Ordered that the order is affirmed, with costs.
By deed dated February 28, 2005, the defendants James R. Petty and Lyubov Petty (hereinafter the Pettys) transferred certain real property located in Woodbury (hereinafter the subject property) to the defendant Frank Cicarelli and his wife. Cicarelli and his wife retained the services of the defendant Charles W. Kuehn, an architect, and the defendant Lunasol Builders, Inc., a contractor, to design and construct a one-family house on the subject property. The defendants Huntington Landscaping and Contracting, Inc., and Wallart, Inc., were retained, respectively, to excavate the subject property and to construct a retaining wall along that portion of the subject property that abuts the plaintiffs’ property. The plaintiffs commenced this action to recover damages for injury to their property allegedly caused by, inter alia, the foregoing excavation activities on the subject property.
The Pettys established their prima facie entitlement to judgment as a matter of law by demonstrating, through the affidavit of James R. Petty, that they neither retained the services of anyone to excavate, construct a retaining wall, or remove trees from the subject property, nor personally were engaged in any of those activities. The affidavits and documentary evidence of the Pettys’ codefendants also demonstrated that Cicarelli and his wife, and not the Pettys, retained the services of the architect and the various contractors to excavate and construct a retaining wall on the subject property.
The assertions made by the plaintiff Jeffrey Canarick, in his affidavit in opposition, regarding the purported involvement of the Pettys in the activities which allegedly caused damage to the plaintiffs’ property, were speculative and conclusory, and contradicted by evidence in the record (see Carpio v Leahy Mech.