Opinion
No. 570195/24
09-24-2024
Jane-Horatio LLC, Petitioner-Landlord-Appellant, v. Kenneth Caccavale, Respondent-Tenant-Respondent.
Unpublished Opinion
PRESENT: Hagler, P.J., Brigantti, Tisch, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Landlord appeals from an order of the Civil Court of the City of New York, New York County (Vanessa Fang, J.), dated February 2, 2024, which granted its motion to strike tenant's answer only to the extent of directing tenant to produce any outstanding documents requested in the discovery demand in a holdover summary proceeding.
Order (Vanessa Fang, J.), dated February 2, 2024, affirmed, with $10 costs.
Civil Court providently exercised its discretion in declining to strike tenant's answer pursuant to CPLR 3126(3) and instead directing, inter alia, that landlord provide an updated list of outstanding documents and that tenant, within 20 days, provide the outstanding documents or written proof of his efforts to obtain such documents (see Gogos v Modell's Sporting Goods, Inc., 87 A.D.3d 248, 255 [2011] ["It is not the function of this Court to micromanage discovery proceedings in the trial parts, particularly where, as here, the remedy for nondisclosure is entrusted to the discretion of the motion court (CPLR 3126), and the order issued was well within the province of the court's discretion"]). Here, the drastic penalty sought by landlord was not commensurate with the alleged disobedience (see Cespedes v Mike & Jac Trucking Corp., 305 A.D.2d 222 [2003]). Tenant, in response to landlord's discovery demands, produced voluminous responses (see Corrigan v New York City Tr. Auth., 144 A.D.3d 495, 496 [2016]) including more than ten thousand pages of documents, and the delay in further production was due, in part, to difficulty in obtaining records from third-parties.
I concur