Judges: Spain
Filed Date: 6/10/2004
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Appeal from an order of the Court of Claims (Lebous, J.), entered December 20, 2002, which denied claimant’s motion to amend the claim.
Claimant, an inmate, commenced this pro se medical malpractice action against defendant in August 2001, alleging that the indifference shown by prison medical officials between Janu
In April 2002, claimant moved to further amend his claim by again inserting new allegations of postclaim medical malpractice, including an April 2002 diagnosis of diabetic retinopathy and a June 2002 misdiagnosis regarding claimant’s carpal tunnel syndrome and increasing his claim for damages from $354,750 to in excess of $3 million. Defendant opposed the motion on the ground that the new. claims improperly expanded the original causes of action stated by claimant and, in any event, were without merit. The Court of Claims denied claimant’s motion not for these reasons, but because it found that the proposed amendments did not substantially alter or amend the original claim and, therefore, were unnecessary. Claimant appeals.
In our view, the denial of claimant’s motion, under the circumstances presented, constituted an improvident exercise of discretion. As relevant here, CPLR 3025 (b) provides that a party is entitled to “amend his pleading, or supplement it by setting forth additional or subsequent transactions or occurrences, at any time by leave of court” (see Siegel, Practice Commentaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR C3025:9). Leave to amend in this fashion should be freely given unless the proposed amendments plainly lack merit or would cause the nonmoving party to suffer prejudice or unfair surprise (see CPLR 3025 [b]; Acker v Garson, 306 AD2d 609, 610 [2003]; De Cristofaro v Joann Enters., 243 AD2d 1015, 1018 [1997]).
Here, claimant has alleged that ongoing acts of medical malpractice perpetrated by prison medical personnel since the filing of his original claim have continued to exacerbate his preexisting medical problems and, therefore, justify the significantly increased damages he now seeks. We disagree with the Court of Claims that these new allegations, particularly the diagnosis of diabetic retinopathy and the medical treatment of claimant’s carpal tunnel syndrome, are insubstantial changes which necessarily fall within the purview of the original claim. Although based on the underlying preexisting conditions to which claimant first referred in the initial claim, the new allegations refer to separate and distinct acts of malpractice occurring outside of the limited time frame originally specified. Because
Cardona, P.J., Peters, Carpinello and Kane, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is reversed, on the law, without costs, and motion granted.