Ostrovsky v. City of New York

2 Misc. 3d 151, 772 N.Y.S.2d 442, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1979
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Misc. 3d 151 (Ostrovsky v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ostrovsky v. City of New York, 2 Misc. 3d 151, 772 N.Y.S.2d 442, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1979 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

William C. Donnino, J.

Defendants Dante Caputo and Emily Caputo move for summary judgment in their favor and to dismiss the complaint and cross claims against them. Defendant Roadway Contracting opposes that motion and cross-moves for summary judgment and dismissal in its favor. Defendant Consolidated Edison (Con Ed) opposes the Caputos’ and Roadway’s motions and cross-moves for summary judgment and dismissal in its favor. Thus, three of the six sets of defendants move for summary judgment and dismissal.1 The plaintiff opposes all the above motions and cross motions.

The Caputos’ motion is denied.

Roadway’s cross motion is granted.

Con Ed’s cross motion is granted.

Background

On November 24, 1997, plaintiff Eugenia Ostrovsky allegedly tripped and fell in the street abutting the residential building numbered 5288-5294 Sycamore Avenue, sustaining injuries. The plaintiff and her husband brought this action on the ground that her injuries were the result of the negligence of the above-captioned defendants.

[153]*153The action was commenced by a complaint filed on October 2, 1998, and supplemented by a supplemented complaint filed on August 18, 2000. The complaints allege that at 5:45 p.m. on November 24, 1997, the plaintiff “was caused to fall due to a dangerous and defective condition which existed” at “the sidewalk/shoulder/roadway at/adjacent to the 254th Street driveway for the premises known as 5288/5294 Sycamore Avenue Bronx, New York”; the bill of particulars narrows the location to “the roadway adjacent to” that driveway entrance. The complaints further allege that the City is the owner of the location where the plaintiff fell, that the Caputos own abutting premises at 5288 Sycamore Avenue, and that Stephen Hammer and Virginia Knox own abutting premises at 5294 Sycamore Avenue.

The complaints allege that, at some time before the incident, the Caputos, Hammer, and Knox contracted with Con Ed “to perform certain work, construction, installation, and/or repair” at the site of the plaintiffs fall, and with Alfredo Calvi and Sons, Inc. “for repair, replacement, construction, demolition, installation, excavation, modification and/or renovation” at that site. The complaints also allege that the “defendants” contracted with the City, and that Con Ed contracted with Roadway, in connection with the alleged work, and that such work was performed “prior to and up until” the plaintiffs fall. The complaints state that the work was done for the benefit of the Caputos and Hammer, and that the Caputos and Hammer made a “special use” of the area where the work was done.

The complaints do not allege whether or how the work done by or on behalf of the defendants caused the alleged defect, but they do allege that the plaintiffs injuries were caused by the defendants’ collective “carelessness, recklessness, and negligence.”

In responsive pleadings, the Caputos denied having any contractual relationships pertaining to construction at or near the location of the alleged fall, and they denied doing any such work themselves or having any knowledge of any dangerous condition. Con Ed and Roadway denied their own negligence and denied knowledge of any dangerous condition.

The following facts were elicited from the testimony taken at the depositions of the witnesses:

In 1997, nonmoving defendants Virginia Knox and Stephen Hammer (collectively Hammer) lived at 5294 Sycamore Avenue, at the corner of Sycamore and West 254th Street; moving [154]*154defendants Dante and Emily Caputo lived next door at 5288 Sycamore Avenue. Notwithstanding the Sycamore addresses, their homes shared a common driveway onto West 254th Street between Sycamore and Independence Avenues. Entering the driveway, Hammer’s house is the first one on the right and the Caputos’ house is second.

At some point before September 1997, the City repaved West 254th Street. The height of the new surface of the road, in comparison to the 5288-5294 Sycamore driveway, caused Hammer’s and the Caputos’ cars to hit the ground while entering the driveway. Hammer had on occasion discussed this problem with the Caputos. To address the problem, Hammer hired Alfredo Calvi and Son, Inc. to repave the lower portion of the driveway. The Caputos were aware that Hammer was having this work done. They did not participate in Hammer’s decision to do it, and they did not pay Hammer or Calvi, but, as Hammer put it, “I don’t recall them arguing with us. Both of us had cars that were bottoming out.” Hammer did not remember exactly when the work was done, but the photographs in evidence at the examination before trial (EBT) fairly and accurately depicted the area as it appeared after completion of the work.

During the course of the work on the driveway, Hammer asked Calvi to do whatever was necessary to prevent water runoff from up the hill from eroding the newly paved driveway.2 Hammer did not tell Calvi how to do this, but he recalled that Calvi paved over some ground a few feet up the hill from the end of the driveway. This paving is visible just above the driveway in EBT exhibit Al.

In 1997, Robert O’Brien, a Con Ed dispatcher, was responsible for coordinating and maintaining records of contract jobs performed on Con Ed’s behalf on Bronx streets. Clemente Perrotta, a manager at Roadway, received job orders from Con Ed and visited all the job sites.

On September 18, 1997, Roadway began two excavations for Con Ed on the block of West 254th Street between Sycamore [155]*155and Independence Avenues, which is the block containing the 5288-5294 Sycamore driveway. Specifically, Roadway dug “test pits” about five feet deep into the street so that Con Ed could examine the area underneath the asphalt. The pits were filled in on October 1, 1997. Perrotta identified as a test pit the “black asphalt line” in EBT exhibit Al, near the 5288-5294 Sycamore driveway, which crosses most of the street but does not reach the edge of the street on the right side. O’Brien indicated that the cut had been 29 feet across by 4 feet wide. Roadway did no other work for Con Ed in that location.

On November 24, 1997, plaintiff Eugenia Ostrovsky was walking on West 254th Street near Sycamore Avenue. She walked on the right side of the road up the hill from Sycamore Avenue, past the driveway entrance to 5288 and 5294 Sycamore, toward Riverside Drive. After the plaintiff passed the driveway, she heard a bus coming from behind her and turned to her right to get out of the way.3 At that point, the plaintiff fell and was injured when her left foot was caught “in a hole” on “the edge of the road” that was about six inches deep by three feet long. This occurred five to six feet beyond the driveway. The plaintiff stated that she “cannot [be] precise” as to the location, but she nonetheless circled the general area of her fall on EBT exhibits Al, C2, and C4 (all of which are included, along with other photographic exhibits from the EBT, in exhibit E in the appendix to the Caputos’ moving papers). The plaintiffs markings do not overlap or immediately abut Roadway’s “test pit” or the driveway. Also, the plaintiff noticed no apparent excavation or construction being performed at the time. The plaintiffs markings do, however, coincide with the area beyond the driveway where Calvi did the work to prevent water runoff.

Dante Caputo did not testify at an EBT.

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Related

Ostrovsky v. City of New York
2002 NY Slip Op 22803 (New York Supreme Court, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Misc. 3d 151, 772 N.Y.S.2d 442, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ostrovsky-v-city-of-new-york-nysupct-2002.