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S & G MEDICAL SERVICES, P.C., as Assignee of Nicolette Harvey, Appellant, v. ALLSTATE INS. CO., Respondent.
ORDERED that the order is reversed, with $30 costs, and defendant's motion to dismiss the complaint is denied.
Plaintiff commenced this action in 2015 to recover assigned first-party no-fault benefits. Defendant failed to appear in the action, and, on February 8, 2016, a default judgment was entered upon plaintiff's motion. Defendant thereafter served an answer by mail and moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of jurisdiction, or, in the alternative, to vacate the default judgment, extend defendant's time to answer and compel plaintiff to accept the answer. Plaintiff opposed the motion. By order entered July 28, 2017, the Civil Court (Andrew Borrok, J.) granted defendant's motion to the extent of vacating the default judgment, stating that the “answer served by defendant is deemed served and received by plaintiff.” On November 2, 2017, defendant served plaintiff with a 90-day demand to file a notice of trial, which demand plaintiff rejected as premature. On February 1, 2018, defendant moved, pursuant to CPLR 3216, to dismiss the complaint on the ground that plaintiff had failed to prosecute the action. Plaintiff opposed and now appeals from an order of the Civil Court entered January 23, 2019 granting defendant's motion.
A court may dismiss an action for failure to prosecute under CPLR 3216 only if the statutory preconditions to dismissal are met (see Baczkowski v Collins Constr. Co., 89 NY2d 499, 503 [1997]; Alli v Baijnath, 101 AD3d 771 [2012]; Neary v Tower Ins., 94 AD3d 723 [2012]). In the instant case, as defendant moved to dismiss the complaint in February 2018, before the expiration of one year after the Civil Court had deemed defendant's answer served as of July 28, 2017, defendant failed to satisfy a statutory precondition to dismissal of the complaint (see CPLR 3216 [b] [2]; Madigan v Crompton, 45 AD3d 650 [2007]). Consequently, there was no basis for the Civil Court to grant defendant's motion to dismiss the complaint pursuant to CPLR 3216.
Accordingly, the order is reversed and defendant's motion to dismiss the complaint is denied.
ALIOTTA, P.J., WESTON and ELLIOT, JJ., concur.
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Docket No: 2019-552 K C
Decided: April 23, 2021
Court: Supreme Court, Appellate Term, New York,
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