MARIAN ARKIN, Appellant, v SYBIL RESNICK et al., Defendants, and PIOTR DUMICZ et al., Respondents.
Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Second Department, New York
890 NYS2d 95
In this action, the decedent‘s executor (hereinafter the plaintiff) alleges, inter alia, that the respondents Dr. Colleen Willet, Keri-Ann Kiernan, R.N., and their employer Winthrop University Hospital (hereinafter collectively the respondents) departed from good and accepted standards of medical practice in their actions and omissions on the night of February 2, 2000 to February 3, 2000, proximately causing the decedent to sustain brain damage. The respondents and other defendants (hereinafter collectively the movants) moved, among other things, for summary judgment dismissing the complaint insofar as asserted against the respondents. The motion papers included a document by their medical expert Dr. Alan Mensch that was labeled as an “affirmation,” but was prefaced with a statement that he had been “duly sworn.” However, the document did not have either a jurat or a statement pursuant to
Contrary to the plaintiff‘s contention, the Supreme Court did not improvidently exercise its discretion in granting the motion for leave to renew, allowing the movants the opportunity to correct their inadvertent mistake by submitting an identical affirmation in the proper form (see
After the respondents made a prima facie showing of entitlement to judgment as a matter of law, the burden shifted to the plaintiff “to show by sufficient evidentiary proof the existence of a triable factual issue” (Holbrook v United Hosp. Med. Ctr., 248 AD2d 358, 359 [1998]; see Alvarez v Prospect Hosp., 68 NY2d 320, 324 [1986]; Behar v Coren, 21 AD3d 1045, 1046 [2005]). A physician‘s affidavit in opposition to a summary judgment motion must attest to the departure from accepted practice and must contain an opinion that the challenged acts or omissions were a competent producing cause of the injury (see Swezey v Montague Rehab & Pain Mgt., P.C., 59 AD3d 431, 433 [2009]; Vera v Soohoo, 41 AD3d 586, 587 [2007]; Domaradzki v Glen Cove Ob/Gyn Assoc., 242 AD2d 282 [1997]). General allegations that are conclusory and unsupported by competent evidence tending to establish the essential elements of medical
The Supreme Court properly determined that the opinion of the plaintiff‘s unnamed expert with respect to proximate cause was conclusory. The plaintiff‘s expert failed to address the evidence cited by Dr. Mensch that the decedent did not exhibit symptoms of anoxic brain damage on the day after the reintubation and further ignored evidence in the medical records regarding a previously undetected injury that appeared on a CT scan of the decedent‘s head taken on February 4, 2000 that was suggestive of either a nonhemorrhagic contusion from the automobile accident or a cerebral artery infarct (see Zak v Brookhaven Mem. Hosp. Med. Ctr., 54 AD3d at 853). The plaintiff‘s expert failed to link the decedent‘s injuries to any departure from accepted practice which occurred on the night of February 2, 2000 to February 3, 2000 in relation to the decedent‘s episode of respiratory distress, and thus, failed to raise a triable issue of fact on the issue of proximate cause sufficient to defeat the motion (see Murray v Hirsch, 58 AD3d at 703; Myers v Ferrara, 56 AD3d 78, 85 [2008]; Anderson v Lamaute, 306 AD2d 232, 233 [2003]; DiMitri v Monsouri, 302 AD2d 420, 421 [2003]).
The plaintiff‘s remaining contentions are without merit. Rivera, J.P., Miller, Dickerson and Roman, JJ., concur.
