Plaintiff, a deliveryman, fell from a lift at defendant’s loading dock in February 2001, and, in October 2001, commenced this negligence action seeking damages for his resulting injuries. Defendant’s security captain, Roy Evelyn, testified at his deposition in March 2002 that the security camera monitoring the loading dock had videotaped “some of’ the subject incident, but Evelyn also testified that the tape of the incident had been erased after three months in the normal course of defendant’s business.
In June 2002, plaintiff moved to sanction defendant for destroying the tape of the incident to which Evelyn had referred. In opposing the motion, defendant submitted an errata sheet, sworn to July 24, 2002, in which Evelyn changed his testimony to a denial that the security camera would have filmed any of the subject incident. Evelyn also submitted an affidavit stating the reasons for the change, as required by CPLR 3116 (a), in which he explained that, in reviewing the deposition transcript, he “realized that [he] had incorrectly testified that there was a security camera at the loading dock which would have filmed the lift where [plaintiffs] accident occurred.” In fact, Evelyn represented, the camera in question “does not cover any portion of the lift where [plaintiffs] alleged accident occurred.” Evelyn further explained that, pursuant to defendant’s regular practice of “eras[ing] all security tapes unless the tape itself captures an incident and/or accident occurring,” the tape made by the camera on the day of the incident had been erased “[a]s [it] could not have possibly captured [plaintiffs] accident.” The motion court nonetheless granted the sanctions motion to the extent indicated.
We reverse. The existing record presents a triable issue as to whether any spoliation of evidence actually occurred, and that issue should be submitted to the jury at trial (see PJI 1:77, 1:77.1 [2004]). In this regard, we note that, if Evelyn’s correction of his deposition testimony is credited, it follows that no
