Goldstein v. Berenbaum

2025 NY Slip Op 04216
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 17, 2025
DocketIndex No. 805291/18; Appeal No. 4074; Case No. 2024-01458
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 04216 (Goldstein v. Berenbaum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldstein v. Berenbaum, 2025 NY Slip Op 04216 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Goldstein v Berenbaum (2025 NY Slip Op 04216)

Goldstein v Berenbaum
2025 NY Slip Op 04216
Decided on July 17, 2025
Appellate Division, First Department
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 Official Reports.


Decided and Entered: July 17, 2025
Before: Moulton, J.P., González, Scarpulla, Higgitt, Michael, JJ.

Index No. 805291/18|Appeal No. 4074|Case No. 2024-01458|

[*1]Jeffrey Goldstein et al., Plaintiffs-Respondents,

v

Rachel Marie Berenbaum et al., Defendants-Appellants, Saadia Akhtar et al., Defendants.


Kaufman Borgeest & Ryan LLP, Valhalla (Jacqueline Mandell of counsel), for appellants.

Morelli Law Firm, PLLC, New York (Sara A. Mahoney of counsel), for respondents.



Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Kathy J. King, J.), entered February 28, 2024, which denied the motion of defendants Rachel Marie Berenbaum, D.C. and Manhattan Sports Therapy for summary judgment dismissing the complaint as against them, unanimously affirmed, without costs.

In this chiropractic malpractice action, plaintiffs allege that defendant Berenbaum's chiropractic treatment of plaintiff Jeffrey Goldstein on four occasions, from November 10, 2017 to November 27, 2017, caused him to suffer bilateral vertebral artery dissections that resulted in strokes on December 2 and 6, 2017.

As an initial matter, defendants' motion was timely made (see CPLR 3212[a]). The September 10, 2020 notice filed by Supreme Court, which was not rescinded and did not expire, superseded the time limits contained in the March 19, 2019 preliminary conference order, thereby enlarging the time for summary judgment motions from 60 to 90 days after the filing of the note of issue; this enlargement of time fortuitously coincided with the part rules in place when the action was reassigned to Justice King in 2022 and when those rules were circulated to the parties on March 21, 2023, at least four months prior to service of the motion (see e.g. Nyadzi v Lee, 129 AD3d 645, 645 [1st Dept 2015]; Donnell v Madison Ave.-53rd St. Corp., 214 AD2d 307, 308 [1st Dept 1995]; compare Waxman v Hallen Constr. Co., Inc., 139 AD3d 597, 598 [1st Dept 2016]).

Defendants met their prima facie burden of demonstrating a lack of causal relationship between Berenbaum's treatment and Goldstein's injuries. In support of the motion, defendants submitted Goldstein's medical records and the affirmations of a neurosurgeon and a neuroradiologist, both of whom opined that the collective evidence, including the radiological studies both before and after Berenbaum's treatment of Goldstein and Goldstein's deposition testimony, demonstrated that Goldstein's injuries were unrelated to Berenbaum's treatment.

The neurosurgeon explained that a dissection ? an accumulation of blood within the wall of a blood vessel ? may be either spontaneous, emanating from a force within the blood vessel due to factors that influence blood flow dynamics, or traumatic, emanating from an external physical force applied to the blood vessel and the adjacent structures. Several factors contributed to his conclusion that the dissections were spontaneous and not traumatically induced by the forces applied to Goldstein's body during Berenbaum's treatment.

The neurosurgeon also opined that neither the "typical diversified chiropractic adjustment technique" nor the "even more conservative modalities such as . . . traction" involved strain sufficient for disruption of or injury to the cervical vessels, and that Berenbaum's treatment, as described by Goldstein at his deposition, even if "aggressive," "jerky," or "fast," was evocative of traction, as opposed to manipulation, and, in any event, could not have involved force sufficient [*2]to cause these types of injuries. He explained further that it is extremely rare for bilateral or multiple dissections to be produced by trauma, with spontaneous injury being more likely to produce them. Moreover, he explained, it is even less likely that the injuries are traumatic when there is no evidence of associated injury to the adjacent and surrounding tissues; it is an "impossibility," because the path of travel of an external force capable of producing a dissection would have damaged the interstitial tissues or structures between the dissections or resulted in the collection of blood. Here, the neurosurgeon noted, none of the posttreatment imaging showed injury to any structure in the neck, other than the dissections themselves, confirming that the dissections were spontaneous and not traumatic.

Defendants' neurosurgeon further opined that two pretreatment imaging studies, the second taken within a month prior to Berenbaum's first treatment of Goldstein, showed that Goldstein was suffering from a preexisting arterial disease impacting his entire vascular system and placing him at high risk for developing spontaneous dissections as the disease progressed and continued to impact blood flow. He opined that this systemic disease process explained the nonresolving neck pain that brought Goldstein to seek Berenbaum's care in the first place, and also explained why Goldstein sustained bilateral rather than unilateral dissection, because both structures would have been similarly affected by disease and stressors.

Finally, the neurosurgeon opined that because traumatic dissections, by definition, produce immediate and severe pain, and because Goldstein did not testify to any forceful impact or pain during or after any of the treatment, the dissections could not have been traumatically induced.

Defendants' neuroradiologist reviewed imaging conducted both before and after Berenbaum's treatment of Goldstein. He found that the pretreatment imaging showed that Goldstein had already sustained an undiagnosed right-sided dissection, and because the posttreatment imaging demonstrated that the condition remained unchanged, Berenbaum's treatment could not have caused or contributed to that dissection. Defendants' neuroradiologist further opined that the characteristics of the left-sided dissection appearing on posttreatment imaging indicated that it had occurred days after plaintiff's last treatment with Berenbaum. He concluded that because a traumatic dissection occurs at the moment of arterial trauma, and not days later, this dissection was not caused by Berenbaum's treatment of plaintiff.[FN1]

Contrary to plaintiffs' argument, a defendant in a chiropractic malpractice action may meet its prima facie burden by demonstrating either that there was no departure from good and accepted chiropractic practice in treating the plaintiff, or that any such departure was not a proximate cause of the plaintiff's injuries (see Lyons v Tsadyk, 225 AD3d 681, 682 [2d Dept [*3]2024]; Scalisi v Oberlander, 96 AD3d 106, 120 [1st Dept 2012]; King v St. Barnabas Hosp., 87 AD3d 238, 245 [1st Dept 2011]). Defendants demonstrated their prima facie entitlement to judgment as a matter of law by establishing the latter.

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2025 NY Slip Op 04216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldstein-v-berenbaum-nyappdiv-2025.