I disagree with the majority’s further reduction of the verdict for future pain and suffering. Plaintiff suffered a devastating traumatic brain injury, resulting in multiple life-altering cognitive impairments. The jury’s award of $9 million for future pain and suffering was appropriate to the particular circumstances, and certainly, the award as reduced by the trial court to $5 million cannot be said to deviate materially from what would be reasonable compensation under the circumstances.
The jury in the present case awarded plaintiff $9 million over 40 years, based upon the particular facts of this plaintiff’s ruined life. Before the accident, she had been a highly skilled, sought-after pattern maker at Calvin Klein, a premier fashion house. But more than that, she had been a vital, creative, sociable, adventurous 35-year-old woman, who looked forward to the time when she could have a family and be a mother, which she said had been her true goal. She now suffers significant cognitive deficits affecting her memory, organizational ability, attention span and concentration, as well as a mood disorder *210marked by severe depression, and is in constant pain from persistent headaches. Her entire life has been stunted in all its essentials.
The jury heard testimony that plaintiff will never be able to return to work, or engage in any type of meaningful employment. Her treating neurologist made a diagnosis of dementia based upon the constellation of plaintiff’s symptoms, which includes confusion, disorganization, inability to plan, inability to carry out activities of daily life, and memory difficulties with respect to verbal information. She has trouble completing simple tasks, and cannot balance a checkbook or cook. Her fundamental personality has changed: she is nervous, anxious, depressed, and, importantly, her dream of having a family is unrealizable. As she explained during her testimony, “I cannot take care of myself. How can I take care of a baby?” These sad circumstances, as well as the jury’s conclusion that plaintiffs future pain and suffering award was intended to cover a period of 40 years, support the conclusion that the verdict for future pain and suffering reached by the jury in this matter constitutes reasonable compensation.
In concluding that the trial court’s award of $5 million for future pain and suffering deviates materially from what is reasonable compensation under the circumstances, the majority cites Reed v City of New York (304 AD2d 1, 6-7 [2003], lv denied 100 NY2d 503 [2003]). That case also concerned a plaintiff who suffered brain damage with similar deficits in cognitive functions; the jury there, based upon what it heard as to that partic- ■ ular plaintiff’s life, awarded $2.5 million for future pain and suffering over 30 years, an award affirmed by this Court. But that finding as to the value of that particular plaintiffs expected future pain and suffering does not require that any future plaintiff suffering a similar injury should be limited to a similar sum.
While the injury here was similar to that suffered by the plaintiff in Reed, the proven effects of the injury on the respective plaintiffs’ lives were different. In Reed there was no indication that the plaintiff had been engaged in an ambitious or personally rewarding career, nor that she had harbored a “true goal” of motherhood that her injuries now precluded. Further, in Reed the term of future pain and suffering was set at 30 years, rather than the 40-year period found by the jury here. Therefore, even when comparing this case to the Reed case for purposes of determining reasonable compensation for the injury, the award for future pain and suffering for a 40-year period, given these circumstances, cannot be fairly said to materially *211deviate from what is reasonable compensation by comparing it to Reed.
Another case in which a similar injury was considered and a similar award made is Flynn v General Motors Acceptance Corp. (179 Misc 2d 555 [1998]). There, the plaintiff was a young honor graduate of Smith College, whose brain injuries had a profoundly negative impact upon her personal and professional life, including marked personality changes. The jury awarded that plaintiff $9.275 million for future pain and suffering for 55 years. While the matter was ultimately not presented for appellate review, the jury’s finding as to the value of the injury is of substantial relevance in assessing the reasonableness of the verdict here.
The majority seems to suggest that the award of damages that we affirmed in Reed set in stone a line of demarcation. I do not seek to downplay Reed as the majority suggests. Instead, I merely seek to analyze the result in Reed in the context of the facts presented there, and the award in the present case in view of the facts presented here. As the Court of Appeals recognized in Caprara v Chrysler Corp. (52 NY2d 114, 127 [1981]), “[i]n no two cases are the quality and quantity of such damages identical.” While we look to similar cases to determine whether an award deviates materially from what would be reasonable compensation, this reference to similar cases was never intended to require that the awards in prior cases set the limit for awards in future similar cases. Having engaged in the process of comparing and contrasting the respective facts in this case with those in Reed, I find that the jury award, as reduced by the trial court, does not materially deviate from what would be fair and reasonable compensation.
While the majority disparages reference to the $9.275 million jury verdict to the brain-damaged plaintiff in Flynn v General Motors Acceptance Corp. (179 Misc 2d 555 [1998], supra) as “hardly an exemplar for us on appellate review,” it offers no critical analysis of the extent of injury in that case and its impact on the future loss of enjoyment of life of that plaintiff. Of course, jury damage verdicts are not controlling on us in our oversight role as gatekeepers under CPLR 5501 (c), but I disagree with the majority’s assertion that only judicial rulings reviewing jury awards are of any relevance in determining what is fair and reasonable compensation. This declaration of the complete irrelevance of jury awards is unnecessarily extreme. The voice of a jury is the voice of the community, and it should not be so cavalierly ignored when deciding whether an award deviates materially from what would be reasonable compensation. Indeed, not only are jury awards of relevance in deciding *212what is reasonable, but in some circumstances they may offer the only basis for comparison.
Since in similar cases amounts were awarded which were comparable to this one, once essential differences in the circumstances in each case are accounted for, I would affirm the trial court’s determination as to future pain and suffering.