It is ordered that this motion is decided as follows.
This is an action predicated upon injuries allegedly sustained by plaintiff Salvatore Zavaglia as a consequence of a fall in a nursing home. Plaintiffs assert that the fall was caused by defendants’ breach of federal and state regulations and that plaintiff Salvatore Zavaglia sustained a fractured hip, which led to an open reduction and internal fixation of the hip, two subsequent hip replacements, and three hospitalizations.
One day after plaintiffs served and filed their note of issue and certificate of readiness, plaintiffs served a supplemental bill of particulars to update their claim of special damages (CPLR 3043 [b]). In the supplemental bill of particulars, plaintiffs inserted, for the first time, a claim for past and future home care services which have/will be provided by plaintiff Angela Zavaglia, the spouse of the injured party, plaintiff Salvatore Zavaglia. Plaintiffs seek recovery of $259,200 for past home care services for three years as well as future home care services calculated on the basis of $156 per day. At her deposition, plaintiff Angela Zavaglia testified she helps her husband go to the bathroom, change his diaper, take a shower, get dressed, and eat. She testified that the only one of these activities that her husband can undertake on his own is shaving and that her husband is not able to dress himself entirely on his own. In his affirmation on this motion, plaintiffs’ counsel, without citation to any documents or testimony, asserts that plaintiff wife undertakes dressing changes, provision of medications, and physical assistance with all activities of daily living, including ambulation, bathing, dressing, toileting and personal hygiene.
Defendants bring this motion, asserting that plaintiff wife may not, as part of her derivative action, recover for gratuitous care she provides to her husband. Defendants also assert that they should be afforded the opportunity to conduct a further deposition of plaintiff wife, though they do not explain why they need a further deposition. In opposition, plaintiffs argue that the reasonable value of the nursing services rendered to a husband by his wife is recoverable in the derivative claim since the responsibilities undertaken by plaintiff wife as a result of defendants’ alleged negligence involve nursing and home care tasks for which she is obligated to pay or supply to her husband and thus are compensable as a loss entirely separate from the
Plaintiff husband could properly retain the services of a home health care aide and, if he did so, there would be no question but that he could recover that expense, to the extent necessary and reasonable, from a tortfeasor whose conduct caused his injuries. A spouse has an obligation to support the other spouse (Family Ct Act § 412) and, if as part of that obligation, a spouse retains the services of a home health care aide to help care for his or her injured spouse, that expense, to the extent necessary and reasonable, should be recoverable from a tortfeasor whose conduct caused the injuries (see PJI 2:316). Since either the injured spouse or the non-injured spouse may retain the services of a home health care aide, it should not matter by which spouse, or both, the claim is pursued since the actions will be joined and, therefore, the possibility of a double recovery avoided (Nelson v State of New York,
Here, plaintiff wife did not retain a home health care aide but performed those services herself. While gratuitous care services rendered by friends and relations are not recoverable (Coyne v Campbell,
It seems clear the award for the value of gratuitously rendered services provided by friends and relatives in Schultz was stricken because plaintiff failed to show that he actually incurred any cost or expense for those services (see Mono v Peter Pan Bus Lines, Inc.,
Where a spouse, prior to injury, performed certain household services for his or the other spouse, the latter spouse may recover the pecuniary value of the services that the injured spouse formerly performed (Mono v Peter Pan Bus Lines, Inc., supra). By a parity of reasoning, where an injury to a spouse compels the other spouse to perform additional tasks, not previously performed, for the injured spouse, the non-injured spouse may properly recover for the pecuniary value of those additional services. It should not matter whether the non-injured spouse retains a third party to render those services or performs them himself or herself. The fact remains that the non-injured spouse has a legal obligation to support the injured spouse and whether by paying a third party to provide services not required prior to injury or providing those services directly, the non-injured spouse has sustained an actual, compensable loss.
As was noted by the Court of Claims in the only case found to have directly confronted this issue (Cesnavicius v State of New York, Ct Cl, Patti, J., claim No. 78324, UID No. 2002-013-501; see Caher, Court Awards Wife Damages for Care Given to Hus
To the extent that the non-injured spouse can establish that there are services, which were not required prior to injury, that have actually been incurred or are reasonably certain to be incurred to meet the reasonable requirements of the injured spouse, the non-injured spouse may recover from the person responsible for causing the injury for the reasonable value of those services. Thus, in the view of this court, the compensatory function of a damages award would be appropriately served by reimbursing a spouse for the reasonable value of those additional services necessitated by the injury and caused by the tortfeasor and not required prior to injury that the spouse rendered or will render to an injured spouse.
The court does not agree with defendants’ contention that the claim for household services is subsumed within the spouse’s own loss of consortium claim. A loss of consortium claim represents the marital partner’s interest in the continuance of the marital relationship as it existed at its inception (Buckley v National Frgt.,
Accordingly, defendants’ motion to strike plaintiffs’ supplemental bill of particulars is denied.
Likewise, because defendants have not specified why they seek an additional deposition of plaintiff wife, and because
Notes
Defendants also argue that, viewed as a new claim that properly belongs to plaintiff husband, the claim is time-barred. This argument is not considered as it is improper to raise a new argument (the statute of limitations) for the first time in a reply affidavit (Sanz v Discount Auto,
