Court Filings
1,984 filings indexedRecent court opinions cross-linked with public notices by case number, summarized and classified by AI.
Matter of A.G.
The Appellate Division affirmed a Family Court order granting the petitioner nonparent guardianship of A.G., a child placed with the petitioner at birth in August 2018, and dismissed the parents' petitions for custody. The court found the petitioner demonstrated extraordinary circumstances and had been the child’s exclusive caregiver, meeting the child’s needs and fostering a strong bond. The parents had only sporadic or supervised contact, failed to provide financial support or stable housing, and did not show they could plan for the child's return. The court held the guardianship was in the child’s best interests.
FamilyAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkDocket No. G-24377/22 N-2110/18 V-16010/23 V-24861/22|Appeal No. 6453|Case No. 2024-02062|Johnson v. AMF Bowling Ctrs., Inc.
The Appellate Division, First Department affirmed the trial court's grant of summary judgment dismissing plaintiff Lisa Johnson's personal-injury complaint arising from a slip-and-fall at defendants' bowling alley. The court held the appeal was properly considered on the merits despite a procedural argument about appeal timing, but found no admissible evidence that any specific negligent condition (such as excessive oiling or waxing) caused the fall. Because causation could only be based on speculation, defendants met their burden and plaintiff failed to raise a triable issue of fact, so the dismissal was upheld.
CivilAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkIndex No. 450921/19|Appeal No. 6449|Case No. 2024-03539|Gavilanes v. 919 Ground Lease LLC
The Appellate Division, First Department affirmed a Supreme Court order granting plaintiff Luis Gavilanes summary judgment on liability under Labor Law § 240(1) against defendant 919 Ground Lease LLC and others. The court held that the evidence shows defendants’ negligence in failing to provide proper fall protection — plaintiff was directed to climb cross-pipes without a harness tie-off and could not secure his harness — and that this was a proximate cause of his injury. The court also found defendant translations insufficiently certified but that factual disputes about ladder availability did not defeat liability.
CivilAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkIndex No. 153246/22 |Appeal No. 6454|Case No. 2025-03947|Deutsche Bank Natl. Trust Co. v. Adekola
The Appellate Division, First Department dismissed Jacob Adekola’s appeal from Supreme Court orders that granted Deutsche Bank’s motions for a default judgment, an order of reference, confirmation of a referee’s report, and a judgment of foreclosure and sale. The court held Adekola lacked standing to appeal because he failed to appear in the underlying action before filing his notice of appeal and therefore was not an aggrieved party. Because the appeal was dismissed for lack of standing, the panel did not reach the merits of Adekola’s arguments for relief.
CivilDismissedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkIndex No. 380894/10|Appeal No. 6447|Case No. 2025-03923|De La Rosa v. Isabella Geriatric Ctr., Inc.
The Appellate Division, First Department affirmed the denial of defendant Isabella Geriatric Center’s motion to dismiss a wrongful-death complaint brought after a resident contracted COVID-19 and died. The court held that defendant did not establish entitlement to immunity under the Emergency or Disaster Treatment Protection Act because, while two statutory prerequisites were satisfied (it was a health care facility providing COVID-related services), there were triable issues about whether the facility acted in good faith and whether its conduct rose to gross negligence. A post-death health department citation suggesting policy noncompliance was central to the decision.
CivilAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkIndex No. 152822/22|Appeal No. 6462|Case No. 2025-01529|Clarke v. Fifth Ave. Dev. Co., LLC
The Appellate Division, First Department modified a lower-court order denying summary judgment to the landlord-defendants on their counterclaim for unpaid rent. The court held defendants were entitled to partial summary judgment that plaintiffs owe use-and-occupancy damages for the period October 2020 through March 2021, when plaintiffs returned to and lived in the apartment after elevator service was restored. The court otherwise affirmed the denial of summary judgment because disputed facts remain about defendants' alleged fraudulent inducement, whether plaintiffs were partially constructively evicted or unreasonably rejected alternative housing, and whether plaintiffs ratified the lease.
CivilAffirmed in Part, Reversed in PartAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkIndex No. 158986/20 |Appeal No. 6439|Case No. 2025-06786|Campbell v. New York City Health & Hosps. Corp.
The Appellate Division, First Department reversed Supreme Court Bronx County's grant of summary judgment for New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation and reinstated Janice Campbell's medical malpractice complaint. The suit alleges surgeons lacerated the plaintiff's bladder during pelvic surgery. The appellate court found that plaintiff's expert affidavit raised a triable issue by opining surgeons deviated from the standard of care by failing to perform a retrograde bladder fill, which would have better delineated bladder margins given substantial pelvic adhesions. The court held this claim was included in the bill of particulars, so dismissal was improper.
CivilReversedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkIndex No. 26902/20|Appeal No. 6467|Case No. 2024-06323|Bank of Am. v. Sands
The Appellate Division, First Department affirmed the foreclosure judgment entered for Bank of America against defendant Nicholas Sands. The court confirmed the Referee's report on the amount due because the bank submitted admissible business records and supporting filings, and Sands failed to produce proof of payments or raise evidentiary objections. The court found any failure to calendaring a post-report hearing did not prejudice Sands. It declined to review a separate challenge to service of a 90-day notice because Sands had abandoned that issue by not appealing the prior order or raising it below. The court also held the loan was not a protected "home loan."
CivilAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkIndex No. 810068/10|Appeal No. 6456|Case No. 2025-01291|Bacchus v. 676 E. 179 LLC
The Appellate Division, First Department modified a Bronx Supreme Court order on a Labor Law § 241(6) claim. The court affirmed that plaintiff was entitled to partial summary judgment and defendants were not entitled to dismissal as to Industrial Code §§ 23-1.5(c)(3) and 23-9.2(a) because the grinder lacked a visible guard, the employer had notice, and the unguarded tool was necessary for the work. The court reversed as to Industrial Code § 23-1.5(c)(1), holding that provision is too vague to support liability under Labor Law § 241(6). The remainder of the lower court's order was affirmed.
CivilAffirmed in Part, Reversed in PartAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkIndex No. 35204/20|Appeal No. 6452|Case No. 2025-03503|Anderson v. Lubin
The Appellate Division, First Department modified a Supreme Court order concerning deposition priority in a multi-plaintiff civil case. The court held that defendants who filed a pre-answer motion preserved their CPLR 3106(a) priority to take party depositions and plaintiffs needed court leave to depose defendants before the defendants' time to answer expired. The Appellate Division also ruled that defendants are entitled to depose each individual plaintiff (all 27), not just 10, because each sues in his individual capacity and the Commercial Division presumptive limit can be altered. Nonparty depositions and document discovery may proceed as scheduled.
CivilAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkIndex No. 655151/23|Appeal No. 6436|Case No. 2025-05030|AmBase Corp. v. 111 W. 57th Sponsor LLC
The Appellate Division reviewed cross-motions for summary judgment about whether two individuals (Maloney and Stern) must indemnify plaintiffs under two paragraphs of limited joinders tied to a joint venture agreement (JVA). The court affirmed the lower court in holding that paragraph (ii) does not obligate Maloney and Stern to indemnify plaintiffs for first-party claims, but it vacated the declaration and denied summary judgment as to paragraph (i) because that paragraph is ambiguous about covering first-party claims. The court relied on Delaware law requiring a clear statement to extend indemnities to first-party claims and found disputed issues of contractual interpretation for paragraph (i).
CivilAffirmed in Part, Reversed in PartAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkIndex No. 652301/16|Appeal No. 6457|Case No. 2025-06984|Small v. Riding High Dude Ranch, Inc.
The Appellate Division, Third Department affirmed Supreme Court's denial of defendant Riding High Dude Ranch's motion for summary judgment in a negligence suit by plaintiff Kerry Small. Small alleged a wrangler negligently pushed her leg over a horse while mounting in June 2021, causing knee injuries requiring surgery. The court found defendant met its initial burden showing Small assumed ordinary risks of horseback riding, but Small raised triable issues that the wrangler applied excessive force in a manner contrary to ranch training and protocols, which could have unreasonably increased the risk and caused her injury. Those factual disputes preclude summary judgment.
CivilAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCV-25-0291People v. Randolph
The Appellate Division, Third Department affirmed defendant Robert W. Randolph’s conviction following his guilty plea to third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance. Randolph pleaded guilty pursuant to an agreement that included a five-year prison term and a waiver of appellate rights; County Court imposed the agreed sentence. The appellate court found the written and colloquy-based appeal waiver valid, declined to disturb the plea (finding the voluntariness claim unpreserved), and rejected challenges to the People’s certificate of compliance and statutory speedy-trial claims as forfeited or foreclosed by the waiver. A constitutional speedy-trial claim was unpreserved and, on the merits, would not warrant relief.
Criminal AppealAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCR-23-1527People v. Nesbitt
The Appellate Division, Third Department affirmed defendant Anthony Nesbitt’s convictions and sentences following his guilty plea to first-degree criminal contempt, attempted second-degree assault, and second-degree menacing. The court held that Nesbitt’s written appeal waiver was invalid because it failed to clearly explain what collateral challenges survived, so his challenge to sentence was not precluded. On the merits, however, the court found the agreed-upon consecutive sentences lawful and not unduly harsh, declined to modify the sentence in the interest of justice, and noted that any request about a missing letter of support should be made to County Court.
Criminal AppealAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York113194BPeople v. Martinez
The Appellate Division, Third Department affirmed Jose Martinez's conviction and sentence for third-degree robbery after he pleaded guilty pursuant to a plea agreement that included an appeal waiver. The court found the oral plea colloquy adequately explained the appeal waiver, separate from rights lost by pleading guilty, and that Martinez acknowledged discussing the waiver with counsel and understood its consequences. Because the waiver was knowing and voluntary and Martinez had been informed of the possible prison exposure if he failed interim probation, his challenge to the severity of the sentence was barred.
Criminal AppealAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York113415People v. Ellington
The Appellate Division, Third Department affirmed defendant Jerry Ellington's conviction and agreed-upon sentence after a guilty plea to attempted promoting prison contraband in the first degree. Ellington had pleaded guilty in satisfaction of an indictment charging multiple contraband-related offenses and admitted his involvement; County Court imposed a 1½ to 3-year term to run consecutive to his existing sentence. The appellate court found his challenges to plea voluntariness and counsel performance unpreserved and, on the merits, concluded the plea colloquy and record showed the plea was knowing and voluntary. The court also held the agreed sentence was the minimum authorized by law and not excessive.
Criminal AppealAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCR-22-2139People v. Duane MM.
The Appellate Division, Third Department affirmed County Court's denial of defendant Duane MM.'s 2022 application for resentencing under the Domestic Violence Survivors Justice Act (DVSJA). Defendant, convicted in 1996 of two counts of second-degree murder and other property offenses for killings committed when he was 16, argued his history of sexual abuse by his father significantly contributed to the crimes and that his original sentence was unduly harsh. The court found the expert testimony lacked sufficient contact with or records about defendant and offered no nexus to one murder, and defendant's own statement did not tie the abuse to his actions. Because defendant did not prove the required DVSJA factors by a preponderance of the evidence, resentencing was properly denied.
Criminal AppealAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCR-24-1778Matter of Xu
The Appellate Division, Third Department, granted Baidu Xu's motion to be reinstated to the practice of law after a prior suspension in September 2024. The court reviewed Xu's affidavit and the Committee's response and found by clear and convincing evidence that Xu complied with the suspension order and court rules, demonstrated the requisite character and fitness, and that reinstatement served the public interest. The court ordered immediate reinstatement under the Rules for Attorney Disciplinary Matters governing reinstatement after suspension.
OtherGrantedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkPM-79-26Matter of Wurah
The Appellate Division, Third Department granted Attorney Amanda Wurah's motion to be reinstated to the practice of law after a suspension imposed in September 2024. The court found by clear and convincing evidence that Wurah had complied with the suspension order and court rules, demonstrated the requisite character and fitness, and that reinstatement served the public interest. Based on those findings and the applicable reinstatement rule, the court ordered that Wurah is reinstated effective immediately.
OtherGrantedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkPM-78-26Matter of Shahinian
The Appellate Division, Third Department granted Natalie Sirouhi Shahinian's motion to be reinstated to the practice of law after a September 2024 suspension. The court reviewed her affidavit and the Committee's response, found by clear and convincing evidence that she complied with the suspension order and applicable rules, demonstrated the requisite character and fitness, and that reinstatement served the public interest. As a result, the court ordered her reinstatement effective immediately.
OtherGrantedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkPM-77-26Matter of Screen (A & K Automotive)
The Appellate Division, Third Department affirmed the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board's decision disqualifying Peirce Screen from receiving unemployment benefits because his employment was terminated for misconduct. The appeal was brought by Screen (pro se) against his former employer A & K Automotive and the Commissioner of Labor. The court issued a short order affirming the Board's ruling without opinion or costs, leaving the Board's finding of misconduct and resulting disqualification in place.
OtherAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCV-25-1443Matter of Martinez v. Sing Sing Corr. Facility
The Appellate Division affirmed the Workers' Compensation Board's decision refusing to preclude a December 2023 independent medical examination (IME) report in claimant Michael Martinez's workers' compensation matter. Martinez argued the IME report was inadmissible because the examiner did not file an IME-3 form as required by section 137, but the Board found the carrier's timely-filed IME-5 form and separately filed instructions supplied the same substantive information about body parts to be examined and issues to address. The court concluded those filings satisfied statutory and regulatory notice requirements and that exclusion was not warranted.
AdministrativeAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCV-25-0759Matter of Kunii
The Appellate Division, Third Department granted attorney Norika Kunii’s motion to be reinstated to the practice of law after a suspension imposed in October 2021. The court reviewed Kunii’s affidavit, exhibits, and the Committee’s response and found by clear and convincing evidence that she satisfied the reinstatement requirements, complied with the suspension order and court rules, demonstrated the requisite character and fitness, and that reinstatement served the public interest. The court ordered immediate reinstatement under the court’s disciplinary reinstatement rules.
AdministrativeGrantedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkPM-76-26Matter of Knights (Commissioner of Labor)
The Appellate Division, Third Department affirmed the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board's decision that Warren Knights was ineligible for unemployment benefits for multiple periods because he falsely certified he was totally unemployed while earning money delivering for Instacart. The Department of Labor issued revised determinations finding overpayments and imposing forfeiture penalties based on willful misrepresentations. The Board credited evidence and testimony showing Knights failed to report his paid work despite having received a handbook explaining reporting obligations, and the court found substantial evidence supported the Board's finding of willfulness and the monetary penalties.
AdministrativeAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCV-25-0502Matter of Ferra v. Paramount Global
The Appellate Division, Third Department affirmed the Workers' Compensation Board's decision that claimant Jorge Ferra did not commit fraud under Workers' Compensation Law § 114-a. Ferra was seriously injured when his parked vehicle was struck after a minor accident; hospital toxicology showed a .18 blood alcohol level. The Board and the workers' compensation judge had previously found the injury compensable because intoxication was not the sole cause. The carrier later sought suspension of benefits for alleged perjury about drinking, but the Board concluded there was insufficient evidence of material fraud and the Appellate Division found substantial evidence supporting that conclusion.
AdministrativeAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCV-25-0176Matter of Ebanks v. Sing Sing Corr. Facility
The Appellate Division affirmed the Workers' Compensation Board's denial of claimant Omar Ebanks's request to preclude an independent medical examination (IME) report. Ebanks had argued the carrier failed to file an IME-3 form as required under the statute and Board rules, but the Board found the carrier had filed an IME-5 scheduling form, timely IME-4 cover sheet and detailed examiner instructions that provided notice and the requested information. The court held that these submissions constituted substantial compliance with Workers' Compensation Law § 137 and 12 NYCRR 300.2, so the April 2024 IME report was admissible and the Board did not abuse its discretion.
AdministrativeAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCV-25-0485Matter of Davis v. Gia Quinto Masonry
The Appellate Division, Third Department affirmed the Workers' Compensation Board's decision awarding benefits for an occupational disease to Samuel Davis, a brick mason who alleged repetitive-trauma injuries to both hands/wrists and knees. The Board credited treating physician Dr. Hecht's opinion linking Davis's long history of repetitive masonry duties to his diagnoses, despite conflicting opinions from the carrier's consultant. The court also upheld a $500 penalty the Board imposed (reduced from $2,500) against the carrier for unilaterally conducting a third deposition of Dr. Hecht while an administrative appeal was pending, finding that the deposition constituted a frivolous proceeding.
CivilAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCV-24-2025Matter of Century Indem. Co. v. Office of the N.Y. Attorney Gen.
The Appellate Division, Third Department affirmed Supreme Court's dismissal of Century Indemnity Company's CPLR article 78 challenge to the Attorney General's denial of a FOIL request. Century sought documents the Diocese of Ogdensburg produced to the Attorney General during an investigation; the Attorney General withheld them under FOIL's law-enforcement exemption. The court found the agency met its burden by identifying categories of records compiled for law enforcement and explaining how disclosure would interfere with the ongoing investigation, so nondisclosure was proper and counsel fees were not awarded.
AdministrativeAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCV-25-0568Gillespie v. Nathan Littauer Hosp. & Nursing Home
The Appellate Division, Third Department affirmed Supreme Court's denial of defendants' summary judgment motions in a wrongful-death/medical malpractice suit. Plaintiff sued after her husband presented to the emergency department with left-sided back pain and difficulty breathing and later died of a heart attack four days after discharge. Defendants submitted expert affidavits saying care met the standard and testing would not have changed the outcome; plaintiff produced expert opinions that an EKG and troponin should have been ordered and that timely testing/treatment would likely have prevented death. The court found disputed issues of fact on breach and causation and rejected defendants' claim plaintiff raised a new theory of recovery.
CivilAffirmedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCV-24-2095Ball v. New York State Dept. of Health
The Appellate Division, Third Department reversed Supreme Court's declaration that Justin Ball is entitled to a civil jury trial to contest administrative charges seeking fines and revocation of his EMT license. The court held that the federal Seventh Amendment has not been incorporated against the states and therefore does not guarantee a civil jury in a state administrative licensure proceeding, and that New York's constitutional jury guarantee does not extend to regulatory license-revocation proceedings rooted in the statutory scheme governing professional licensure. The court granted the Department of Health's motion to dismiss and ended the injunction against the administrative process.
AdministrativeReversedAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New YorkCV-25-0810