Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Caruso, J.), entered February 10, 1997 in Schenectady County, which granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint.
On February 2, 1993, a police vehicle owned by defendant was delivered to Salisbury Chevrolet, Inc., an automobile dealership and repair facility in the Town of Scotia, Schenectady County, for repairs to its antilock braking system. At that time, Police Officer Carl LaMalfa advised Salisbury’s service personnel that the vehicle’s antilock brake light flashed intermittently, which was, as he advised Salisbury, a recurrence of a similar problem that had been the subject of a January 19, 1993 service call. As a Salisbury employee was driving the vehicle into the service area, the brakes failed, causing the vehicle to strike plaintiff Sien Sam (hereinafter plaintiff), a Salisbury brake technician, bringing about the injuries that are the subject of this action. The complaint alleges causes of
We affirm. As a threshold matter, we note plaintiffs’ concession that Supreme Court properly dismissed their first cause of action, predicated upon the alleged negligence of plaintiff’s fellow employee (Workers’ Compensation Law § 29 [6]; see, Kenny v Bacolo,
The question of whether Supreme Court was correct in its grant of summary judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ second cause of action is somewhat more problematic. Notably, the primary evidentiary support for defendant’s summary judgment motion came from LaMalfa’s supporting deposition, an instrument which, although subscribed and sworn to under the penalties of peijury and containing the warning set forth in Penal Law § 210.45, was not sworn to before a notary public or commissioner of deeds. Notwithstanding the existence of some caselaw tending to equate an affirmation with an affidavit (see, People v Sullivan,
Nonetheless, defendant urges that because plaintiffs raised no objection to the technical form of its submission before Supreme Court, choosing instead to attack the sufficiency of the allegations contained therein, the deficiency has been waived. We agree. Fundamentally, “[t]he doctrine of preservation mandates that an issue is preserved for appellate review, and thus available as a basis for reversal or modification of an order or judgment, only if it was first raised in the nisi prius
In this case, the facts alleged in LaMalfa’s affirmation, including the statement that, to the best of his knowledge and recollection, Salisbury had been informed of all problems concerning the vehicle, were sufficient to satisfy defendant’s initial burden of tendering sufficient evidence to eliminate any material issues of fact from the case (see, Winegrad v New York Univ. Med. Ctr.,
Finally, we agree with Supreme Court’s conclusion that plaintiffs’ opposing evidentiary showing was insufficient to raise a material question of fact. Notably, plaintiffs came forward with no evidence identifying the actual cause of the brake failure or giving rise to an inference that defendant was or should have been aware of the defective condition that caused the brakes to fail.
Ordered that the order is affirmed, with costs.
