OPINION OF THE COURT
Plaintiff Noel Bess commenced this tort action in Supreme
Background
In 1999, plaintiff Noel Bess commenced this tort actiоn in New York State Supreme Court, Bronx County, seeking to recover money damages for personal injuries sustained on July 6, 1998, while doing construction/demolition work. Reportedly, before his accident, plaintiff had been removing metal beams and ceiling fans while standing on an elevated platform. The platform collapsed, causing plaintiff’s fall and injuries.
On October 29, 1999, the justice presiding over the preliminary conference removed the case to Civil Court, by an order entered pursuant to CPLR 325 (d) and Uniform Rules for Trial Courts, without the consent of the parties. As reported by one of the parties opposing the motion (defеndant),
Four years later, plaintiff moves in Supreme Court for an order transferring the case back to Supreme Court. Plaintiff argues that Supreme Court initially erred in ordering a transfer to Civil Court based upon the incorrect assessment of the sеverity of the injuries that plaintiff had suffered. As reported in the bill of particulars, allegedly available to the court at the preliminary conference, plaintiff sustained “very serious injuries” in the nature of a “compression fracture, herniated disk at L4-L5, bulging disk at [L5]-S1, all with resulting pain, restriction, weakness and limitations.” In addition, plaintiff claims that the case has “languished” in Civil Court for four years with no real expectation of reаching trial anytime soon. Such inordinate delay, plaintiff argues, warrants the transfer of the case back to Supreme Court. Defendant and third-party defendant, on the other hand, argue that Supreme Court was divеsted of jurisdiction over the case once it was transferred to Civil Court.
Under rules enacted on the authority of CPLR 325 (d),
The legislative purpose of enacting CPLR 325 (d) was to create a procedural device under which a higher court can freely transfer cases to lower courts of limited jurisdiction to reduce trial calendar congestion in Supreme Court. (Gordon v Board of Educ. of City of N.Y.,
Contrary to defendants’ suggestion, however, it was not the legislative intent that a transfer tо Civil Court pursuant to CPLR 325 (d) would irrevocably divest the Supreme Court of jurisdiction over the transferred case. (See Huston v Rao,
Another circumstance where Supreme Court has been compelled to order a retransfer to the higher court is when the transfer to the lower court engenders substantial prejudice. (See e.g., La Placa v Boorstein,
Circumstаnces may also change subsequent to the transfer warranting a transfer back to Supreme Court. The classic example is when it appears that a plaintiffs recovery may reasonably exceed the amount stated in the ad damnum clause of her complaint. In such a situation, the Supreme Court would entertain a motion for a retransfer of the action to that court for the purpose of granting leave to increase the ad damnum clause. (See e.g., Huston v Rao, supra; Pulerwitz v Rand,
Nevertheless, absent the aforementioned extraordinary or compelling circumstances, a Supreme Court has no authority to facilitate a CPLR 325 (d) retransfer. (Sеe, La Placa v Boorstein, supra; Schwartz v New York City Tr. Auth., supra; cf.
In this case, the court is not convinced that extraordinary or compelling circumstances exist to warrant a transfer of the case back to Supreme Court. To begin with, this is not the case where the pоssible recovery may exceed the amount stated in the ad damnum clause. Thus, there is no dispute that plaintiff can be adequately compensated for his injuries within the jurisdictional limits of the Civil Court as expanded by CPLR 325 (d). (Cf. Huston v Rao, supra; Pulerwitz v Rand,
Rather, as alluded to before, plaintiff argues that the original transfer was improper because the court failed to realize that the sustained injuries were severe enough to preclude a transfer under CPLR 325 (d). However, except where a party questions subject matter jurisdiction, which is never waived, a party’s remedy is to challenge the Supreme Court’s transfer order by way of reargument or by prescribed appellate procedure. (See, Zuckermann v Spector,
Nor is this court convinced that the circumstances of this case have significantly changed since then to warrant a transfer back to Supreme Court. Plaintiffs averment that the action has been languishing in Civil Court with no immediate prospect of reaching a trial is not an extraordinary or compelling reason for facilitating its transfer back to Supreme Court. Indeed, such a transfer with its attendant delays would not guarantee that plaintiff would reach a more expeditious adjudication in Supreme Court. On the contrary, the goals of judicial economy and efficiency could only be hampered, not furthered, by permitting a retransfer based solely on the fact of the delay in adjudication of the action in the lower court. Such a ruling would be an administrative nightmare; it would surely open a Pandora’s box, by encouraging parties to move for re-transfer whenever a party feels her case has not progressed at a satisfactory pace in Civil Court. Also, it would undoubtedly cаuse many cases to move full circle with the attendant unnecessary administrative cost.
Conclusion
In sum, this court rejects defendant’s and codefendant’s notion that Supreme Court is irrevocably divested of jurisdiction over a case that has been transferred to Civil Court, pursuant to CPLR 325 (d). Nevertheless, this court is not convinced that plaintiffs alleged predicament — his case languishing in Civil Court, presumably shared by other transferred casеs — is a sufficient reason to facilitate its retransfer to Supreme Court, in light of the countervailing policy considerations mentioned above. Such considerations, along with the long delay in making this motion, requirе a denial of plaintiffs motion seeking an order transferring this action back to Supreme Court.
Notes
. The motion is also opposed by third-party defendant Long DeLosa Construction Group, which was not part of thе action when the preliminary conference occurred on October 29, 1999.
. CPLR 325 (d) provides that “a court in which an action is pending may, in its discretion, remove such action without consent to such lower court where it appears that the amount of damages may be less than demanded, and the lower court would have had jurisdiction but for the amount of damages demanded.”
