—Ordеr, Supreme Court, New York County (Stanley Sklar, J.), entered December 20, 2002, which denied defendant Dr. Simkhayeva’s cross motion to dismiss the complаint against her as time-barred, unanimously reversed, on the law, without costs or disbursements, and the cross motion granted. The Clerk is directed to еnter judgment in favor of defendant-appellant dismissing the complaint as against her.
In May 1995 plaintiff visited defendant Toothsavers Dental Care for restorative dental bridgework. Over the course of a three-year period between May 1995 and June 1998, a course of treatment was undertaken, ranging from the taking of X rays and the making of temporary crowns to the insertion of bridgework, by several dental prаctitioners employed at Tooth-savers, including Dr. Simkhayeva. As a result of this dental work, which plaintiff claims deviated from acceрted dental practice, he experienced pain and suffered from infections. Plaintiff commenced a dental malpractice action against Tooth-savers and Dr. Jerry Lynn, asserting causes of action for negligence and lack of informed cоnsent, and alleged that “on or about December 17, 1997” he was under the care of defendants whose negligence caused his injuries. In аddition, in his bill of particulars, plaintiff added that the course of negligent treatment occurred between “July 1997” and “December 17, 1997.”
At his depоsition, Dr. Lynn, after reviewing Toothsavers’ records relating to plaintiff’s treatment, testified that when plaintiff first visited Toothsavers he was examined by Dr. Trumpatori, at which time several teeth were extracted and a temporary bridge made. Plaintiff did not return to Toothsavers until January 1997 at which time the bridgework continued, lasting until June 1998. Dr. Lynn noted that on three of these visits, January 25, 1997, April 19, 1997 and June 19, 1997, Dr. Simkhayeva treated plaintiff. Plaintiff then sоught leave to amend the complaint to add several of the treating dentists, including Trumpatori and Simkhayeva, as defendants. The
In opposition, plaintiff argued that the action against Simkhayeva was not time-barred since he had timely commenced the action against Toothsavers and Lynn and inasmuch as Simkhayeva was one of the plaintiffs treating dentists she was united in interest with Toothsavers under CPLR 203 (b), which allows a claim to relate back to the date on which the claim was interposed against the originally named defendant if the subsequently served defendant is united in interest with the defendant originally named (see Schiavone v Victory Mem. Hosp.,
Once a defendant has shown that thе statute of limitations has run, the plaintiff bears the burden of demonstrating the applicability of the relation-back doctrine (Spaulding v Mt. Vernon Hosp.,
Simkhayeva’s cross motion to dismiss the complaint as against her should have been granted because, although plaintiff may have satisfied the first two рrongs of the test determining the applicability of the relation-back doctrine, he failed to establish the third prong. As the record shоws, Simkhayeva neither knew nor should she have known that, but for plaintiff’s mistake in identifying the proper parties, she would have been named as a party in the lawsuit. The Court of Appeals has noted that “the ‘linchpin’ of the relation back doctrine [is] notice to the defеndant within the applicable limitations period [citation omitted]” (Buran v Coupal,
Notes
Deceased June 1, 2003.
