Juarez v. Wavecrest Management Team Ltd.

212 A.D.2d 38, 627 N.Y.S.2d 620, 1995 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5808
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 30, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 212 A.D.2d 38 (Juarez v. Wavecrest Management Team Ltd.) 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
Juarez v. Wavecrest Management Team Ltd., 212 A.D.2d 38, 627 N.Y.S.2d 620, 1995 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5808 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Asch, J.

Administrative Code of the City of New York § 27-2013 (h) classifies lead paint in multiple dwelling units where children under seven years old live as a hazardous violation that the owner must correct within 24 hours. Many children are poisoned as a result of owners’ noncompliance with this statutory requirement.

Plaintiffs brought this action alleging that the infant plaintiff Peggy Juarez suffered severe personal injury by ingesting lead-based paint chips as a result of the negligence of the defendants, who are, respectively, the managing agent (Wave-crest), the original owner (Mayaghor) and the successor owner (2295 Morris Associates) of 2295 Morris Avenue, in the Bronx. The infant and her mother, plaintiff Noemi Juarez, lived in apartment 4C of that building where the infant allegedly ate the lead paint fragments.

The original owner, Mayaghor, obtained title to the building in September of 1984. The tenant of record, at that time and subsequently, in apartment 4C was Julio Ortiz. The mother, plaintiff Noemi Juarez, and her two daughters moved into the apartment in October of 1987 and continued living there until October 1991. She paid Mr. Ortiz, a "friend”, $150 per month to rent a bedroom in the apartment, with use of the kitchen and bathroom.

According to the mother, "damaged” and peeling paint was "everywhere” in the apartment from the time she moved in. The apartment was not painted by the original owner or the successor owner while the infant and her mother lived there, "before the Department of Health came”. In the bedroom where the three of them resided, and in the bathroom and kitchen which they shared, there were paint chips falling from the ceiling and on the windows, pipes and the radiator. The infant and her sister played near the window in the [41]*41bedroom where there were "a lot of peelings”. They both had dust on their hands, requiring that the mother wash them constantly. On several occasions, beginning about five months after they moved in, the mother found her daughters eating the paint. Once a neighbor suggested that she "have them seen”. There had been several incidents of the girls eating paint chips before the mother sought medical intervention.

The mother only complained to Mr. Ortiz concerning the paint problem and did not speak to anyone connected with the owner. About a year after the Juarez family moved into the apartment, the infant was complaining of stomach pain and showing behavioral problems. The mother took her to Lincoln Hospital. At some subsequent point in 1988, according to the mother, the infant was diagnosed as having lead poisoning. She was referred to and was admitted at Montefiore Hospital where she remained for about a week. She had outpatient treatment for the lead poisoning.

The files before the IAS Court include Montefiore’s records on the infant which show positive lab results for lead and subsequent chelation therapy. According to the mother, the infant continued to play near windows, her toys covered with "lead paint dust”, when she returned from Montefiore. She "constantly put her hands and her toys covered in this lead paint dust into her mouth”. In December of 1988, blood tests revealed that her lead level had "increased” despite chelation therapy. Her lead level remained high in early 1989.

An XRF Analyzer Test Result form, with chemist certification, shows 39 samples of the apartment’s paint taken on September 16, 1988. This test was taken by a sanitarian of the New York City Department of Health, and shows 38 positive findings of lead paint when the apartment was inspected on the indicated date.

The same sanitarian completed a "Lead Poisoning Investigation Checklist”, also on the same day. According to this form, the infant had been seen eating paint chips. There were defective surfaces and peeling paint in every area of the house. There were no other environmental conditions present that would indicate a different source of lead.

On September 21, 1988, the Department of Health issued an Order to Abate Nuisance, stating that the infant resided in the apartment which was identified as a nuisance and had a specified high blood level of lead. Numerous lead poisoning violations were specified in a total of seven locations in the [42]*42apartment. The Order was addressed to the managing agent, Wavecrest. A Health Department document showed that the violations continued in December of 1988 and February of 1989.

Manir Ahmed, a principal of the original owner, testified in deposition that he went to the apartment only once when he bought the building in 1986 or 1987, at which time he did not see paint chips falling. He never had the apartment painted. Instead, he gave the tenant of record a month of rent-free tenancy with the understanding that the tenant "should” use the money to paint the apartment. He never entered the apartment to see whether or not it had been painted.

Ahmed had never seen the Order to Abate before, but his wife (also an officer of the corporation) had learned from the managing agent that the City had found a lead paint poisoning problem in apartment 4C. She advised Mr. Ahmed of the situation when he returned from a trip abroad.

A Department of Health inspection report showed that no work had been done as of October 19, 1988. Ms. Juarez stated in an affidavit that repair work on the peeling lead paint was done by a construction company hired by the City on or about November 2, 1988, but that the problem had not been completely eliminated. The defendants’ copy of the Order to Abate bears the handwritten notation ("Done by Emerg. Repairs, 11/ 1/88, NYC, per Jose Torres”).

A maintenance request maintained by the managing agent shows that the work was still on request in December of 1988. According to the mother’s affidavit, a Department of Health sanitarian conducted another inspection that month, and issued a notice of remaining violations in January of 1989.

Deposition witness Robert Drummond was a principal of both the managing agent and the successor owner, which took title in January 1989. In September of 1988, the successor owner contracted for the purchase of the building, retaining the same managing agent. Mr. Drummond knew that the violation had issued in September of 1988 before going to contract, and had been under the impression that there was an "emergency repair going on”. After going to contract, the successor owner was "made aware of’ the "presence of lead-based paint in Apt. 4C”.

Dr. Robert Gordon, who submitted a report and an expert affidavit on behalf of defendants, examined the infant in July of 1993. In his report, he acknowledged that she had elevated [43]*43levels of lead and erythrocyte protoporphyrin in her blood. He noted both the reports of her eating paint chips and the reports of her putting pencils in her mouth. He questioned whether or not her "lead poisoning” was the sole cause of her cognitive difficulties as measured by academic scores, but raised no question of whether or not she had lead poisoning. He further acknowledged that this "lead poisoning may be one contributing factor to these pattern [sic] of scores”. In his two-page affidavit, he concluded that the infant had "low levels of lead” in her blood, which have not conclusively "affected her cognitive or behavioral performance”.

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Bluebook (online)
212 A.D.2d 38, 627 N.Y.S.2d 620, 1995 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/juarez-v-wavecrest-management-team-ltd-nyappdiv-1995.