Joyner-Pack v. State

45 Misc. 3d 734, 992 N.Y.S.2d 612
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 9, 2014
DocketClaim No. 116582
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 Misc. 3d 734 (Joyner-Pack v. State) 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
Joyner-Pack v. State, 45 Misc. 3d 734, 992 N.Y.S.2d 612 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

David A. Weinstein, J.

The present application arises out of an action brought by Ivy Joyner (IJ) on behalf of her infant son Nyrell Joyner-Pack (NJP), alleging medical malpractice in the immediate postnatal care received by the latter, leading to severe physical and mental deficits. By decision and order dated December 3, 2012, I approved the settlement of this matter under article 12 of the CPLR, via an infant compromise order (ICO) (Joyner-Pack v State of New York, 38 Misc 3d 903 [Ct Cl 2012]). IJ now moves [736]*736to make withdrawals from the settlement fund created by the ICO beyond those permitted thereunder.

NJP is now 12 years old, and lives with his mother and 23-year-old sister in a two-bedroom apartment in Brooklyn, New York. He is wheelchair-bound and (according to his mother’s affidavit) “will need lifelong care and constant supervision” (IJ aff ¶ 4).

Under the ICO, claimant received $2 million for pain and suffering. Those funds were to be allocated as follows: $915,359.88 were deposited in the Hudson Valley Bank, N.A., to fund a managed settlement trust (the trust), $800,000 were used to fund periodic structured settlement payments, and the remainder went to pay attorneys’ fees and costs. In addition, I approved NJP’s placement in the Medical Indemnity Fund (MIF), which ensured that his medical expenses would be paid out of that fund.1

In regard to the money held for the infant’s benefit, I approved the use of $2,000 per month for the infant’s care and maintenance; $1,000 per month (adjusted 3% per annum) paid to IJ for services she rendered in caring for claimant; $500 quarterly to pay for NJP’s clothing and shoes; and $72,000 for an automobile and the cost of car insurance. I noted that certain of these payments were at odds with what generally may be taken from an infant’s funds. Nevertheless, I approved them based on the following reasoning, set forth in the decision and order:

“Claimant Nyrell Joyner-Pack is, and so far as the medical reports before me indicate will forever remain, entirely dependent on his family or on institutional caregivers for every aspect of his life. He cannot use language, nor move about on his own, nor feed himself, nor live in a manner that is any way independent of those around him. He is, the medical submissions attest, at the developmental level of an four-month-old child. Moreover, his ‘qualifying medical costs’ will be provided for via the MIF. Under these circumstances, I find that use of the settlement proceeds to provide for the necessities of Joyner-Pack’s life (and to do so in as [737]*737comfortable a manner as possible), and to aid his family in caring for him in his home, is in claimant’s best interests. To preclude the use of settlement assets for these purposes, in order that they will be available to claimant when he reaches the age of majority or some other, undisclosed purpose is to draw a wholly artificial boundary. When claimant turns 18, the evidence before me indicates he will remain in the same developmental state as he is at present, and the potential uses for the settlement assets will be subject to the same practical limitations.
“Under these circumstances, and given the extraordinary responsibility claimant’s mother faces in providing him with care, some greater leeway is warranted so that his parent and guardian may make use of the settlement fund to provide for her son, and to mitigate the great difficulties presented by claimant’s state” (Joyner-Pack, 38 Misc 3d at 914-915).

The ICO prohibited any further withdrawals without leave of the court.

NJP also entered into a settlement of a companion action filed against various physicians in New York State Supreme Court. That case had settled in 2009 for $1.25 million, and an ICO was approved on November 18, 2010. According to claimant’s present submission, those funds were used to settle liens regarding Medicaid and held by other social service providers, to establish a supplemental needs trust, and to fund an annuity (see Daly aff ¶ 12). This court has confirmed, as part of its review of the present application, that claimant has not sought to withdraw funds from that settlement.

On April 28, 2014, IJ made the present application, requesting further payments out of the funds reserved for NJP The application is supported by the affirmation of claimant’s attorney, John Daly, and IJ’s own affidavit.

Specifically, IJ seeks the to use the following funds from her son’s settlement:

• $265,000 for the purchase of a new home in East Stroudsburg, PA. Title to the home will be held by the trust.

$15,000 for closing costs on the home.

[738]*738• Annual payment of real estate taxes, homeowner’s association fees and homeowner’s insurance on the new house. The former two items are estimated at $14,306.94 and $1,080 per annum, respectively. No estimate is provided for insurance.

• Up to $10,000 for new furniture for the home.

• Payment of up to $7,500 for purchase and installation of a generator, which IJ states is necessary for the new home, since she “cannot afford to lose power” given NJP’s condition.

• Up to $2,500 in moving expenses.

• An increase from $1,000 to $2,000 in the monthly “earned income” payment to IJ for the care of her son.

In IJ’s affidavit, she states that her monthly income, including the money she receives from this settlement, plus various government benefits, totals $4,298 (IJ aff ¶ 13). Her monthly expenses are presently $3,080 (IJ aff ¶ 14). The market value of the trust, at the time this application was filed, was $838,160.46.

IJ attests that she has “thoroughly researched” the services in the town where her intended home is based, and has found that NJP has full access to “all his needed therapies and schooling” there (IJ aff ¶ 20). She further notes that while the home will reduce the trust’s cash balance, it will remain an asset held by the trust (IJ aff ¶ 25).

Discussion

As a general rule, a child’s recovery in a lawsuit “is intended to recompense him for the physical handicaps and personal suffering the defendant visited on him and to place him on a more equal footing with [other] persons not injured . . . and is not a resource available for his basic support” (Baker v Sterling, 39 NY2d 397, 413 n 3 [1976, Fuchsberg, J, concurring] [citations omitted]). Thus, such settlement funds are generally not to be used “for ordinary necessities of life” (see Galante v Doe, 68 Misc 2d 295, 297 [Civ Ct, Kings County 1971] [citation omitted]; DeMarco v Seaman, 157 Misc 390, 391 [Sup Ct, Queens County 1934]; see also Zambrana v Railway Express Agency, 11 Misc 2d 553, 554-556 [Sup Ct, NY County 1956] [an order allowing the withdrawal of money “must mean something more than just giving over the infant’s property . . . which constitutes legal replacement for his loss, to the one who in law is responsible for his support”]).

[739]*739In recent years, though, courts have retreated from a blanket prohibition on withdrawal to assist the parent in providing the standard elements of a child’s care.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Misc. 3d 734, 992 N.Y.S.2d 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joyner-pack-v-state-nyclaimsct-2014.