Gluck v. Kamin Health Williamsburg, LLC

2025 NY Slip Op 50548(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Kings County
DecidedApril 16, 2025
DocketIndex No. 509381/2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 50548(U) (Gluck v. Kamin Health Williamsburg, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Kings County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gluck v. Kamin Health Williamsburg, LLC, 2025 NY Slip Op 50548(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

Gluck v Kamin Health Williamsburg, LLC (2025 NY Slip Op 50548(U)) [*1]
Gluck v Kamin Health Williamsburg, LLC
2025 NY Slip Op 50548(U)
Decided on April 16, 2025
Supreme Court, Kings County
Mallafre Melendez, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on April 16, 2025
Supreme Court, Kings County


Solomon Gluck, as Administrator of the Estate of DEVORA GLUCK,
Deceased, and SOLOMON GLUCK, Individually, Plaintiff,

against

Kamin Health Williamsburg, LLC, UNION MEDICAL CARE, PLLC,
 UC MANAGEMENT LLC, ARTHUR KORNBLIT, M.D.,
ANTONIO KING, PAC and CHAIM ADLER, P.A., Defendants.




Index No. 509381/2021

Plaintiff
Scott Howard Seskin, Esq. (ss@seskinlaw.com)
Seskin & Seskin
18 East 41st Street, Suite 800
New York, NY 10017
212-751-0077

Defendant Kamin Health Williamsburg, LLC, Union Medical Care, PLLC, UC Management LLC, Antonio King PAC, and Chaim Adler, PA
Eric S. Stober, Esq. (eric.strober@rivkin.com)
Rivkin Radler LLP
477 Madison Avenue, Suite 410New York, NY 10022
212-455-9555

Defendant Arthur Kornblit, M.D.
Bora Seo, Esq. (bseo@omcdoc.com)
O'Connor McGuinness Conte Doyle Oleson Watson & Lotfus, LLP
One Barker Avenue, Suite 675
White Plains, NY 10601
914-948-4500 Consuelo Mallafre Melendez, J.

Recitation, as required by CPLR §2219 [a], of the papers considered in the review:

NYSCEF#s: Seq. 2: 40 — 42, 43 — 52, 61, 62 — 70, 81

Seq. 3: 53 — 55, 56 — 57, 71, 72 — 80, 82

Defendant Arthur Kornblit, M.D. ("Dr. Kornblit") moves (Seq. No. 2) for an Order, pursuant to CPLR 3212, granting summary judgment in his favor and dismissing all causes of action against him.

Defendants Kamin Health Williamsburg, LLC, Union Medical Care, PLLC, UC Management LLC, Antonio King, PAC ("PA King"), and Chaim Adler, PA ("PA Adler") separately move (Seq. No. 3) for an Order, pursuant to CPLR 3212, granting summary judgment in their favor and dismissing Plaintiff's complaint in its entirety.

Plaintiff opposes both motions.

Plaintiff commenced this action on April 21, 2021, on behalf of Decedent's estate, asserting claims of medical malpractice and wrongful death. Plaintiff also asserts individual claims for loss of services. The claims arise from care and treatment rendered on April 25, 2019, when Decedent presented at Kamin Health Urgent Care.

On April 25, 2019, approximately 4:30 p.m., Decedent presented to Kamin Health Urgent Care with "shortness of breath and pressure on chest." She was seen by PA King, who performed a physical examination and ordered an EKG. PA King assessed her with tachycardia and non-specific EKG findings, and she was discharged with instructions to go to an emergency room if certain signs and symptoms appeared or worsened. He noted: "Pt was advised to go the emergency room tonight but due to holiday the patient refused as she felt symptoms were not worsening. No medications prescribed as pharmacy closed tonight and EKG was non-specific. Pt advised to go to emergency room if chest pressure worsen or sob [shortness of breath] worsen, dizziness, leg pain, worsening headaches or chest pain radiating to arm or shoulder."

Shortly after midnight on April 27, 2019, Decedent had difficulty breathing and an ambulance was called to her home. She arrived at non-party New York Presbyterian in cardio-pulmonary distress, and an CT scan revealed a pulmonary embolism. She then went into cardiac arrest. Despite advanced life support and resuscitation efforts, she was pronounced dead at 5:02 a.m.

Plaintiff alleges that PA King departed from the standard of care by failing to appreciate Decedent's abnormal EKG findings and appropriately refer her to the hospital for immediate treatment on April 25. Plaintiff also asserts vicarious liability claims against the other defendants, including the urgent care's medical director Dr. Kornblit and supervising physician's assistant PA Adler. Plaintiff further alleges that these departures proximately caused the worsening of Decedent's pulmonary embolism and her death.

As an initial matter, both motions from the defendants rely heavily on testimony from PA King regarding his conversation and interaction with Decedent. They contend based on his testimony, as well as the Kamin Health Urgent Care medical records, that PA King appropriately conveyed the severity of Decedent's symptoms and that she "emphatically" declined to go to the hospital. In opposition, Plaintiff argues this evidence is barred by the "Dead Man's Statute" and cannot support a motion for summary judgment.

Generally, CPLR 4519 (commonly known as the Dead Man's Statute) prohibits a party from offering testimony in their own interest as to their "personal transaction or communication" with a deceased person, on the principle that the deceased would be unable to refute their claims. [*2]Personal communication includes "every method by which one person can derive any impression or information from the conduct, condition or language of another" (Holcomb v Holcomb, 95 NY 316 [1884]). "Emphatically, evidence excludable under the Dead Man's Statute should not be used to support summary judgment" (Phillips v Kantor & Co., 31 NY2d 307, 313 [1972]), and "evidence that would be inadmissible at trial under the Dead Man's Statute may not be relied upon to establish prima facie entitlement to judgment as a matter of law" (Weber v Sharma, 232 AD3d 930, 932 [2d Dept 2024]).

The statute is applied less stringently when considering opposition to a motion for summary judgment, because as the Court of Appeals noted, complex rules of evidence and their exceptions are best litigated at trial, and a summary judgment motion is most concerned with "whether an issue of fact exists, without being overly concerned with how the parties will or may prevail on that issue" (Phillips, at 315). Still, the Second Department has held that testimony barred by the Dead Man's Statute can be excluded even in opposition to summary judgment, when it is the only evidence offered and there is no doubt it would be excluded at trial (Stathis v Estate of Karas, 193 AD3d 897, 900-901 [2d Dept 2021]).

In a medical malpractice context, the Second Department recently dealt with the issue of applying the Dead Man's Statute to depositions and medical records. The appellate court found that the deposition and affidavits of two defendant physicians "largely based on their communications with the decedent could not be considered as evidence in support of the defendants' motion for summary judgment" (Weber, at 932). However, the deposition of a non-party nurse was admissible because the nurse was not an "interested party," and "the medical records were admissible as pertinent to the diagnosis and treatment of the decedent" (Id.) To the extent that the medical records are consistent with barred testimony, those records may be considered to provide "sufficient, independent support for the expert opinions" even if the depositions are excluded (Butler v Cayuga Med. Ctr., 158 AD3d 868, 873 [3d Dept 2018]).

Given the clear similarities between this case and Weber,

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Related

Holcomb v. . Holcomb
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Phillips v. Joseph Kantor & Co.
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Bluebook (online)
2025 NY Slip Op 50548(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gluck-v-kamin-health-williamsburg-llc-nysupctkings-2025.