In an action to recover damages for personal injuries, the defendants appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County (Douglass, J), dated June 12, 2002, which, upon a stipulation on the issue of liability and limiting any award of damages to $1,250,000, and upon a jury verdict awarding the plaintiff Goslyn Sylvan damages in the sum of $4,000,000, is in favor of the plaintiff Goslyn Sylvan and against them.
Ordered that the judgment is reversed, on the law and in the interest of justice, and a new trial is granted on the issue of damages, with costs to abide the event.
The accident in this case occurred on August 12, 1995. The
In 1999, approximately four years after the accident, the plaintiff began to experience progressively worsening pain in his neck, as well as occasional pain radiating to his hands and feet. He was also having difficulty walking. Approximately one year after the onset of these more serious symptoms, the plaintiff was admitted to University Hospital in Brooklyn, where he underwent neck surgery in July 2000. The jury in this case was called upon to resolve a very close issue as to whether the significant degeneration of the plaintiffs condition in 1999 was due solely, or even partially, to the trauma suffered in the car accident four years earlier. In light of the close issue of causation at the heart of his case, a new trial on the issue of damages is warranted in the interest of justice based on the repeated misconduct of the plaintiffs trial attorney.
The record on appeal is replete with vituperative remarks made by the plaintiffs attorney for the sole purpose of inducing the jury to decide this case on passion rather than on the basis of the evidence. We will make no attempt to catalog counsel’s more egregious remarks only for fear that a failure to mention other less egregious ones will be construed as approving their repetition at the new trial. We will instead merely repeat that “when counsel in a close case resort to [inflammatory] practices to win a verdict, they imperil the very verdict which they thus seek” (Cherry Creek Natl. Bank v Fidelity & Cas. Co.,
We also find that the Supreme Court erred to the extent that it permitted the plaintiffs attorney to comment on, or to elicit testimony in regard to, the plaintiffs alleged intent to return to work, an intent supposedly frustrated as a result of the accident, where there is no claim for loss of earnings in the bill of particulars. Similarly, the Supreme Court erred to the extent it permitted the plaintiffs wife to testify as to her need to hire contractors to perform work that, but for his injury, the plaintiff would have performed. No such claim was asserted in the complaint or in the bill of particulars, and the variance between the bill of particulars and the evidence of trial was prejudicial to the defendants (see Palchik v Eisenberg,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment appealed from must be reversed, and a new trial granted on the issue of damages. We need not address the remaining issues, including whether the damage award, based on the verdict as reduced in accordance with the parties’ stipulation, was excessive. Prudenti, EJ., S. Miller, H. Miller and Adams, JJ., concur.
