Jul 11 2009

There Oughtta Be a Law!

You knew it was going to happen.  The combination of texting and walking would lead to disaster, or at least, cuts and scrapes. Which would be followed by a negligence suit.  Yes, a Staten Island teen attempting to do both at once did not see the open manhole that she subsequently stepped into, and is now bringing a suit because she apparently feels that her accident came about through no fault of her own.

Hmmmm!  Didn’t some giant of the bar warn about just this type of suit a while back?  Oh, yeah!  It was me!  I don’t mean to suggest that there is any merit to the case being brought by this unfortunate young woman in Staten Island.  But wouldn’t all such suits be nipped in the bud by a new law banning texting while walking?  And what about people who become injured as a result of such inattention by texting walkers?  And so, without further adieu, I now officially call on Albany to take a break from the important work of following the perverse ways of Pedro Espada and company, and pass a law banning this dangerous behavior (seriously).  Am I being a legal Chicken Little?  Let’s just wait and see.

Share
TAGS:
Jul 9 2009

Builders of NYC’s Subway Steps May Ignore Building Code, and Other Lessons From New Cases

So you’re attempting to navigate the steps leading down into one of NYC’s subway stations, and you fall and hurt yourself because the steps are of inconsistent heights, and there is no handrail within reach when you lose your balance.  You bring a law suit, during which your expert testifies that the steps at issue do not comply with the New York City Building Code, which in these circumstances, mandated the installation of a handrail in the middle of the steps, where you had fallen, and called for consisitent riser heights for the steps.  You obtain a plaintiff’s verdict, even though you were found to have been 20% at fault yourself, and you can expect some money for your trouble, right?

Wrong.  According to Garcia v. New York City Transit Authority, NY Slip Op 05506 (2d Dept. 2009), decided on June 30, 2009, such a judgment must be reversed, because the protections found within the Building Code “‘shall not extend to…subways or structures appurtenant thereto’ (New York City Charter Sect. 643[7]).”  Naturally, the Second Department found that the subway steps were “appurtenant” to the subway station.  Make sense?  Not to me.  And the Court neglected to mention any law that does mandate compliance with basic safety regulations in the building and maintaining of subways and their “appurtenant” structures.  What a nice gift to the Transit Authority.

The Second Department also tackled the issue of whether a negligent act in a medical setting was standard negligence, or medical malpractice–an issue just addressed by the Court of Appeals (see my June 26, 2009 post).  In Pacio v. Franklin Hospital, et al., NY Slip Op 05527 (2d Dept. 2009), decided June 30, 2009, plaintiff, who had been paralyzed in an earlier motor vehicle accident, fell at home and was treated for just over one week at Franklin Hospital, spent time at a nursing home, and ultimately transferred to North Shore University Hospital at Glen Cove, where pressure ulcers that had begun developing after plaintiff’s week-long confinement to Franklin Hospital worsened, prompting the need for surgeries. 

When plaintiff chose to add North Shore as a defendant in the suit against Franklin Hospital, more than 2 and 1/2 years, but less than 3 had passed since his treatment there (as a reminder, the medical malpractice statute of limitations is 2 and 1/2 years).  North Shore moved for summary judgment dismissal, claiming that plaintiff’s claims were time barred, since they were grounded in medical malpractice.  As to one of the three claims against North Shore, plaintiff asserted that it was grounded in negligence, and not malpractice, so that the 3-year statute of limitiations would apply. Plaintiff reasoned that this remaining claim concerned North Shore’s alleged failure to follow its own protocols in caring for plaintiff’s pressure ulcers, such that no expert medical testimony was called for.

The Second Department ruled that the lower court had been correct when it granted North Shore’s motion for summary judgment dismissal based on the medical malpractice statute of limitations, reasoning that the comprehensive hospital protocols concerning pressure ulcers consituted a “substantial relationship to the rendition of medical treatment.”  The Court pointed to the various duties of nurses and aides who were obliged to continuously inspect the skin, use moisturizers, utilize proper technique for positioning, and maintain proper “tissue load management.”

To me, this decision could have come down on either side.  After all, how different is failing to position a patient properly, and thereby causing injury, from failing to maintain proper placement of a bed rail, allowing the patient to fall to the floor and become injured–a scenario that is usually seen as negligence?  There is only one consistent element in these cases.  If someone is injured in a medical setting, and proceeds under a standard negligence theory, chances are good that he or she has blown the medical malpractice statute of limitations.

And a last note.  As we hit the season of outdoor amusement parks, the First Department has reaffirmed a lesson we should all know.  When you sign that waiver form before jumping into your motorized go-kart–you know, the one in which you assume all risk, waive all claims for injury, indemnify the operator of the concession, and agree not to sue–you have not truly waived any of those things, according to Garnett v. Strike Holdings LLC, NY Slip Op 05630 (1st Dept. 2009), decided July 2, 2009.  Such waivers are “‘void as against public policy and wholly unenforceable’ against plaintiff[s] by reason of General Obligations Law Sect. 5-326 (citations omitted).”

Share
TAGS:
Jun 26 2009

Injury During Adversary’s Medical Exam is Med Mal, Not Negligence

In a decision issued June 24, 2009 by New York’s Court of Appeals, it found that a plaintiff who was injured by the defendant’s examining orthopedist–part of the discovery process in an auto accident case–can bring suit only for medical malpractice, and not standard negligence.  This was the pivotal issue in Bazakos v. Lewis, NY Slip Op 05199 (2009), because plaintiff had waited until 2 years and 11 months beyond the time he was injured before bringing suit.  He was therefore time-barred from pursuing a claim in medical malpractice, which has a 2 and 1/2 year statute of limitations.  Apparently because of this impediment, plaintiff based his claim on a standard negligence theory, which has a 3 year statute of limitations.

Plaintiff claimed that when he reported to defendant’s examining orthopedist, the orthopedist simultaneously pulled and twisted his head, causing him injury.  The Court of Appeals found that the circumstances created a limited physician-patient relationship, and that the act upon which the suit was based constituted “medical treatment by a licensed physician,” so that the negligent act was “not ordinary negligence, but a prototypical act of medical malpractice.” (citations omitted).

Share
TAGS: