Summary
reversing summary judgment granted to the defendant hospital where the plaintiff gave birth at hospital six hours before her attending private physician arrived and where even during the time that the infant was technically under the care of a private attending physician there were allegations of independent negligent acts attributable solely to the hospital staff
Summary of this case from I.M. v. United StatesOpinion
April 7, 1994
Appeal from the Supreme Court, Kings County (Vincent Pizzuto, J.).
Plaintiff gave birth to her infant son at the defendant Medical Center on March 8, 1971. Defendant Geller, a private physician, entered the picture six hours later, as attending pediatrician with resident privileges. On March 11, Dr. Geller, having noted and confirmed a slightly jaundiced condition, ordered phototherapy. After three days of such treatment and monitoring, the child's bilirubin count fell to a normal level, and Dr. Geller ordered the patient discharged.
Dr. Geller continued to treat the child for hyperbilirubinemia and kernicterus over the next four years. The child today is brain damaged, with permanent neurological dysfunction.
Plaintiff alleged medical malpractice on the part of both the Medical Center and the private attending physician for failing to diagnose and treat the jaundice in a timely fashion. Following examinations before trial, the IAS Court granted the Medical Center's motion for summary judgment, without opinion. Plaintiff and defendant Geller appeal.
Two factual issues were left unresolved after EBT. The first is whether there were indications, in the first six hours after birth, which should have alerted the Medical Center delivery and nursery staff of possible hyperbilirubinemia. According to the Medical Center's expert, one such indicator overlooked was a blood incompatibility between mother and child. Since the Medical Center acted alone as plaintiff's medical practitioner over those first six hours, it would have to bear sole responsibility for any malpractice committed during that period.
The second issue is whether the Medical Center should be exempt from sharing any responsibility for malpractice over the course of the next six days (until the infant's discharge) by reason of the fact that for the balance of that period the infant was technically under the care of a private attending physician (see, e.g., Clott v Kings Highway Community Hosp., 120 A.D.2d 634). A number of allegations are raised as to negligence attributed solely to Medical Center staff during that period. For example, notes of attending nurses at the nursery failed to record any jaundiced condition, or indeed any reference to color, until the third day after birth, despite the parents' complaints to hospital personnel about the baby's yellowish complexion practically since birth. The child's true condition during those first three days is thus at issue (Mango v Long Is. Jewish-Hillside Med. Ctr., 123 A.D.2d 843, 844). Furthermore, Dr. Geller ordered a complete blood count and bilirubin test as soon as he learned of the first recorded observation by a nurse of a jaundiced appearance, on the morning of March 11. Test results, which showed a moderately elevated bilirubin count, were not reported by the laboratory until ten hours after the blood sample was drawn, and it took another three hours before Dr. Geller's order for phototherapy was carried out. An issue is thus raised as to whether the thirteen-hour delay in commencement of the treatment had any permanent effect.
Normally, a hospital is shielded from liability for the negligence of a private attending physician practicing at its facility (Fiorentino v Wenger, 19 N.Y.2d 407; Brusco v St. Clare's Hosp. Health Ctr., 128 A.D.2d 390, appeal dismissed 70 N.Y.2d 692, lv denied 70 N.Y.2d 606). However, a myriad of cases hold that a hospital may yet be held concurrently liable with a private practitioner for the independent negligence of the former's medical staff (Laub v Montefiore Hosp. Med. Ctr., 115 A.D.2d 430; Currier v St. Peter's Hosp., 89 A.D.2d 693; Horton v Niagara Falls Mem. Med. Ctr., 51 A.D.2d 152; Matlick v Long Is. Jewish Hosp., 25 A.D.2d 538, 539). During pre-trial discovery, the Medical Center failed to dispel allegations of its own negligence concurrent with Dr. Geller's attendance to this patient (see, Christopher v St. Vincent's Hosp. Med. Ctr., 121 A.D.2d 303, 305). Since the court's function on a motion for summary judgment is to identify just such triable issues of fact, the Medical Center's motion should have been denied (Critelli v Long Is. Jewish-Hillside Med. Ctr., 115 A.D.2d 632).
Concur — Carro, J.P., Ellerin, Wallach, Kupferman and Nardelli, JJ.