Siskind v. Norris

152 A.D.2d 196, 548 N.Y.S.2d 160, 1989 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 15085
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 30, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 152 A.D.2d 196 (Siskind v. Norris) 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
Siskind v. Norris, 152 A.D.2d 196, 548 N.Y.S.2d 160, 1989 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 15085 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Sullivan, J. P.

On June 13, 1985, Bernard Siskind was involved in a motor [197]*197vehicle accident, as a result of which he commenced an action against Edward Norris and Feinstein Iron Works, Inc., alleging personal injuries, including a herniated disc, and seeking $2,000,000 in damages. Siskind’s wife, Pearl, was not named as a party in that action and no claim was made in her behalf.

On June 16, 1988, three days beyond the expiration of the Statute of Limitations, and after the parties had been directed to proceed to trial, Siskind’s action was eventually settled for $500,000. In the course of the settlement negotiations, Sis-kind’s attorney had inquired as to whether Feinstein’s excess insurer would be willing to contribute $100,000 to the $500,000, which was being paid by Feinstein’s primary insurer. When the excess insurer refused, Siskind agreed to accept the $500,000, although, according to his attorney, he was dissatisfied with the settlement. A release was executed and stipulation of discontinuance prepared that same day. Siskind’s attorney pressed for immediate payment of the settlement sum.

Thereafter, Feinstein’s primary insurer issued its settlement draft, which was paid sometime before July 1, 1988. On that date, Pearl Siskind, represented by the same attorney as had represented her husband, commenced this action seeking the recovery of $1,000,000 for loss of consortium by service of a summons and complaint on Norris and Feinstein. At no time during the settlement negotiations of Bernard Siskind’s action did he or his attorney refer to any contemplated action by Pearl Siskind arising out of the accident of June 13, 1985. The complaint in this action was verified June 6, 1988, seven days before the Statute of Limitations was to run and 10 days before Bernard Siskind’s action was settled. Apparently, a copy of the summons had been filed with the County Clerk of Queens County to toll the Statute of Limitations.

Prior to answering, Feinstein moved, pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (5), to dismiss the complaint on the ground of release and payment. The motion court granted the motion, not on that ground, which it rejected, but, rather, on the constraint of precedent, which, it held, required mandatory joinder of derivative claims. We reverse.

In 1968, in Millington v Southeastern Elevator Co. (22 NY2d 498), the Court of Appeals, abandoning the old rule that only the husband had a cause of action for loss of spousal consortium, recognized, for the first time in New York, a wife’s right to maintain such a cause of action. Stating that consortium [198]*198"represents the interest of the injured party’s spouse in the continuance of a healthy and happy marital life” (supra, at 504-505), the court held that the wife’s interest in the undisturbed continuance of that relationship is no less worthy of protection than that .of her husband. Consortium was held to include not only support or services, but also "such elements as love, companionship, affection, society, sexual relations, solace and more.” (Supra, at 502.)

Courts in other States have voiced the same rationale. (See, e.g., Schreiner v Fruit, 519 P2d 462 [Alaska] [injury to the conjugal relationship rather than loss of services is basis for cause of action]; Nicholson v Chatham Mem. Hosp., 300 NC 295, 266 SE2d 818 [essence is the mutual rights of husbands and wives]; Thill v Modern Erecting Co., 284 Minn 508, 170 NW2d 865 [marital relationship is a "wholeness”]; Izzo v Colonial Penn Ins. Co., 203 Conn 305, 524 A2d 641 [loss of consortium inextricably attached to the claim of the injured spouse].) In DeAngelis v Lutheran Med. Center (84 AD2d 17, affd 58 NY2d 1053), the Second Department, by rejecting the plaintiff’s effort to equate the relationship between parents and children with that which exists between spouses, reaffirmed the unique status accorded the marital relationship.

While an action for loss of consortium is viewed as derivative of the original cause of action of the injured spouse, it has been held to be a separate and independent cause of action, constituting a property right of the deprived spouse. "Since the husband’s cause of action is separate and distinct from that of his wife for personal injuries * * * he could have brought his action even though no suit had been brought by his wife”. (Rios v State of New York, 67 AD2d 744; see also, Filer v New York Cent. R. R. Co., 49 NY 47, 56.) Under this view, a loss of consortium action is derivative only to the extent that it is not cognizable unless the defendant is liable to the injured spouse, whose injury in turn caused the spouse to suffer. In all other respects it constitutes a separate and distinct cause of action personal to the deprived spouse.

Thus, a release given by the injured spouse, whether executed prior to the injury in the form of an exculpatory agreement releasing a party from liability for future injuries or after, cannot be binding on the deprived spouse, since, by virtue of the marital relationship, the injured party is not the agent of his or her spouse and thus, cannot bind the other by an agreement to which he or she is not a party. Courts in other jurisdictions have similarly held. (Fleischman v Har[199]*199wood, 10 FRD 139 [SD NY]; see, Gallina v State of New York, 115 AD2d 251; Nealy v Fluor Drilling Serv., 524 F Supp 789 [WD La], affd 701 F2d 441; Barker v Colorado Region Sports Car Club, 35 Colo App 73, 532 P2d 372; Ryter v Brennan, 291 So 2d 55 [Fla], cert denied 297 So 2d 836; Deese v Parks, 157 Ga App 116, 276 SE2d 269; Rosander v Copco Steel & Eng’g Co., 429 NE2d 990 [Ind]; Gillespie v Papale, 541 F Supp 1042 [applying Mass law]; Shepherd v Consumers Coop. Assn., 384 SW2d 635 [Mo]; Whittlesey v Miller, 572 SW2d 665 [Tex]; Arnold v Shawano County Agric. Socy., 106 Wis 2d 464, 317 NW2d 161, affd 111 Wis 2d 203, 330 NW2d 773; but see, Beardslee v Michigan Claim Servs., 103 Mich App 480, 302 NW2d 896 [representing the minority view that the loss of consortium action is purely derivative, where the court held that a wife’s consortium claim for her husband’s original injury was extinguished by his release, although her claim for loss of consortium, based upon the husband’s claim of fraud as a result of his employers’ workers’ compensation carrier’s inducing him to return to work, causing an aggravation of his original injury, was not similarly barred]; see also, Annotation, 29 ALR4th 1200.)

Nor, as the motion court held, is there any requirement that the loss of consortium claim of one spouse be joined with the underlying claim of the injured spouse. Millington, in speaking of the concern over duplicative damage awards in the event a wife’s action for loss of consortium was recognized, itself acknowledged that joinder was not mandated when it stated, "Since * * * it is rare, if not unknown, to try a husband’s consortium action separately from his wife’s negligence action, the fear of duplicative damages is wholly unsupportable. Furthermore, if any plaintiff should attempt to exploit the possibility of double recovery by bringing separate actions, motions to consolidate would quickly resolve that difficulty.” (Supra, 22 NY2d, at 502.) It should also be noted that prior to Millington,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 A.D.2d 196, 548 N.Y.S.2d 160, 1989 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 15085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siskind-v-norris-nyappdiv-1989.