Siracusa v City Ice Pavillion, LLC

Annotate this Case
[*1] Siracusa v City Ice Pavillion, LLC 2017 NY Slip Op 27254 Decided on July 20, 2017 Supreme Court, Queens County Dufficy, J. Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the printed Official Reports.

Decided on July 20, 2017
Supreme Court, Queens County

Luna Siracusa, Plaintiff,

against

City Ice Pavillion, LLC, and "JOHN DOE", said name being fictitious and the true identity of said Individual being unknown, Defendants.



4990/15



SHAUB, AHMUTY, CITRIN & SPRATT, LLP

Attorneys for non-Partiés Dr. Michael L. Lipton and Montefiore Medical Center, moved against herein as Montefiore Advanced Medical Imaging-MRRC Division Montefiore Medical Center

Lake Success, New York

WHITE FLEISCHNER & FINO, LLP

Attorneys for Defendant/Third-Party Plaintiff CITY ICE PAVILION

New York, New York

PAUL W. CUTRONE, ESQ.Attorney for Plaintiff LUNA SIRACUSA Douglaston, New York 1 1363 (718) 631-5500
Timothy J. Dufficy, J.

The following papers read on this motion by defendant City Ice Pavilion LLC and defendant "John Doe" for an order, inter alia, compelling plaintiff Luna Siracusa, nonparty Michael Lipton MD, and/or nonparty Montefiore Advanced Medical Imaging— MRRC Division to provide the complete MRI with diffusion tensor imaging examination of the plaintiff, including all necessary control group data that is part of the plaintiff's neuro-radiological examination and on this cross-motion by nonparty Dr. Michael Lipton and nonparty Montefiore Medical Center for a protective order.



PAPERS NUMBERED

Notice of Motion - Affidavits - Exhibits 1

Notice of Cross-Motion - Affidavits - Exhibits 2

Answering Affidavits - Exhibits 3

Reply Affidavits 4

Memoranda of Law

Upon the foregoing papers it is ordered that the motion by defendant City Ice Pavilion LLC and defendant John Doe is denied. The cross-motion by nonparty Dr. Michael Lipton and nonparty Montefiore Medical Center is granted.

MRI-Diffusion Tensor Imaging (MRI-DTI) is an advanced neuroradiological test/exam which compares data about a subject's brain with data from a control group, and by means of computer software and algorithms provides data about a subject's white matter in comparison with the white matter of the control group. MRI-DTI measures the way water moves in the brain - Fractional Anisotrophy (FA) - for the purpose of evaluating white matter integrity. In theory, a high FA indicates that the white matter is intact and well organized, while a low FA indicates a possible abnormality.

On August 8, 2016, plaintiff Luna Siracusa participated in an ALS Ice Bucket Challenge held at a hockey rink owned and/or operated by defendant City Ice Pavilion, LLC (City Ice). The plaintiff allegedly sustained various injuries, including traumatic brain injury and the exacerbation of prior brain injuries.

On March 25, 2016, the plaintiff had an MRI-DTI performed, and Dr. Michael Lipton provided an analysis of it. The MRI part of the examination revealed that there was no recent or remote hemorrhage and that there was nothing remarkable about the ventricles and overall configuration of the brain. But Dr. Lipton's DTI analysis lead to the conclusion that the plaintiff has abnormally low FA levels, which is consistent with traumatic axonal injury although also consistent with other non-traumatic causes.

The plaintiff made disclosure of the DTI Report. On September12, 2016, the defendants served a demand upon the plaintiff for authorizations to obtain the complete data set pertaining to the DTI examination. The plaintiff has refused to comply with that demand. At a court conference, the plaintiff took the positions that (1) he was not required to disclose the statistical studies and data underlying the DTI and (2) the data set belonged to Dr. Lipton or Montefiore, not the plaintiff. On the other hand, the defendants took the position that the data set is a relevant and necessary part of the MRI-DTI which must be disclosed. The defendants assert that FA cannot be determined to be either high or low without comparing the plaintiff's data to the control group's data. According to the defendant's attorney: "The individual FA levels of each [*2]member of the control group, the data as to the ages and other demographics all affect the final opinions/conclusions about what the MRI-DTI examination allegedly establishes." (Toker affirmation ¶41.)

The Court authorized the defendants to make the instant discovery motion. The defendants obtained the instant order to show cause whose service clause directed service upon Lipton and Montefiore by "next day mail, return receipt requested." Although Lipton and Montefiore object that the plaintiff failed to follow normal discovery procedure starting with the issuance of a subpoena duces tecum, pursuant to CPLR 2302 and 3120(1), this Court has sufficient power to regulate disclosure in a manner that permits discovery to be sought from a nonparty via an order to show cause, especially under the circumstances of this case. Although Lipton and Montefiore further object that in the absence of a subpoena, the Court did not acquire jurisdiction over them, the defendants complied with the service clause of the order to show cause which was jurisdictional in nature.. ""The method of service provided for in an order to show cause is jurisdictional in nature and must be strictly complied with***." (El Greco Soc. of Visual Arts, Inc v Diamantidis, 47 AD3d 929; Lobo v Soto, 73 AD3d 1135; Matter of Hennessey v DiCarlo, 21 AD3d 505.) Moreover, "the court in an order to show cause is not restricted to the methods [of personal service] prescribed by CPLR 308 and can devise yet other methods good for the particular case." (Connors, Practice Commentaries, McKinney's Cons. Law of NY, Book 7B,2214:24.)

This Court has previously decided the dispositive issue raised by the instant motion. In Sylvestre Jean-Francois v The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (Queens County Index No. 14475/14), the defendants sought from Dr. Lipton and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine the same data base information that the defendants seek here. Lipton, a neuroradiologist and neuroscientist, is both the Associate Director of the Gruss Magnetic Resonance Research Center and Director of Radiology Research at Albert Einstein and the Medical Director of MRI Services at Montefiore. In a decision, dated March 16, 2016, this Court quashed a subpoena demanding MRI-DTI data base information on several grounds. First, as to Lipton, this Court found that the information requested was not under his control." [A] party cannot be compelled to produce documents which it does not possess or control or which do not exist ***." ( Wilensky v JRB Mktg. & Opinion Research, Inc., 161 AD2d 761, 763; see Maffai v Cty. of Suffolk, 36 AD3d 765.) Second, as to the other nonparty, this Court stated: "Einstein will not be directed by this court to comply with the subpoena requiring it to provide any information contained in its normative data bases for use in this litigation by British Airways. This information is tangentially relevant at best, on issues of the general acceptance of the underlying scanning technology, which have already been determined and need not be revisited in this litigation. ***." In Sullivan v Walters (Supreme Court, Nassau County, Index No. 6110/2005), Lamasa v Bachman ( Supreme Court, New York County, Index No. 129996/1993), and Scott v Espinal (Supreme Court New York County, Index No. 110601/2010), "diffusion tensor imaging or DTI was accepted as a reliable means of diagnosing traumatic brain injury and accepted in the medical community." Third, "to the extent that such data contains identifying information of the subjects of the studies, that data is confidential and protected by HIPAA. *** There has been no HIPAA waiver or authorization from any of the subjects of these studies to forego their rights under the federal statute for the purposes of this litigation, and this court declines to subjugate [*3]their privacy interests when it is not necessary to do so." Fourth, "the information contained in the normative data base has been demonstrated to be the proprietary information of Einstein, and the applicant, British Airways, has not proven otherwise, or made the requisite legal showing in opposition." Once a party from whom discovery is sought shows that the demand would require it to reveal a trade secret, the burden shifts to the other party, requiring it to show that the information sought is indispensable to the proof of its case. ( Finch, Pruyn & Co. Inc. v Niagara Paper Co., 228 AD2d 834; Conley & Son Excavating Co. v. Delta All., LLC,



120 AD3d 1604.) British Airways did not make the required showing.

The March 16, 2016 Order, in Sylvestre Jean-Francois v The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, was not appealed. The defendants did not successfully distinguish that case from the case at bar, nor have they offered any arguments that cause the this Court to alter its views. Rationale pertaining to confidentiality and proprietary information apply to both cases, especially when the detailed, overly broad scope of the disclosure request (e.g. "hardware specifications" and "coil design") made here is taken into consideration. The Court notes that the plaintiff has not designated Dr. Lipton as an expert witness, and the plaintiff's attorney has not expressed any intent to do so. The plaintiff regards Dr. Lipton as a treating radiologist. Without such a designation, the defendants cannot successfully argue that they need data base information, computer analysis, algorithms, and other matters for the purpose of knowing the foundation for his expert opinion pursuant to CPLR 3101(d)(1). An attempt to establish the permissible parameters of his anticipated trial testimony is premature at this point and may be established later via a motion in limine or at the trial.

Accordingly, it is

ORDERED, that the motion by defendant City Ice Pavilion LLC and defendant John Doe is denied; and it is further

ORDERED, that the cross-motion by nonparty Dr. Michael Lipton and nonparty Montefiore Medical Center is granted.

The forgoing constitutes the decision and order of this Court.



Dated: July 20, 2017

TIMOTHY J. DUFFICY, J.S.C.

Some case metadata and case summaries were written with the help of AI, which can produce inaccuracies. You should read the full case before relying on it for legal research purposes.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.