have brought this suit under the Adult Survivors Act ("ASA"), codified at CPLR 214-j, which provided a one-year revival period for plaintiffs to sue on otherwise time-barred civil claims arising out of sexual offenses committed against adults.

Prior to bringing the instant action in supreme court, plaintiff previously had filed suit on November 22, 2023 under the same alleged facts in the Court of Claims, but she had named as defendants the State of New York, the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision (DOCCS), and OCCF. Oneida County was not named as a defendant in the Court of Claims action, and although plaintiff did include OCCF as a named defendant, she alleged in that action that OCCF was owned and operated by the State, not the County.

On December 14, 2023, Edward J. Smith, III, Esq., who had been retained by Oneida County in connection with the Court of Claims action, called Margaret E. Cordner, Esq., plaintiff's counsel, to advise her of her errors in filing the case in the Court of Claims and in describing OCCF as a state-owned facility. Attorney Smith followed up this telephone call with an email the same day that read, in relevant part, as follows:

"this email will confirm our conversation this morning in connection with the Court of Claims action identified in the caption above. As I explained today, I have been retained by Oneida County Correctional Facility improperly named as a defendant in the Court of Claims action. The Oneida County Correctional Facility is a County, not State-owned, entity so there is no jurisdiction over the County as a defendant in the Court of Claims. You acknowledged that you are now aware of the error and your office is in the process of filing a new action in Oneida County Supreme Court, likely today. I do not have authority to accept service of the new Complaint but would appreciate it if you would send me a courtesy copy after it is filed. You also agreed that no appearance is required by the County in the State Court action based on the jurisdictional defect."


Per the attorneys' representations at oral argument, the State of New York has filed a motion to dismiss the corresponding Court of Claims action and that action remains pending.

Pending Motions and Procedural History

In lieu of an answer, defendants have interposed a pre-answer motion to dismiss on statute of limitations grounds pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (5). The papers defendants have submitted on this motion include the notice of motion; the attorney affirmation of Edward J. Smith, III, Esq.; the exhibits attached to that affirmation; and the memorandum of law of attorney Smith (see NYSCEF Doc. Nos. 5-13). Defendants' motion argues that all of plaintiff's causes of action are subject to three-year statutes of limitations that would have expired in 2015 and that plaintiff cannot avail herself of the one-year revival window under CPLR 214-j (the ASA) because that window closed on November 24, 2023, several weeks prior to plaintiff filing [*3]the instant suit. Although defendants acknowledge that plaintiff's Court of Claims action was timely filed under the ASA, defendants assert that there is no authority to provide that such a timely filing in the improper venue would toll the revival window period relative to the current action.

In opposition, plaintiff has offered the attorney affirmation of Margaret E. Cordner, Esq.; the exhibits attached to that affirmation; and the memorandum of law of attorney Cordner (see NYSCEF Doc. Nos. 15-22). Plaintiff argues that she gets the benefit of CPLR 203's "relation back doctrine." On this point, plaintiff contends that she timely filed in the Court of Claims, that the current action arises from the same conduct she alleged in the timely Court of Claims action, that the current defendants are "united in interest" with the defendants named in the timely Court of Claims action, and that Oneida County knew that but for counsel's mistake, it would have been named as a defendant in the initial case.

In reply, defendants have offered an affirmation and a memorandum of law from attorney Smith (see NYSCEF Doc. Nos. 23-24). Defendants assert that plaintiff cannot rely upon relation back to salvage her current, untimely claim because the Court of Claims suit to which she is trying to relate back is jurisdictionally defective. On that score, defendants note that plaintiff's Court of Claims action "amounts to a nullity because the Court of Claims has no jurisdiction over Oneida County," and that therefore, there is no valid preexisting action to which plaintiff can relate back.

The court heard oral argument on defendants' motion to dismiss on March 13, 2024. At argument, counsel for plaintiff emphasized that despite her initially filing suit in the wrong venue, the County received timely notice of her lawsuit and the facts upon which it was based insofar as OCCF was a named defendant in that case. Counsel also urged this Court not to prejudice her client by dismissing this case as untimely due to an error on counsel's part. Counsel for defendants argued that neither notice nor sympathy to the plaintiff are relevant considerations under these circumstances, and otherwise reiterated the arguments made in defendants' papers. The Court reserved decision and granted a period of one week within which counsel could submit additional case law or authorities in support of their respective positions.

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Bluebook (online)
2024 NY Slip Op 24149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cl-v-county-of-oneida-nysupctoneida-2024.