![]() They want to know if you are supporting anyone financially and what your earnings history has been.Īll of these details are required to be provided to the defense to put them on notice about the exact claims you are making and the reasons why. They want to know what medical expenses you have incurred because of the wrongdoing. They want to know what specific injuries you have suffered as a result of the alleged wrongdoing. They want to know what the theory of liability is. What is it that their client did or did not do that you believe caused harm? They want to know specifics. They want to know what the exact claims of negligence or medical malpractice were. Some of the questions they want answered including why you believe something was done wrong. Your attorney must then answer each of the questions that they pose in this document known as a verified bill particulars. The attorney representing the people you have sued will send back a detailed list of questions and demands seeking answers. ![]() The people you are suing are then required to answer the allegations in the complaint. Your lawsuit is started with certain documents known as a summons and complaint. Your attorney is required to prepare a detailed set of documents known as a bill of particulars after the lawsuit has started. When I say “you” I really mean your lawyer. Contact Schlam Stone & Dolan partner John Lundin at if you or a client has a question regarding discovery obligations (and what to do if a litigant is not honoring those obligations).When you bring a lawsuit in New York seeking compensation for your injuries, you as the “plaintiff” are required to itemize in detail the allegations against the people you are suing. As this decision shows, a bill of particulars is intended to amplify the allegations of a pleading, not as a substitute for discovery devices, such as interrogatories. The scope of discovery in New York is broad, but it does not include the device discussed here: a demand for a bill of particulars. Accordingly, the defendants' separate motions, among other things, to strike the complaint insofar as asserted against each of them must be denied.Ī big part of complex commercial litigation is giving, receiving and evaluating evidence (this is called "discovery"). The defendants failed to demonstrate that the plaintiffs' delay in providing amended bills of particulars was willful. Accordingly, the order dated May 2, 2017, must be vacated.Ĭontrary to the defendants' contentions, the amended bills of particulars were sufficient given that the parties' depositions have not been held. Since CPLR 3104 did not authorize the J.H.O./Referee to determine the defendants' separate motions, among other things, to strike the complaint insofar as asserted against each of them based upon the defendants' objections to the plaintiffs' amended bills of particulars, and there exists no order of reference authorizing the J.H.O./Referee to determine the defendants' motions, the J.H.O./Referee was without authority to determine the defendants' separate motions, inter alia, to strike the complaint insofar as asserted against each of them. Since a bill of particulars is not a disclosure device but a means of amplifying a pleading, the present dispute over the contents of the plaintiffs' amended bills of particulars is not part of any disclosure procedure that CPLR 3104 authorizes a referee to supervise. We reverse.Īlthough the defendants are correct that the plaintiffs raise for the first time on appeal the contention that the J.H.O./Referee lacked authority under CPLR 3104 to issue the order dated May 2, 2017, this contention may be reached since it involves a question of law that is apparent on the face of the record and could not have been avoided by the Supreme Court if it had been brought to its attention. In the order appealed from, the Supreme Court denied the plaintiffs' motion to vacate. Thereafter, the plaintiffs moved to vacate that order. 03450, holding that a bill of particulars is not a discovery device, explaining:īy order dated May 2, 2017, a J.H.O./Referee granted the separate motions of the defendants New York Community Hospital and Hassan Farhat, the defendants Metropolitan Jewish Home Care, Inc., Metropolitan Jewish Health System, Home First, Inc., and Beth Israel Medical Center, and the defendants Yury Zamdborg and Ilya Bilik, inter alia, to strike the complaint insofar as asserted against each of them on the ground that the amended bills of particulars served by the plaintiffs in response to the defendants' motions failed to comply with multiple prior court orders directing the plaintiffs to provide the defendants with supplemental or amended bills of particulars. New York Community Hosp., 2021 NY Slip Op. ![]() On June 2, 2021, the Second Department issued a decision in Kramarenko v. Categories Commercial, Discovery/Disclosure Bill of Particulars Not a Discovery Device ![]()
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