Court Opinion

ID: 5677959
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-12 14:49:23.418257+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:39:49.247653
License: Public Domain

*254Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County (Leland De-Grasse, J.), entered September 4, 2003, which denied petitioner’s application to annul a determination denying him an accidental disability pension by virtue of a tie vote of respondent Board of Trustees, and dismissed the petition, unanimously affirmed, without costs.
The record contains some credible evidence that the disabling instability of petitioner’s knee was caused only by his nonservice-related fall in July 1998, and that a service-related fall in April 1995 did not leave the knee in such a weakened condition as to precipitate the 1998 fall (see Matter of Meyer v Board of Trustees, 90 NY2d 139, 145, 147 [1997]). Such evidence includes the Medical Board’s finding upon examination, amply corroborated by petitioner’s complete medical record, that the instability was the result of damage to the anterior cruciate ligament, which was uninjured in 1995; the Medical Board’s additional finding that the remaining ligaments of the knee, which would include the medial collateral ligament damaged in 1995, were intact; and petitioner’s private orthopaedist’s finding shortly after the 1995 accident of “no gross instability” in the knee. Concur—Buckley, P.J., Nardelli, Andrias, Saxe and Lerner, JJ.