Van Buskirk v. State

22 Misc. 3d 953, 869 N.Y.S.2d 745
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 21, 2008
DocketClaim No. 107578
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 Misc. 3d 953 (Van Buskirk 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
Van Buskirk v. State, 22 Misc. 3d 953, 869 N.Y.S.2d 745 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2008).

Opinion

[954]*954OPINION OF THE COURT

Michael E. Hudson, J.

Defendant has moved for summary judgment dismissing the claim by reason of Mr. Van Buskirk’s alleged failure to file and serve his pleading in the manner set forth under Court of Claims Act § 11 (a) (i), and in conformance with the judicial determination that authorized his pursuit of this matter. For reasons that follow the court must grant the State’s motion, based upon claimant’s failure to serve a copy of the pleading that he filed.

Claimant seeks to recover for injuries allegedly sustained in a fall from the roof of a building on January 6, 2000, while performing construction-related activities under a contract between the building corporation he owned and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Mr. Van Bus-kirk filed his claim on April 7, 2003, pursuant to a grant of leave to file a late claim under Court of Claims Act § 10 (6) by the Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Fourth Judicial Department (Van Buskirk v State of New York, 303 AD2d 970 [2003], revg Ct Cl, Oct. 24, 2001, NeMoyer, J.).

In May of 2007 defendant filed an earlier motion for summary judgment (motion No. M-73386), seeking dismissal on the ground that the claim as served upon the Attorney General on March 28, 2003 failed to recite a total sum claimed, a pleading allegation required at that time under Court of Claims Act § 11 (b) (see Kolnacki v State of New York, 8 NY3d 277 [2007]; Lepkowski v State of New York, 1 NY3d 201 [2003]). Relying upon Kolnacki, the State urged that the pleading defect rendered the claim jurisdictionally defective. Claimant opposed that motion on several grounds, including an assertion that his claim, as filed on April 7, 2003, did include a demand for damages in the sum of $1,000,000. Mr. Van Buskirk also cross-moved at that time for leave to file and serve an amended verified claim that listed a total sum of damages demanded (cross motion No. CM-73478). In response the State expanded its arguments for dismissal to include the variation between the claim as filed, which recited an ad damnum clause, and the claim as served, which did not include such a provision. By decision and order filed April 11, 2008, this court denied dismissal to the extent premised upon the failure to recite a total sum due, based upon the abrogation of that pleading requirement for such matters under an amendment to section 11 (b) (L 2007, ch 606, § 1), effective August 15, 2007, and expressly made applicable to any claim pending on or after November 27, 2003. The court denied [955]*955the State’s further request for dismissal based upon discrepancies between the filed claim and that which was served, since that ground for relief was first raised in an affidavit in response to the cross motion to amend, rather than in its initial motion papers. That latter denial of relief was made without prejudice, and intended to afford both parties the opportunity to review the multiple copies of the claim that likely would have been filed with the Clerk of the Court,1 and to fully address the issue in their motion papers. Lastly, the court denied claimant’s cross motion for leave to file and serve an amended claim that recited a total sum due as moot, in view of the amendment to section 11 (b) in that regard.

In this motion defendant once again seeks to dismiss the claim by reason of the discrepancy between the filed claim and the pleading served upon it. In urging relief the State notes that Court of Claims Act § 11 (a) (i) requires that “a copy” of the filed claim be served upon the Attorney General. It is the State’s contention that the statute anticipates that the pleading served be a reproduction of the same one that is filed, and that noncompliance with that statutory requirement is a failure of jurisdiction that compels dismissal of the claim. As a second basis for relief defendant urges that claimant’s right to pursue this matter is derived from a grant of late claim relief by the Appellate Division, which provided, in part: “[w]e therefore . . . grant the application for permission to file a late notice of claim upon condition that claimant shall file the proposed notice of claim within 20 days of the date of entry of the order of this Court” (303 AD2d at 971 [emphasis added]). According to defendant, the claim that Mr. Van Buskirk filed varied from the proposed pleading upon which the Appellate Division granted conditional relief, and dismissal is warranted on that basis as well.

The court will first discuss the discrepancy between the pleading filed and that which was served. Court of Claims Act § 11 (a) (i) provides, in relevant part, that “[t]he claim shall be filed with the clerk of the court; and, except in the case of a claim for the appropriation by the state of lands, a copy shall be served upon the attorney general” (emphasis added). The word “copy” is not defined within the statute, and for that reason should be afforded its usual and commonly understood meaning (McKin[956]*956nev’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes §§ 94, 232; see Matter of Terino v Levitt, 44 AD2d 167, 169 [1974]). Reference to a dictionary is appropriate in the absence of statutory definition or documented history (see Matter of Cortland-Clinton, Inc. v New York State Dept, of Health, 59 AD2d 228, 231 [1977] [addressing interpretation of an administrative rule]). Here, the definition of “copy,” as relevant, and set forth in Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1981 ed [unabridged]) is “an imitation, transcript, or reproduction of an original work,” or “one of a series of esp. mechanical reproductions of the same original text.” When so viewed it is clear that section 11 (a) (i) anticipates that the pleading served be a reproduction of the same original claim that is filed.

Several decisions of the Court of Claims have dismissed a claim where a material discrepancy existed between the pleading filed and that which was served (see Hardy v State of New York, Ct Cl, Jan. 4, 2008, Hudson, J, claim No. 110013, motion No. M-73636, UID No. 2007-034-554;2 Ali v State of New York, Ct Cl, Feb. 7, 2006, Sise, P.J., claim No. 110988, motion Nos. M-70517, M-70665, CM-70622, UID No. 2006-028-516; Gordon v State of New York, Ct Cl, Dec. 31, 2003, Hard, J., claim No. 105141, motion Nos. M-67068, CM-67122, UID No. 2003-032-133). Significantly, none of those decisions held that the served copy must exactly mirror the original claim, and indeed Gordon recognized that “[a]s a practical matter some variation between the claim and the copy that is served on defendant is and should be tolerated, particularly when the documents are handwritten separately.” The court further notes that following the Legislature’s enactment of a commencement-by-filing procedure in Supreme Court and County Court practice in 1992 (L 1992, ch 216), a similar issue arose with respect to the consequence of serving pleadings that varied from the papers filed with those courts. In Matter of Gershel v Dorr (89 NY2d 327 [1996]), the Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal of a special proceeding in Supreme Court wherein a petitioner served a notice of petition on a respondent after filing a different set of initiatory papers, holding that basic to the revised statutory procedure “is the rule that the papers served must conform in all important respects to the papers filed” (id. at 332).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Misc. 3d 953, 869 N.Y.S.2d 745, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-buskirk-v-state-nyclaimsct-2008.