GLADYS MARTINEZ et al., Appellants, et al., Plaintiff, v PIONEER TRANSPORTATION CORP. et al., Respondents.
Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department, New York
[851 NYS2d 194]
The Martinez plaintiffs were allegedly injured in an automobile accident in May 2004, when their car was hit by defendants’ school bus. Both were taken by ambulance to the hospital and released the same day, after X rays were taken. The driver was treated by a chiropractor over the course of four months, and remained out of work for three months. The passenger, a student, missed two months of school. Neither of these plaintiffs has received any medical treatment since the summer of 2004. The insurance company stopped paying for treatment, which appellants claim they terminated because they could not afford it, and it no longer seemed to have any beneficial effect.
Where conflicting medical evidence is offered on the issue of whether a plaintiff‘s injuries are permanent or significant, and varying inferences may be drawn, the question is one for the jury (see Noble v Ackerman, 252 AD2d 392, 395 [1998]). Since defendants never sustained their initial burden of establishing that each of the Martinez plaintiffs had not suffered a serious injury causally related to the accident, the burden of proof never shifted to them (see Whittaker v Webster Trucking Corp., 33 AD3d 613 [2006]). Concur—Mazzarelli, J.P., Williams, Sweeny, Catterson and Moskowitz, JJ.
