In Cappabianca v Skanska USA Bldg. Inc., 99 A.D.3d 139 (N.Y. App. Div. 1st Dep't 2012), successfully defeated plaintiff’s Labor Law §240 and §200 and general negligence claims at the summary judgment stage. Arguments were relied upon and upheld by the First Department upon appeal.

Won defense verdict in New York Supreme Court on behalf of a general contractor on plaintiff’s Labor Law §200 claims after successfully defeating plaintiff’s product liability claims via pre-trial and dispositive motions.

Represented owner and general contractor of construction site where two plaintiffs fell 30 feet from a ladder, suffering significant injuries. Successfully defeated plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment asserting liability against clients, pursuant to New York State Labor Law §240. Pursued and obtained indemnity from plaintiff’s employer before trial.

Represented a subcontractor of a construction site where the plaintiff was injured during a routine inspection of the project. Identified issues with the contract and successfully defeated the indemnification claims. The co-defendants eventually paid entire pre-trial settlement figure to the plaintiff.

Representative Matters

In Cappabianca v Skanska USA Bldg. Inc., 99 A.D.3d 139 (N.Y. App. Div. 1st Dep't 2012), successfully defeated plaintiff’s Labor Law §240 and §200 and general negligence claims at the summary judgment stage. Arguments were relied upon and upheld by the First Department upon appeal.

Won defense verdict in New York Supreme Court on behalf of a general contractor on plaintiff’s Labor Law §200 claims after successfully defeating plaintiff’s product liability claims via pre-trial and dispositive motions.

Represented owner and general contractor of construction site where two plaintiffs fell 30 feet from a ladder, suffering significant injuries. Successfully defeated plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment asserting liability against clients, pursuant to New York State Labor Law §240. Pursued and obtained indemnity from plaintiff’s employer before trial.

Represented a subcontractor of a construction site where the plaintiff was injured during a routine inspection of the project. Identified issues with the contract and successfully defeated the indemnification claims. The co-defendants eventually paid entire pre-trial settlement figure to the plaintiff.

Representative Matters

Williams and Potter Secure Summary Judgment for Sign Repair Contractor

​Jazmin Williams (Associate-White Plains, NY) and Jay Potter (Partner-New York, NY) obtained summary judgment in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Nassau County, on behalf of Wilson Elser’s client, a sign repair company, securing dismissal of all claims and cross-claims. The team persuaded the court to reject the plaintiff’s metallurgical engineering expert’s opinions as speculative and unsupported by the evidence.

The plaintiff, a convenience store patron, alleged that a portion of a store sign fell and struck her head and neck, causing a traumatic brain injury and requiring a multi-level cervical fusion. She made a $10 million pre-motion settlement demand, and the store owner sought defense and indemnification from the client as well. Our client had been retained to perform limited repairs to the sign approximately 13 months before the accident. Through a careful analysis of the governing contracts and testimony from the co-defendants, Jazmin established that the client acted solely as an independent contractor with a narrowly defined scope of work. Further evidence demonstrated that the parties specifically negotiated a one-year warranty on the repairs. This record helped establish Wilson Elser’s prima facie argument that the client owed no duty to inspect or reassess the sign after its work was completed.

Jazmin meticulously prepared the client's witnesses for deposition and secured testimony confirming the owner's acceptance of the completed work. Combined with the defense expert's opinions, the court agreed that the evidence eliminated any triable issue of fact as to whether the sign was defective when the client completed its repairs more than a year before the incident.

Without evidence linking the client’s repair work to the sign failure, the plaintiff’s engineering expert lacked a factual basis to support his causation opinions. The court agreed with Wilson Elser’s arguments that the plaintiff’s expert’s opinions were based on speculation and conjecture, rejected them outright, and dismissed both the plaintiff’s negligence claims against the client and the contractual indemnification and contribution claims asserted by the co-defendants.

Jazmin R. Williams and Jay A. Potter