Vidal v. Maldonado

23 Misc. 3d 186
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 2008
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Misc. 3d 186 (Vidal v. Maldonado) 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
Vidal v. Maldonado, 23 Misc. 3d 186 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2008).

Opinion

[187]*187OPINION OF THE COURT

Paul A. Victor, J.

Relief Sought

Defendants Ricardo Maldonado and Zobeida Franco move for summary judgment pursuant to CPLR 3212 and dismissal of the complaint against them, for the failure of the plaintiff Victor Vidal to prove that he has sustained a “serious injury,” as that term is defined in section 5102 of the Insurance Law.

Another Frustrating Assembly Line “Serious Injury” Motion

The defendants’ motions and plaintiffs’ responses have become almost assembly line, “cookie cutter” prototypes; and attorneys for defendants (and most plaintiffs) have become expert on how to present or attack a serious injury claim.

Defendants are very adept at providing prima facie proof demonstrating that a plaintiff has not suffered a serious injury; proof at the very least sufficient to meet their “initial burden” to present competent evidence that plaintiff has no cause of action. Plaintiffs, too, have become quite conversant with the requirements to defeat a defendant’s motion.

Defendant’s counsel usually submits at least two (sometimes three) affirmations of so-called “independent”1 medical experts (an orthopedist, a neurologist, and radiologist, usually from the same stable of defense medical experts), each of whom examine the plaintiff and/or the reports and tests submitted by plaintiff, and then by affirmation refute plaintiffs claim to have sustained a serious injury. These examinations usually take place years after the automobile accident which has been alleged to cause injury, and each of the defendant’s medical experts conclude that plaintiff is no longer impaired or injured; that all tests and [188]*188findings are normal; that if originally injured, said injuries have resolved; and that, in any event, all of plaintiffs claimed limitations or impairments have been caused, not by the accident, but by degenerative (normal aging process) changes in the cervical and lumbar regions. Except for the dates and the unique peripheral circumstances presented by each case, these medical reports and affirmations submitted by defendant’s chosen medical experts, are virtually identical. Plaintiffs submissions, made in opposition to a defendant’s motion, are no less boilerplate.

Following an automobile accident many of the claims made by plaintiffs seem to have the same script; and many of the medical experts also are drawn from an oft-used and known pool of plaintiffs’ physicians. In addition to “treating” physicians (usually a chiropractor and/or physiatrist, and sometimes the family doctor), plaintiffs proof of serious injury is “supported” (as it must be in accordance with judicially imposed guidelines) by an attempt to provide the “qualitative” or “quantitative” assessment of an orthopedist or a neurologist, who, after conducting a number of range of motion (ROM) tests (which are said to be positive because of the detection of spasm), and reviewing a positive MRI and/or an EMG/NCV test, concludes that plaintiff has a herniated disc or bulges which impinge on the thecal sac and thus causing significant limitations and quality of life impairments which meet the statutory definition of serious injury.

Great Expenditure of Limited Judicial Resources

Trial courts are then presented with the “serious injury” issue on a motion made by a defendant for summary judgment; and the court must then use its “powers” to discern whether the minimum legal requirements have been met to send the case to a trial by jury. The motions and papers submitted by both sides are usually copious, and thus, a thorough review of the record and current appellate decisions requires a great expenditure of limited judicial time. In any event, the decision rendered is usually challenged and refuted by the losing side; and thus many (too many) of these cases are appealed, and many of those appeals result in nonunanimous (and sometimes acrimonious) decisions which are often difficult to reconcile with prior precedent.

Elusive Standards

The enabling legislation for the No-Fault Law itself provides little or no guidance to the bench and bar as to the scope of the terms used. For example, one should reasonably assume that the legislature sought to distinguish “significant limitation of [189]*189use of a body function or system” from a “consequential limitation of use of a body organ or member.” (Insurance Law § 5102 [d] [emphasis added].) However, there appears to be no practical difference. Some courts have held that “consequential” means “significant” (see e.g. Altman v Gassman, 202 AD2d 265 [1st Dept 1994]); and there are abundant cases in which all of the above terms (including body function, system, organ or member) are used interchangeably. The guidelines, conditions and examples provided by the Court of Appeals in a series of decisions, including Toure v Avis Rent A Car Sys. (98 NY2d 345 [2002] [cited and discussed infra]), although very helpful, have not entirely unburdened the trial courts; and these serious injury claims continue to be the cause of incessant motion practice, and an abundant use of judicial resources at both the trial and appellate levels.

Issues Presented Herein

This case, like all other “serious injury” cases, presents the court with the ongoing and frustrating conundrum of deciding when a plaintiffs injury qualifies as significant within the meaning of the No-Fault Law.

As noted in a three to two decision rendered by the Appellate Division, First Department, concerning a similar “serious injury” claim: “This personal injury lawsuit . . . once again presents us with the sometimes frustrating task of deciding when evidence presented on a motion for summary judgment meets the serious injury threshold ..., an elusive standard that all too frequently escapes facile and final resolution” (Brown v Achy, 9 AD3d 30, 31 [1st Dept 2004] [internal quotation marks omitted; emphasis added]).

Factual Background

The accident underlying this case occurred on December 21, 2004 at approximately 12:45 p.m. at the intersection of E. 188th St. and Cambreleng Avenue in the Bronx, at which time and place the vehicles owned and driven by the plaintiff and defendant collided. The 33-year-old plaintiff, who did not lose consciousness, and was not bleeding, was removed from the scene of the accident by ambulance and taken to St. Barnabas Hospital. At the hospital, he complained of pain in his chest, neck and back, and he stated that, even though he was wearing a seatbelt, his chest hit the steering wheel. X rays were taken of the cervical spine and of the chest, both of which were determined to be negative. Thereafter, he was released the same day.

[190]*190On December 30th, nine days postaccident, plaintiff came under the care of Dr. Vladimir Zlatnik, an internist. The underlying treatment records, and the empirical data contained therein, were provided and reviewed by the defendants’ physicians, but were not submitted to the court. All of the information concerning the substance of plaintiffs care and treatment is gleaned from the affirmation of Dr. Zlatnik, dated April 21, 2008, which was submitted in opposition to defendants’ motion to dismiss. In any event, on plaintiffs first visit to Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Misc. 3d 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vidal-v-maldonado-nysupct-2008.