1,762 results for 'court:"New York Appellate Divisions"'.
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court properly convicted defendant of assault and strangulation. The court did not deny defendant his right to a speedy trial since the time periods in question were excluded as a reasonable time in which the state could respond to defendant's filings. The evidence also supported the finding that defendant was the initial aggressor and that prior uncharged acts of domestic abuse were relevant to prove motive and intent. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 3, 2024, Case #: 02379, Categories: Assault, Domestic Violence, Speedy Trial
J. Moulton finds that the lower court improperly dismissed a youth-led organization's claim that the state and city actors in charge of New York City's public school system have denied Black and Hispanic students students their constitutional right to a basic education. Although the facts supporting an implication of discriminatory intent are not fully developed, claimants deserve the benefit of the doubt that they could be able to establish the truth before a judge. The disparate impact on students is clearly severe and undisputed, and the lack of other facts is understandable at this time since discrimination is rarely admitted. Reversed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Moulton, Filed On: May 3, 2024, Case #: 02369, Categories: Civil Rights, Education
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court properly found for a lender in a $230 million real estate financing claim. The term sheet gave the lender an exclusive right to provide the loan within a certain time period, in which the borrower failed to secure enough equity financing. This permitted the lender to recover one percent of the loan amount in liquidated damages under the exclusivity clause. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 3, 2024, Case #: 02384, Categories: Real Estate, Banking / Lending
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court properly convicted defendant of assault, but should only have convicted on one charge. The evidence, including testimony from a police officer, shows that he spat on an elderly victim and punched him in the face. Also, his ineffective assistance of counsel claim fails because the record does not permit review of it. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 3, 2024, Case #: 02381, Categories: Ineffective Assistance, Assault
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court properly convicted defendant of robbery and sentenced him to 10 years in prison. The court should have suppressed defendant's statement to police that he had been in the cab when the robbery happened because it was not made spontaneously and violated his Miranda rights. However, the error was harmless in light of the overwhelming evidence that he robbed the victim. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 3, 2024, Case #: 02381, Categories: Miranda, Robbery
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J. Power finds that the lower court properly held that restrictive covenants on parcels within a subdivision barred offering a single-family residence as a short-term Airbnb rental. While owners were permitted to rent a premises, restrictions limit use to "single family residential purposes," which implies longer-term living arrangements as opposed to short stays. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Powers, Filed On: May 2, 2024, Case #: CV-23-0610, Categories: Property
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court properly awarded petitioners attorneys' fees of $48,000 for litigation required by respondents' contemptuous conduct. Petitioners' counsel provided an adequate statement of the legal services provided on the contempt motion, and respondents' claims of overbilling or duplicative work are speculative. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 2, 2024, Case #: 02363, Categories: Contempt, Attorney Fees
J. Fisher finds that the lower court improperly annulled the decision authorizing an oversight agency to use an aquatic herbicide to control spread of the invasive Eurasian watermilfoil in Lake George. The board of the Adirondack Park Agency rationally approved the permit, as members received scientific studies and research demonstrating that the herbicide would be minimally harmful to native plants and water insects and more cost-effective than previously attempted eradication methods. Meanwhile, the agency was due judicial deference on factual evaluations within its area of expertise. Reversed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Fisher, Filed On: May 2, 2024, Case #: CV-23-0672, Categories: Administrative Law, Environment
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that attorney Yasutaka Orihara may not be reinstated from his May 2019 suspension for failing to meet registration requirements because Orihara failed to demonstrate compliance with continuing legal education requirements for suspensions of longer than two years.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 2, 2024, Case #: PM-78-24, Categories: Attorney Discipline
Per curiam, the appellate division vacates its March 2024 order naming the Mid-Hudson Women's Bar Association as custodian to take possession of the files of Delores Felice Seligman, a deceased attorney, who had been suspended for failing to cooperate with an investigation into the management of her escrow account.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 2, 2024, Case #: PM-77-24, Categories: Attorney Discipline
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court properly granted the flooring subcontractors' motion to dismiss a personal injury suit because the worker's accident was not in connection with their work. The accident, caused when a scaffold wheel fell into an uncovered hole, occurred two weeks after the floor subcontractors left the job. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 2, 2024, Case #: 02364, Categories: Construction, Tort
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court properly permitted a victim of child sexual abuse to refile his claim with a request for punitive damages. The Child Victims Act creates a two-year revival window for previously time-barred abuse claims, such as the victim's being abused by multiple teachers at his school. Claim revival statutes like this do not violate due process so long as they are enacted as a reasonable response. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: 02339, Categories: Civil Procedure, Education
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court improperly dismissed a contract and negligent hiring suit filed by the family of a student against a teacher who bullied him on a school trip. A claim should be read liberally at this early stage in the proceedings, and the various theories were not necessarily duplicative of one another. For example, the cause alleging unjust enrichment was based on the parents' having paid fees for the school trip, which can be dismissed without affecting the negligent hiring charge. Reversed in part.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: 02341, Categories: Civil Procedure, Education, Contract
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court properly declined to vacate a default on a real property contract and promissory note. Because the buyers failed to provide any reasonable excuse for their default or a good reason to be permitted to grant a late answer, their action fails. There is also no evidence to support the claim that the summons and complaint were too hidden in the packet of documents delivered to the buyers to be read in a timely manner. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: 02338, Categories: Civil Procedure, Contract
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court improperly set aside a jury verdict finding that a physician who treated the decedent had committed medical malpractice. Failing to send the decedent to the emergency room was a clear departure from the standard of care. The jury had ample evidence to find this, given that the decedent would not have committed suicide that day had he been admitted to the hospital. Reversed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: 02340, Categories: Civil Procedure, Education
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court properly declined to dismiss the borrower's counterclaim in a foreclosure suit. Such suits must be filed within six years of the lender accelerating the mortgage, even if the mortgage is payable in installments. The counterclaim plainly showed that the debt was accelerated in 2008, more than six years prior to filing. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: May 1, 2024, Case #: 02342, Categories: Civil Procedure, Property, Banking / Lending
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that attorney Katherine Ann Aidala of Colorado may be reinstated following her January 2014 suspension for failing to meet registration requirements and grants her leave to resign from the New York bar for nondisciplinary reasons.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: PM-71-24, Categories: Attorney Discipline
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the homeowner is entitled to nominal damages of $10 in a breach of contract action against her neighbor who completed their renovation using a cheaper brick that does not exactly match the homeowner's front façade. No evidence was admitted as to the cost of the bricks the defendant neighbor used, so it is not possible to determine the difference between that figure and the cost of matching bricks. However, the homeowner is entitled to attorney fees of $30,000, 10 percent of the amount she requested. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: 02253, Categories: Attorney Fees, Contract
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court improperly dismissed a petition for a declaration that the July 27, 2023 elections of the democratic district leaders for the 68th Assembly District, Part A are null and void. The elections were invalid because the meeting of 13 out of 84 members of the divisional committee lacked a quorum, and notice for the meeting should have been sent to members elected in the June 2023 primaries, not the outgoing 2022 members. Reversed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: 02255, Categories: Elections
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court properly dismissed an employee's age discrimination suit. The employer submitted evidence that it believed its swap dealer registration was imminent, and therefore restructured the employee's department based on the bank's anticipated future needs. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: 02264, Categories: Employment Discrimination
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that attorney Kali Chantelle Jones may be reinstated following her may 2019 suspension for failing to meet registration requirements because she demonstrated compliance with the suspension order and possessed the requisite character to practice law.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: PM-75-24, Categories: Attorney Discipline
J. Powers finds that the lower court properly classified defendant as a risk level two sex offender after adding "points" to his assessment for sex crimes committed against a stranger when he grabbed the victim's buttocks and masturbated in front of her at a bus stop. Without direct evidence that defendant knew the victim, the inference that they were not acquainted was reasonable. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Powers, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: CV-23-1315, Categories: Evidence, Sentencing, Sex Offender
J. Garry finds that the workers' compensation board properly disallowed a benefits claim after determining a warehouse associate had not suffered a job-related occupational disease. The associate contends he performed repetitive motions in lifting, reaching, and squatting, but he offered insufficient medical evidence to establish a causal relationship between his injuries and a distinctive feature of the job. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Garry, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: CV-23-0563, Categories: Workers' Compensation
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that attorney Demetra Agriantonis may be reinstated following her January 2014 suspension for failing to meet registration requirements because she demonstrated compliance with the suspension order and possessed the requisite character to practice law.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: PM-70-24, Categories: Attorney Discipline
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that attorney Sabrina Alyce Nelson may be reinstated following her May 2019 suspension for failing to meet registration requirements because she demonstrated compliance with the suspension order and possessed the requisite character to practice law.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: PM-72-24, Categories: Attorney Discipline
J. Pritzker finds that defendant was properly sentenced based on his guilty plea to aggravated vehicular homicide and aggravated driving while intoxicated for driving the wrong way on a state highway and hitting an oncoming vehicle, killing one occupant and severely injuring another. Defendant points to his limited criminal history and that he had been in grief following his daughter's death in a car accident the year before, but the negotiated sentence took into account the life-altering impact this event had on him and his victims' families. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Pritzker, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: 112475, Categories: Sentencing, Vehicular Homicide
J. Aarons finds that defendant was properly convicted of menacing for threatening hospital security guards who tried to stop him from taking a wheelchair while he was being escorted out of the emergency department for acting aggressively toward staff, as the guards' testimony established they reasonably feared others could be injured when defendant brandished a knife. The lower court improperly ordered defendant to wear leg shackles during trial and failed to issue curative instructions to the jury, but the error was harmless given the overwhelming evidence of guilt. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Aarons, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: 113131, Categories: Evidence, Menacing
J. Fisher finds that an inmate was improperly found guilty of smuggling and possessing a weapon in charges brought when a ceramic scalpel was found on the ground after he was observed dropping something from his pocket. Meaningful review could not occur due to inaudible gaps in the hearing transcript, and remittal for a new hearing would not be feasible due to the inmate's parole release. Thus, the determination must be annulled and expunged.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Fisher, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: 535826, Categories: Weapons, Prisoners' Rights
Per curiam, the appellate division finds that the lower court properly awarded Home Depot $1.1 million plus interest in a dispute arising from an escrow account set up in connection with the parties' asset purchase agreement, which allocated $5 million to be used to indemnify Home Depot for non-compliant products. Home Depot is entitled to damages for losses attributable to inventory it acquired in the deal that was subsequently recalled. Affirmed.
Court: New York Appellate Divisions, Judge: Per curiam, Filed On: April 25, 2024, Case #: 02256, Categories: Corporations, Business Practices, Banking / Lending