Order, Supreme Court, Bronx County (Stanley Green, J.), entered February 14, 2006, which, to the extent appealed from as limited by the briefs, denied the Bloomingdale’s defendants’ motion for summary judgment, unanimously reversed, on the law, without costs, summary judgment granted and the complaint dismissed as against Bloomingdale’s. The Clerk is directed to enter judgment accordingly.
Plaintiffs allege injuries due to multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS) caused by a two-week exposure to bedding (mattresses and box springs) manufactured by defendant Simmons and purchased from defendant Bloomingdale’s in January 1984. They commenced this action in October 1986; however, bankruptcy proceedings commenced in 1990 by Bloomingdale’s parent company, Federated Department Stores, resulted in stays delaying this matter until August 2004.
This motion for summary judgment, made in October 2005, was timely, despite the filing of the note of issue and certificate of readiness in April 1995. In an August 2004 order, the motion court granted the parties additional discovery and defendant Bloomingdale’s a reservation of right to move for summary judgment “within 60 days of the completion of all discovery.” This order did not preclude Bloomingdale’s from seeking summary judgment earlier, especially in light of the case being marked off the trial calendar in March 2005 due to outstanding discovery.
As Bloomingdale’s contends, both state and federal courts have consistently determined that the cause or causes of MCS cannot be reliably established by scientific proof (see e.g. Op
Plaintiffs’ reports supporting Bloomingdale’s position were the Clayton Environmental Consultants’ report and the American Standards and Testing Bureau (ASTB) report. The Clayton report, based on tests of air and bedding samples taken from plaintiffs’ apartment in February and April 1984, found that the results were inconclusive as to a cause of plaintiffs’ symptoms, that numerous compounds might have caused plaintiffs’ symptoms, that the comprehensive testing necessary to test for all such compounds would be a “gargantuan task,” that “unless some additional information is obtained that might provide insight into the problem, any further [testing would] result in . . . inconclusive findings,” and that a review of scientific literature and questioning of scientists from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health did not reveal any previous complaints regarding adverse health effects involving exposure to polyurethane foam bedding.
In May 1986, ASTB tested bedding and reviewed the Clayton report and a February 1985 report by New York Testing Laboratories (NYTL). ASTB’s first report failed to find the hydrochloric acid vapors found by NYTL or other substances that might have caused the allergic reactions alleged, questioned NYTL’s results, and noted the wide range of allergic reactions among individuals and the difficulty of ascribing them to a specific al
