Goussous v. Modern Food Market, Inc.
This text of 93 A.D.2d 417 (Goussous v. Modern Food Market, Inc.) 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.
Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
Plaintiffs brought this action to recover damages for personal injuries and derivative loss sustained allegedly as [418]*418a result of plaintiff Haider Goussous’s contracting trichinosis from pork purchased from defendant Modern Food Market (Modern Food) and distributed by defendant Tobin Packing Co., Inc. (Tobin). Tobin served an answer and a demand for a bill of particulars on April 5, 1978. Ten months later, on February 19, 1979, Special Term granted a 30-day conditional order of preclusion because of plaintiffs’ failure to serve the bill of particulars. On May 9,1979, Special Term also granted an order for plaintiffs to furnish Tobin with hospital records. Plaintiffs did not comply with either order until May 29, 1980, 14 months after the conditional order of preclusion had expired, when plaintiffs attempted to serve a bill of particulars on Tobin. It was immediately rejected as untimely. No further action was taken until eight months later when, on January 20, 1981, Modern Food brought a motion to compel plaintiffs and Tobin to appear for depositions upon oral examination. Tobin then cross-moved for summary judgment based on plaintiffs’ failure to comply with the preclusion order and the order for hospital records, or, in the alternative, on the merits, for legal insufficiency. Plaintiffs then cross-moved for an order to compel Tobin to accept its proposed bill of particulars. In deciding these motions, Special Term denied Tobin’s cross motion for summary judgment on all grounds, and granted plaintiffs a 20-day extension in which to serve a bill of particulars, imposing, however, a $50 sanction against plaintiffs’ former attorney. Tobin has appealed.
Tobin claims that because plaintiffs’ delay concededly resulted from law office failure, Special Term erred as a matter of law in relieving plaintiffs from the preclusion order. Tobin points to O’Neal v Pankin (90 AD2d 623), and Liberski v Zimmer USA (88 AD2d 1072) and Melendez v Layton (83 AD2d 655), cited therein, which it contends apply the strict rule of Barasch v Micucci (49 NY2d 594) to noncompliance with a preclusion order. However, St. Louis v Willey (92 AD2d 703), our most recent decision on this topic, clearly stands for the proposition that we have not thus extended the rule of Barasch. Any seeming inconsistencies between St. Louis and ONeal-Liberski-Melendez can be reconciled on several grounds. Barasch and its [419]*419progeny (see, e.g., Eaton v Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of U. S., 56 NY2d 900) state that, as a matter of law, law office failure is insufficient as a reasonable excuse for a default in service of a complaint or an answer; that is, trial courts may not exercise discretion to relieve a default where the only excuse is law office failure. Neither the Court of Appeals nor this court, however, has treated delays in complying with conditional preclusion orders because of law office failure as prohibiting the exercise of such discretion.
We have long held that the excuse put forward for delay in serving a bill of particulars must be “proportionate to the delay” (Shumalski v Government Employees Ins. Co., 80 AD2d 975, 976, affd 54 NY2d 671, supra; Scholefield v De Cordier, 70 AD2d 351, 353). In the instant case, there were substantial and uncontradicted extenuating circumstances in connection with plaintiffs’ prior attorney’s failure timely to serve a bill of particulars. During the period following the conditional preclusion order, the legal partnership representing plaintiffs was involved in dissolution proceedings precipitated by the conviction of one partner on Federal criminal charges for failure to file income tax returns (see Matter of Murphy, 80 AD2d 981). Apparently, new counsel for plaintiffs was not substituted until August, 1981, just before Special Term’s order herein. Clearly, no willfulness was involved in plaintiffs’ delay. Therefore, we agree with Special Term’s exercise of discretion in relieving plaintiffs of the fatal consequences of their default (St. Louis v Willey, 92 AD2d 703, supra; Jones v White Metal Rolling & Stamping Corp., 86 AD2d 687; Vecchione Constr. Corp. v Efros, 85 AD2d 633; Neufeld v Roome, 84 AD2d 503). While plaintiffs’ delay was not willful, it was protracted, and relief therefrom should not be granted without appropriate sanctions. The nominal fine of $50 imposed upon plaintiffs’ former counsel is not commensurate with the seriousness of these circumstances. Accordingly, we exercise our discretion to increase the sum to be paid personally by plaintiffs’ former attorney to Tobin to $500 (Vecchione Constr. Corp. v Efros, 85 AD2d 633, supra).
Tobin’s motion for summary judgment on the merits, on the ground that the danger of eating improperly cooked pork is universally known and, therefore, should not be a ground for recovery, was properly denied by Special Term. [421]*421This is nothing more than an assertion of the patent danger doctrine which New York has long since abandoned (Micallef v Miehle Co., Div. of Miehle-Goss Dexter, 39 NY2d 376).
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93 A.D.2d 417, 463 N.Y.S.2d 550, 1983 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goussous-v-modern-food-market-inc-nyappdiv-1983.