Wiggins v. City of New York
This text of 2021 NY Slip Op 06335 (Wiggins v. City of New York) 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.
Opinion
| Wiggins v City of New York |
| 2021 NY Slip Op 06335 |
| Decided on November 16, 2021 |
| Appellate Division, First Department |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports. |
Decided and Entered: November 16, 2021 SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION First Judicial Department
Judith Gische
Peter H. Moulton Lizbeth González Tanya R. Kennedy Saliann Scarpulla
Index No. 152665/19 Appeal No. 14351 Case No. 2021-00463
v
The City of New York et al., Defendants-Respondents.
Plaintiff appeals from an order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Dakota D. Ramseur, J.), entered on or about August 10, 2020, which, to the extent appealed from as limited by the briefs, granted defendant the City of New York's motion to dismiss the complaint as against the individual New York Police Department defendants for failure to comply with General Municipal Law § 50-e.
Rosenbaum & Rosenbaum, P.C., New York (Mark W. Walsh of counsel), for appellant.
Georgia M. Pestana, Corporation Counsel, New York (Daniel Matza-Brown and Anna Gottlieb of counsel), for respondents.
SCARPULLA, J.
This appeal stems from plaintiff Reginald Wiggins's arrest on May 28, 2008, at age 16, in connection with a shooting that took place on May 24, 2008. Prior to plaintiff's arrest, witnesses positively identified a different suspect, who was ultimately prosecuted for the shooting, and subsequent to plaintiff's arrest, witnesses failed to identify plaintiff in a lineup. Nevertheless, plaintiff was incarcerated for six years at Rikers Island pending a criminal trial. Approximately three of the six years were spent in solitary confinement. On September 23, 2014, plaintiff pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the first degree and received a 12-year sentence. The Court of Appeals, on February 15, 2018, overturned plaintiff's conviction, holding that his constitutional right to a speedy trial had been violated, and plaintiff was released.
On March 16, 2018, plaintiff filed a notice of claim against defendant City of New York, asserting causes of action for false arrest and imprisonment; negligent performance of police duties; negligent training, supervision, discipline, and retention of New York City Police Officers; violation of his rights under the New York State Constitution, including the right to a speedy trial; assault; and excessive force. Plaintiff alleged, among other things, that while in solitary confinement at Rikers Island, he was treated inhumanely by officers who deprived him of meals and denied him showers and recreation time. He also alleged that during many of the 75 times that he appeared in New York Supreme Court, he was forced to wear mittens, shackles, and waist chains.
On March 13, 2019, plaintiff sued the City of New York, together with named and unnamed employees of the New York Police Department (the NYPD defendants), and asserted causes of action for false arrest, malicious prosecution and respondeat superior. The City moved to dismiss plaintiff's complaint against the NYPD defendants, arguing that plaintiff failed to satisfy General Municipal Law § 50-e because he did not serve a notice of claim that named the NYPD defendants or John/Jane Doe placeholders on or before May 16, 2018. Supreme Court granted the City's motion and dismissed the complaint against the NYPD defendants. The court noted that "[f]ailing to examine the merits of [p]laintiff's claim here risks perpetuating the faults of a system which already failed him once." However[*2], the court found that it was nonetheless "constrained by precedent to find that [p]laintiff's failure to name the Detectives in the Notice of Claim merits dismissal against them."
Indeed, our prior decisions do hold that, as a prerequisite to suing individual municipal employee defendants pursuant to General Municipal Law § 50-e, employee defendants must be named in a notice of claim (see Alvarez v City of New York, 134 AD3d 599, 606-607 [1st Dept 2015] [Sweeney, J., concurring]; Cleghorne v City of New York, 99 AD3d 443, 446 [1st Dept 2012]; Tannenbaum v City of New York, 30 AD3d 357, 358 [1st Dept 2006]).
Tannenbaum involved the failure to name assistant district attorneys in a notice of claim. We dismissed the claims against the district attorneys, citing a lower court decision and concluding, without discussion, that actions against individuals who have not been named in a notice of claim are not authorized under General Municipal Law § 50-e (id. at 358). Cleghorne, an action stemming from a teacher's alleged exposure to allergens in a school building, cites to Tannenbaum in finding, again without discussion, that the action must be dismissed against the individual defendants because they were not named in the notice of claim (Cleghorne, 99 AD3d at 446).
Like this action, our most recent precedent, Alvarez, involved a plaintiff arrested in a criminal matter who filed a notice of claim alleging, inter alia, assault, excessive force, police brutality and false imprisonment. The plaintiff in Alvarez also omitted from the notice of claim names of individual NYPD officers (Alvarez, 134 AD3d at 599-600). The plurality in Alvarez, after distinguishing contrary decisions from other departments and citing to the same nonbinding lower court case relied upon in Tannenbaum, dismissed the action against the NYPD employees, finding that the plaintiff did not put the City on notice that he would seek to hold specific NYPD employees liable as they were not named in the notice of claim (id. at 606).
As recognized by the dissent in Alvarez, the Third and Fourth Departments have deemed Tannenbaum's reasoning flawed (see Goodwin v Pretorius, 105 AD3d 207, 215 [4th Dept 2013] [holding that courts "misapplied or misunderstood the law in creating, by judicial fiat, a requirement for notices of claim that goes beyond those requirements set forth in the statute"]); Pierce v Hickey, 129 AD3d 1287, 1288-1289 [3d Dept 2015], lv dismissed 30 NY3d 933 [2017].
Moreover, since Alvarez, the Second Department has joined the Third and Fourth Departments in holding that General Municipal Law § 50-e does not mandate the naming of individual municipal employee defendants in the notice of claim (see Blake v City of New York, 148 AD3d 1101, 1106 [2d Dept 2017] ["[l]isting the names of the individuals who allegedly committed the wrongdoing is not required"]). Thus, if we continue to uphold our precedents on actions against municipalities in which individual municipal employees [*3]were not named in the notice of claim, it creates an anomalous situation in that every court in the state — except the courts in the First Department — could make decisions on the merits regarding the individual employees. Here in the First Department, our prerequisite rule would preclude merits-based determinations against such individuals.
Upon additional review of the reasoning of our own precedents, the reasoning of Blake
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2021 NY Slip Op 06335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiggins-v-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-2021.