Wilson v. Galicia Contr. & Restoration Corp.

890 N.E.2d 179, 10 N.Y.3d 827, 860 N.Y.S.2d 417
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 29, 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by306 cases

This text of 890 N.E.2d 179 (Wilson v. Galicia Contr. & Restoration Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Galicia Contr. & Restoration Corp., 890 N.E.2d 179, 10 N.Y.3d 827, 860 N.Y.S.2d 417 (N.Y. 2008).

Opinion

10 N.Y.3d 827 (2008)
890 N.E.2d 179
860 N.Y.S.2d 417

LAMONT WILSON, Respondent, et al., Plaintiff,
v.
GALICIA CONTRACTING & RESTORATION CORP. et al., Defendants, and
SAFWAY STEEL PRODUCTS, INC., Appellant.

Court of Appeals of the State of New York.

Argued March 18, 2008.
Decided April 29, 2008.

*828 Mauro Goldberg & Lilling LLP, Great Neck (Kenneth Mauro and Anthony F. DeStefano of counsel), and Ahmuty, Demers & McManus for appellant.

Pollack, Pollack, Isaac & DeCicco, LLP, New York City (Brian J. Isaac and Michael H. Zhu of counsel), and Law Firm of Allen L. Rothenberg (Marc J. Rothenberg of counsel) for respondent.

Chief Judge KAYE and Judges CIPARICK, GRAFFEO, READ and JONES concur; Judge PIGOTT dissents and votes to reverse in an opinion in which Judge SMITH concurs.

OPINION OF THE COURT

MEMORANDUM.

The order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.

On June 18, 1999, at about 7:30 P.M., 16-year-old plaintiff Lamont Wilson allegedly was walking under scaffolding assembled by defendant Safway Steel Products when he saw the scaffolding shake and looked up, and a piece of material fell into his left eye. Plaintiff told hospital personnel that he thought that he had been struck by broken glass. Doctors surgically removed a small piece of metal that had imbedded in his eye and permanently damaged his retina.

On April 6, 2000, plaintiff filed suit against Safway and six other defendants, asserting various theories of liability. Over the ensuing months, Safway and certain other defendants failed to comply with plaintiff's formal and informal discovery demands, and with the terms of a preliminary conference order dated June 25, 2001. Ultimately, on plaintiff's application, the court issued a self-executing conditional order directing *829 defendants to comply by July 1, 2002 or their answers would be stricken.

Having failed to comply, Safway's answer was stricken as of July 1, 2002. This left unrebutted plaintiff's assertion that the cause of plaintiff's injury was "a dangerous, defective and/or unsafe condition" existing on defendant's premises. In early August 2002, at the request of a codefendant, plaintiff produced the object that had been removed from his eye; that defendant's expert opined that the object appeared to be a lead air-gun pellet that was "fired into his eye by the power of an air gun." Plaintiff thereafter discontinued his claims against the other defendants with prejudice, and by order dated June 18, 2003, the court granted his motion for an inquest against Safway, denying Safway's motion to dismiss.

Over the next two years, Safway unsuccessfully moved three times to vacate the order striking its answer and the order granting the inquest. First, Safway attempted to show a "justifiable excuse" for its conduct. The Appellate Division affirmed denial of that motion, concluding that Safway failed to offer "any acceptable reason for its two-year long pattern of failure to respond to discovery demands, court orders, or the conditional order" (8 AD3d 560). Next, Safway alleged that the underlying claim was fraudulent. The trial court determined that its decision to strike Safway's answer and allow plaintiff to proceed to an inquest was "wholly unrelated and in no manner the result of" alleged fraud but resulted solely from Safway's "own actions or inactions." Third, Safway claimed that the self-executing order was void ab initio due to a stay in another matter; the court denied that motion as well, finding the stay inapplicable. After the inquest and entry of judgment, the Appellate Division reduced the award but otherwise affirmed. We now affirm.

In our Court, Safway contends that CPLR 3215 (f) renders the judgment a nullity. Safway—who was represented throughout by counsel, and offered no valid reason for ignoring the discovery demands and court orders—failed to raise this argument in its prior motions.[*] As we have previously made clear, the requirement of preservation is not simply a meaningless technical barrier to review (see Bingham v New York City Tr. Auth., 99 NY2d 355, 359 [2003]). Here, for example, had defendant earlier raised CPLR 3215 (f), plaintiff might well have filed *830 the documents referenced in that section; the affidavit or verified complaint specified in CPLR 3215 (f) "need only allege enough facts to enable a court to determine that a viable cause of action exists" (Woodson v Mendon Leasing Corp., 100 NY2d 62, 71 [2003]). Today, nearly a decade after the incident, and years after dismissal of all codefendants with prejudice, the potential harm to plaintiff from reversing the consequence of Safway's counseled course of action is manifest.

As the conditional order was self-executing and appellant's "failure to produce [requested] items on or before the date certain" rendered it "absolute" (see Zouev v City of New York, 32 AD3d 850, 850 [2d Dept 2006]; Lopez v City of New York, 2 AD3d 693, 693 [2d Dept 2003]), the courts below correctly held that defendant was precluded from introducing any evidence at the inquest "tending to defeat the plaintiff's cause of action" (Rokina Opt. Co. v Camera King, 63 NY2d 728, 730 [1984]; see Weinstein-Korn-Miller, NY Civ Prac ¶ 3126.03 [a conditional order "will preclude proof as to matters not furnished unless the delinquent party provides the particulars within the time frame specified in the order"]). As a result, Safway was deemed to admit "all traversable allegations in the complaint, including the basic allegation of liability" (Curiale v Ardra Ins. Co., 88 NY2d 268, 279 [1996]).

Addressing the dissent, we agree that courts must protect the integrity of the judicial process and ensure that plaintiffs do not secure money judgments based on fraudulent claims. We do, however, assure those objectives by insisting on the parties' compliance with statutes and orders throughout the litigation process, particularly when both sides are represented by counsel engaged to make, and respond to, arguments for their clients. The objectives of honesty and integrity are not furthered when the Court goes outside applicable law to itself raise arguments not preserved in the trial court. Indeed, the dissent's major point—noncompliance with CPLR 5015 (a) (3)—has not even been presented to us.

For this Court now to do the "lawyering" is problematic for additional reasons. Here, for example, there is nothing nefarious in the 16-year-old's statement to hospital personnel immediately after the incident that he thought a piece of broken glass had fallen into his eye when he looked up. He did not actually know what had fallen into his eye; there is no "new theory" (dissenting mem at 832). Nor does the opinion of another defendant's expert establish that a metal pellet was fired *831 from an air gun (dissenting mem at 831); plaintiff's treating physician at the inquest acknowledged that the injury also could have been caused by a small metal object dropping from above. Finally, the dissent's solution—again not sought by Safway before us—overlooks the unfairness to plaintiff of remittal for a hearing at this point, long after the accident and dismissal of all other defendants.

PIGOTT, J. (dissenting).

I respectfully dissent.

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Bluebook (online)
890 N.E.2d 179, 10 N.Y.3d 827, 860 N.Y.S.2d 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-galicia-contr-restoration-corp-ny-2008.