Lead Opinion
— Judgment, Supreme Court, Bronx County (Patlow, J.), entered May 21, 1980, awarding plaintiff $50,657.94, affirmed, with costs. In August, 1976, plaintiff, while driving his own car, collided with defendants’ vehicle at a Bronx intersection. Thereafter, plaintiff consulted an orthopedist, Dr. Etkind, on eight occasions and incurred expenses of $1,025 for these visits. In the course of this treatment, plaintiff assigned his no-fault insurance claim, then in the amount of $635, to Dr. Etkind. After plaintiff’s carrier refused payment, arbitration proceedings were commenced. The claim was denied on the ground that claimants Etkind and Mayers had failed to prove that the alleged injuries for which plaintiff was treated were causally related to this vehicular accident. Defendants’ primary contention on this appeal is that this arbitral determination precluded plaintiff’s claim in this litigation by virtue of the operation of collateral estoppel. The then prevailing Insurance Law, sections 671 and 674, limited causes of action for personal injury to recover noneconomic loss arising out of negligence in the operation of a motor vehicle to situations in which a personal injury resulted in the “permanent loss of use of a body * * * function” or in which “the reasonable and customary charges for medical *** [and] x-ray * * * services necessarily performed as a result of the injury would exceed five hundred dollars” (L 1973, ch 13, § 1). Defendants argue that the rejection of the $635 claim by the arbitrator should have required the court, as a matter of law, to strike that amount from plaintiff’s medical expenses, reducing such expenses below the statutory threshold amount. This, it is argued, would require dismissal of the complaint. Further, it is claimed that Dr. Etkind’s testimony should have been barred in its entirety as the arbitrator found the injuries which he had treated arid of which he had knowledge were not causally related to the accident. This claim would presumably require reversal and the grant of a new trial as there was trial evidence of the injuries plaintiff suffered in the accident other than the testimony of Dr. Etkind. It is apparent that defendants’ plea for a dismissal of the complaint is flawed. Quite apart
Dissenting Opinion
dissents in a memorandum as follows: This case arises out of the collision of two motor vehicles at the intersection of Randall Avenue and New England Expressway in The Bronx on August 9, 1976. Plaintiff’s vehicle was in one of the southbound lanes of Randall Avenue, waiting for the traffic signal to change from red to green. To his immediate right was a truck. In order to observe traffic to his right he permitted his car to roll for a distance of approximately two feet. At that point he first saw the vehicle owned- by defendant D’Agostino and operated by his son Nicholas (collectively the defendant) crossing the intersection and in the process of making a left turn onto the expressway. Other traffic proceeding in the same direction as defendant’s automobile was stopped for the traffic light. As the defendant’s vehicle veered to the left to make the turn it struck the vehicle operated by plaintiff. While plaintiff did not estimate the speed of the D’Agostino vehicle he did state that “[t]he car was bearing down on me very fast”. After a somewhat acrimonious exchange among Nicholas, his passenger and plaintiff, Nicholas, who possessed only a junior driver’s license which did not permit him to operate a vehicle in New York City, drove away. Either hours later or the next day the plaintiff reported the accident to the police. That report indicated that the D’Agostino car had left the scene of the accident and that no injuries had occurred. At the time of the accident plaintiff was 68 years old. Prior to his retirement some four years prior thereto, he had been employed by the New York City Transit Authority as a masonry foreman. Throughout his adult life plaintiff had been engaged in heavy work. By consequence he had been treated by chiropractors since he was 20 years old. Immediately prior to the accident he had been treated by Dr. Marrone, a chiropractor, with greater or lesser regularity. After the accident he saw Dr. Marrone almost daily for a period of approximately one month. Thereafter, the frequency of these visits was reduced to once or twice a week. This action was commenced in or about October, 1977. Plaintiff first visited an orthopedist on December 7, 1977, some two months after the commencement of the action. The orthopedist, Dr. Etkind, was seen approximately six times. So far as the record indicates, plaintiff did not visit any other physician or surgeon for the back injuries claimed to have been suffered by him. The jury returned a verdict in the sum of $83,350, apportioning 60% of the fault to defendant and 40% to plaintiff. By reason of the apportionment the verdict in plaintiff’s favor was reduced to $50,010. Three questions are posed by defendant dealing with the testimony of the experts and one dealing with damages. Dr. Etkind appeared as a witness for plaintiff on the third day of the trial. During cross-examination by defendant it was brought to the attention of the court, in the absence of the jury, that plaintiff had assigned his no-fault claim in the sum of $635 to Dr. Etkind; that Dr. Etkind had made demand for payment from State Farm Mutual Insurance Company, plaintiff’s no-fault insurer; that the insurer had refused to pay and the matter was referred to arbitration. Both plaintiff and Dr. Etkind were listed as claimants in that proceeding which resulted in an award in favor of the insurer upon the ground that the proof submitted failed to establish any causal relationship between the injuries alleged to have been suffered by plaintiff and the treatment by Dr. Etkind. Defendant “suggested” quite strongly that the doctrine of res judicata was applicable and barred the testimony of Dr. Etkind. The court responded: “Arbitration on no-fault is not binding on this Court”. At the close of plaintiff’s case defendant moved formally to add the defense of collateral estoppel. The court reserved the decision on the motion. After the jury had rendered its verdict defendant moved to set it aside, again noting that Dr. Etkind’s testimony should have been barred. At that point the court specifically denied the application. It did