The order is appealable as of right under CPLR 5701(a)(3), as plaintiff properly made a motion on notice to vacate Supreme Court's sua sponte order under CPLR 2221(a).
215 W. 84th St. Owner LLC v. Ozsu, NY Slip Op 05495 (1st Dep't October 4, 2022)
The order is appealable as of right under CPLR 5701(a)(3), as plaintiff properly made a motion on notice to vacate Supreme Court's sua sponte order under CPLR 2221(a).
215 W. 84th St. Owner LLC v. Ozsu, NY Slip Op 05495 (1st Dep't October 4, 2022)
Pursuant to CPLR 2201, Supreme Court may stay an action pending before it "upon such terms as may be just," and the court has broad discretion to grant a stay in order to avoid the risk of inconsistent adjudications, duplication of proof, and the waste of judicial resources. Here, the first-in-time holdover proceeding involves the same parties and both proceedings require the resolution of questions arising from defendant's occupancy of the apartment. A stay is appropriate.
215 W. 84th St. Owner LLC v. Ozsu, NY Slip Op 05495 (1st Dep't October 4, 2022)
A defendant with a right to contribution from a co-defendant has standing to appeal dismissal of his cross-claim. Here, the cross-claim is reinstated, and the cross-claimant can seek recovery for his co-defendants' proportionate fault for plaintiff's injuries.
Ortiz v. Maxon, NY Slip Op 05375 (1st Dep't September 29, 2022)
Defendant fails to establish, as a matter of law, that plaintiff waived his right to be compensated in accordance with the terms of a bonus provision in the parties' employment agreement. The evidence it submitted to show that plaintiff had accepted a bonus amount lower than that to which he was entitled does not demonstrate a clear manifestation of intent to relinquish the contractual right. Defendant's motion to dismiss is denied.
Ramirez v. Moab Capital Parners, LLC, NY Slip Op 05383 (1st Dep't September 29, 2022)
Directors and officers are not subject to personal liability for the torts of corporation employees merely as a result of their holding corporate office.
Schwartz v. Mount Sinai Hosp., NY Slip Op 05384 (1st Dep't September 29, 2022)
The discrimination claims fail because the same supervisor who hired plaintiff in December 2015 fired him by early March 2016, undercutting any notion that plaintiff was mistreated due to his race, color, or national origin. The hostile work environment claims fail, because plaintiff withdrew the claims at his deposition after testifying that he did not consider race, color, or national origin when complaining that a coworker was hostile to him. The record also demonstrates nothing more than petty slights and trivial inconveniences arising from their arguments about the quality of his work and his use of his coworker's workstation and tools.
The retaliation claims fail, as plaintiff testified that no supervisor, coworker, or human resources personnel knew of an unrelated lawsuit he filed against his undergraduate institution, and he otherwise merely theorized that unnamed military or government agents, who were purportedly stalking him, bribed his supervisor to fire him or informed a coworker of the other action.
The discrimination and retaliation claims also fail because plaintiff's disagreement with defendants' assessment of his performance is insufficient to raise an issue of fact as to whether poor performance was a pretext for unlawful conduct.
Weir v. Montefiore Med. Ctr., NY Slip Op 05301 (1st Dep't September 27, 2022)
Although plaintiffs' cross motion is denominated as one for leave to renew and reargue, they seek only reargument, and no appeal lies from the denial of a motion to reargue. The appeal is dismissed.
Yocum v. United States Tennis Assn. Inc., NY Slip Op 05302 (1st Dep't September 27, 2022)
CPLR 5003-a requires a settling defendant to pay all sums due to the settling plaintiff "within twenty-one days of tender, by the settling plaintiff to the settling defendant, of a duly executed release and a stipulation discontinuing [the] action executed on behalf of the settling plaintiff." Where a release and stipulation of discontinuance are tendered by mail, the 21-day period is measured from the receipt of those documents. If the settling defendant fails to pay all sums due to the settling plaintiff within 21 days after the tender of the required documents, the statute authorizes the plaintiff to enter, without further notice, a "judgment . . . for the amount set forth in the release, together with costs and lawful disbursements, and interest."
Levine v. American Multi-Cinema, Inc., NY Slip Op 05207 (2d Dep't September 21 2022)
In order to compel the plaintiff to accept an untimely answer, the defendant must demonstrate that there is a reasonable excuse for the delay and a potentially meritorious defense to the action. As an exercise of its discretion, the court may accept law office failure as a reasonable excuse, where there is a detailed and credible explanation. However, a pattern of willful default and neglect will not be excused.
Hingorani v. Venus Enters. 11 Corp., NY Slip Op 05206 (2d Dep't September 21, 2022)
The appeal must be dismissed because the right of direct appeal therefrom terminated with the entry of the order and judgment of foreclosure and sale in the action. The issues raised on the appeal are brought up for review on the appeal from that order and judgment.
Green Tree Servicing, LLC v. Fernando. NY Slip 05205 (2d Dep't September 21, 2022)