Hailan Cui v. State of New York

2025 NY Slip Op 51926(U)
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 25, 2025
DocketClaim No. 137097
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 51926(U) (Hailan Cui v. State of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hailan Cui v. State of New York, 2025 NY Slip Op 51926(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

Hailan Cui v State of New York (2025 NY Slip Op 51926(U)) [*1]

Hailan Cui v State of New York
2025 NY Slip Op 51926(U)
Decided on November 25, 2025
Court Of Claims
Shillingford, 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This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.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 November 25, 2025
Court of Claims


Hailan Cui, AS ADMINISTRATOR FOR THE
ESTATE OF YANFANG XIE AND HAILAN CUI, INDIVIDUALLY, Claimants,

against

The State of New York, Defendant.




Claim No. 137097

For Claimant:
YK LAW LLP
By: Jesse Weiner, Esq.

For Defendant:
HON. LETITIA JAMES, New York State Attorney General
By: Cheryl Rameau, Esq., Assistant Attorney General Ruth Shillingford, J.

Claimants, Hailan Cui, as Administrator for the Estate of Yanfang Xie (hereinafter "Miss Xie"), and Hailan Cui, Individually, filed this Claim seeking damages for wrongful death and negligent supervision resulting from the death of Miss Xie, then allegedly a resident at the Manhattan Psychiatric Center (hereinafter "MPC"), whose body tragically was found in the East River. A unified trial was conducted, with the parties subsequently filing post-trial briefs. This Decision follows.

Claimant Cui testified and presented the testimony of Terri Ann Paul and Dr. Glenn Kalash. Lucy Borges-Smith, Sanju Thomas and Dr. Matthew Majeske appeared on behalf of Defendant. The parties consented to admission of Claimant's Exhibits 1-4, 6-13; and Defendant's Exhibits A-H, and J-W.[FN1]

After Claimants rested, Defendant made an application for a directed verdict and the Court reserved decision at that time and upon the reiteration of Defendant's motion at the end of Defendant's case.

The Court now makes the following Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, finding in [*2]favor of Defendant.

FINDINGS OF FACT [FN2]


CLAIMANTS' CASE

Terriann Paul, treated as a hostile witness at trial, had been employed as a Social Worker for Family Care with the Manhattan Psychiatric Center ("MPC") since 2016. Her job entailed placing patients who had no family members with whom they could reside after their psychiatric hospitalization with outside providers. If the patient matched with the family in question, they would then live there. Her duties and that of her team were to ensure that the client had all necessary items at the home and to supervise the provider. This was all part of the Family Care program.

Miss Xie, who had been diagnosed with schizophrenia and perhaps bi-polar disorder, was one of her clients. Ms. Paul first met her in 2016 while Miss Xie was residing in the Bronx with a Family Care provider named Ms. Robinson. Miss Xie was also receiving outpatient treatment, including with her psychiatrist and her social worker, at the O.P.D. Clinic ("the Clinic") located on Adam Clayton Boulevard and 125th Street in Manhattan. Ms. Cui served as Miss Xie's emergency contact from 2016, and her name and telephone number were listed in the emergency contact list dated April 19, 2019 (Defendant's Exhibit D; T3: 21-23). Ms. Paul had always been in contact with Ms. Cui.

The usual practice was that the driver of a van would drop the clients off at the Clinic at around 9:30 or 10:00 a.m., and would then leave the location around 12:30 or 1:00 p.m. Miss Xie would "wander off" at least two or three times a month and miss the bus, causing Ms. Paul and her team to search the area for her. Ms. Paul would also call Ms. Cui to inquire about Miss Xie's whereabouts. Ms. Paul cared very much about her clients, including Miss Xie, and would warn her about the dangers of wandering off to places like the McDonald's across the street from the Clinic and sitting out on a bench by herself.

Sometimes Miss Xie would disappear for "a couple of days" and "then sometimes it'll be like four, five [days] or maybe a week" (T3: 32). Ms. Paul would contact Ms. Cui when the team "noticed that [Miss Xie's] gone for a week, of course" (id.). Upon the refreshment of her recollection, Ms. Paul recalled that Miss Xie had attempted suicide in February 2019. She was admitted as a patient at Jacobi Hospital and later discharged to the Crisis Residence (hereinafter "Crisis") on March 8, 2019. Miss Xie was no longer in her care once she was discharged by Jacobi Hospital to Crisis. Ms. Paul had no recollection of Miss Xie disappearing on March 12, 2019, since she was not in her unit.

The difference between the Transitional Living Residence ("T.L.R.") and Crisis is that "it's like two different residents. You got T.L.R. Transitional Living Residence and then you have another building with the Crisis. Crisis would cater to other individuals who are, I believe, undocumented" (T3: 67). Crisis is not open from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Residents at Crisis are free to leave Wards Island and "are able to come and go as they wish" (T3: 62-63). Those [*3]clients in Family Care were also free to leave the assigned home on their own. It is about a thirty-minute walk from the Queens entrance on Wards Island to the Manhattan Psychiatric Center ("MPC").

There are two completely different approaches to the responsibilities at Family Care and Crisis, which is located on Wards Island. When a client is missing, the Family Care team will initiate a "diligent search" of, inter alia, shelters and hospitals; contact family members; and they "don't stop until [they] get some kind of communication to locate that particular client." Ms. Paul undertook such searches regarding Miss Xie (T3: 60; 72-73). On the other hand, "Crisis, the staff, they're not leaving the island, they're not doing any of that" (id.). Rather, the staff at Crisis would call the Justice Center; complete an incident form; and advise the assigned social worker, who would call the police within forty-eight hours. The police would then come to Wards Island and initiate a Missing Person's Report (T3: 64-67; 69-70). Ms. Paul never looked at the rules for Crisis; rather, her testimony about the absence of a "diligent search" requirement was based on her observations while working overtime at T.L.R.

A Progress Note reflected that on March 12, 2019, Miss Xie failed to return for 7 p.m. curfew at T.L.R. and was later found at the Queens entrance on Wards Island on March 13, 2019. Ms. Paul related that since Miss Xie had been discharged from Family Care, she did not know when precisely she was found. However, Miss Xie was then sent to New York-Presbyterian Weill Cornell Hospital.

According to Ms. Paul, "The high-risk list would be individuals who tend to miss their doctors' appointments, with their psychiatrist. If they miss, like, three or four consecutive appointments, we would put them on the high-risk list" (T3: 47). Ms. Paul could not recall if Miss Xie was ever placed on the high-risk list. Placement on this list requires an enhancement of the number of visits to the psychiatrist.

The various factors for consideration of placement on the high-risk list are "Suicide attempt within the past year ...Suicide Care Pathway... Current violent ideation ...Suicidal ideation with plan ...Arrest for violence within the past year ...Active order of protection High Risk Rating on the Violence Risk Assessment form" (Defendant's Exhibit S; T3: 52).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 NY Slip Op 51926(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hailan-cui-v-state-of-new-york-nyclaimsct-2025.