A Westchester County jury returned an $8 million verdict against the City of Yonkers after a municipal truck struck a driver parked on Ashburton Avenue [1]. The case proceeded in Westchester County Supreme Court in White Plains, New York, on a negligence theory tied to the city's operation of a municipal vehicle [1]. The anonymous plaintiff alleged long-term impairment resulting from the collision.
The jury allocated the award across three components: $2 million for past pain and suffering, $4.5 million for future pain and suffering, and $1.5 million for future medical expenses [1]. No punitive damages were sought or awarded. The verdict came without a reported pretrial ruling that narrowed the claims, and the full negligence theory went to the jury intact.
The $8 million verdict stands in sharp contrast to the city's $35,000 pretrial settlement offer, a gap that reflects the jury's assessment of the plaintiff's long-term impairment claims [1]. Municipal defendants in vehicle-operation cases carry exposure under New York's respondeat superior principles when a government employee causes injury while operating a city-owned vehicle in the course of official duties.
No post-trial motion schedule or notice of appeal had been publicly reported as of the filing of this brief. The City of Yonkers faces a judgment that, absent reduction on post-trial motion or appellate review, will be satisfied from municipal funds. New York law permits defendants to move to set aside a verdict as excessive, and large pain-and-suffering awards against municipal defendants in the Second Department are frequently subject to remittitur proceedings.