Filed Date: 6/28/2005
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
In this personal injury action, plaintiff alleges that, in a motor vehicle accident on October 12, 2000, she suffered “serious injury,” within the meaning of Insurance Law § 5102 (d), to her right shoulder, right knee, and back. In moving for summary judgment, however, defendants established a prima facie case that the subject accident did not cause plaintiff any serious injury. Among other things, defendants offered the affirmed reports of an orthopedist and a neurologist, who opined, after personally examining plaintiff on September 10, 2002, that plaintiff suffered from no orthopedic or neurological disability as of that date. In addition, defendants offered affirmed reports by a radiologist, opining that MRI scans of plaintiffs right knee and right shoulder, made within about two months of the subject accident, indicated that plaintiff suffered from preexisting degenerative conditions in both of these joints, but showed no evidence of any trauma-related injury. Similarly, a November 2000 radiologist’s report in plaintiffs medical file stated that an x-ray of the right knee showed an early stage of osteoarthritis, but “no evidence of fracture or gross destructive lesion,” and an x-ray of the right shoulder showed “no evidence of fracture.” Defendants also submitted the transcript of plaintiffs deposition, at which she testified (1) that, due to a heart condition, she has been unable to work since 1992, (2) that she injured her right knee in a fall in 1991, and (3) that she injured her back in an automobile accident in June 2000, about four months before the subject accident.
In the face of defendants’ evidence, plaintiff failed to come forward with the “objective proof’ (Toure v Avis Rent A Car Sys., 98 NY2d 345, 350 [2002]) required to create a triable issue as to whether her alleged injuries, even if assumed to have met the serious injury threshold, were caused by the subject motor vehicle accident. The affirmed report of plaintiff’s treating
Finally, to the extent plaintiff claims to have suffered a “serious injury” under the 90-day/180-day prong of Insurance Law § 5102 (d), the conclusory and medically uncorroborated assertions of her affidavit are insufficient to raise a triable issue (see Beaubrun v New York City Tr. Auth., 9 AD3d 258, 259 [2004]; Sherlock v Smith, 273 AD2d 95 [2000]). Accordingly, defendants are entitled to summary judgment. Concur—Mazzarelli, J.P., Friedman, Williams and Gonzalez, JJ.