Bevevino v. Saydjari

76 F.R.D. 88, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14632
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedAugust 4, 1977
DocketNo. 75 Civ. 2848
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 76 F.R.D. 88 (Bevevino v. Saydjari) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bevevino v. Saydjari, 76 F.R.D. 88, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14632 (S.D.N.Y. 1977).

Opinion

OPINION

WHITMAN KNAPP, District Judge.

Before the court is a motion by defendant doctor1 (actually, as will be seen, by his malpractice insurance carrier) to set aside a verdict in the amount of $550,000 for negligent medical care resulting in the loss of plaintiff’s right eye. In support of this motion it is contended that the finding of liability should be set aside in the court’s discretion to prevent a miscarriage of justice, that certain evidence was admitted in error and that the verdict is excessive.2

The basic problem posed by this motion arises from two conclusions at which the court has arrived: first, that as a matter of actual fact the finding of liability was altogether unwarranted, but second, that on the basis of the testimony adduced at trial the jury was fully justified in making such a finding. The apparent inconsistency of these two conclusions appears to arise out of the circumstance that defendant’s malpractice insurance carrier, Employer’s Insurance of Wausau, deliberately decided not to provide the defendant with the semblance of a defense. In short, it is the court’s opinion that the verdict resulted from the carrier’s willful default.

We shall first consider the facts which have brought us to the conclusion that the carrier is guilty of willful default, and shall then consider the legal consequences of such default upon the contention that the finding of liability should be set aside. We shall then consider whether, on the record actually before us, the verdict is excessive.

I

FACTS ESTABLISHING THE CARRIER’S WILLFUL DEFAULT

In the early hours of June 17, 1973 plaintiff was the victim of a severe automobile accident, the car in which he was a passenger having crashed at high speed into a tree. At 1:25 A.M. he was admitted to the Community General Hospital of Sullivan County in an apparently dying condition. His injuries included a fractured spine, several fractured ribs, a lacerated scalp, multiple abrasions and a severely damaged right [90]*90eye (Tr. 155, 177-178, 340).3 Defendant doctor, being on call, treated plaintiff in the emergency room until 3:00 A.M. His condition having stabilized, he was then removed to the intensive care unit (Tr. 157-159).

Except for his eye, his injuries were successfully treated by defendant doctor, and plaintiff has since fully recovered therefrom. However, nothing much but palliative treatment was accorded to the eye, and after six days plaintiff was removed to another hospital where the eye was enu-cleated (removed).

Two highly competent ophthalmologists, the one who performed the enucleation and one called as an expert by the defense, gave it as their opinion that the eye had been destroyed at the moment of impact, and was wholly beyond saving when defendant doctor first encountered plaintiff. The contrary testimony of an expert called by plaintiff appeared to us to be equivocal.

Why then, the defendant doctor apparently having saved plaintiff’s life and having had nothing to do with the loss of his eye, did the jury award a $550,000 verdict against him? The answer, as we have indicated, is that the defendant’s malpractice carrier did not afford him the semblance of a defense.

The complaint asking damages in the amount of one million dollars was filed on June 13, 1975. It must have been apparent upon cursory view of the situation that crucial to any proper defense would be defendant doctor’s testimony concerning his first encounter with plaintiff, his diagnosis of plaintiff’s then critical condition, and his decision to concentrate on saving plaintiff’s life rather than on treating the apparently hopeless eye. Incredible as it may seem, by November 4,1976 when at a pretrial conference a trial date was scheduled, no attorney representing the carrier had so much as spoken to the doctor about his version of the case.4 Moreover, the carrier did not even then have anyone knowledgeable of the situation speak to him. On the contrary, the defendant having retired to live in Texas, the carrier retained local counsel to “represent” him at a deposition demanded by plaintiff. It appears from the transcript of that deposition that such local counsel did not even trouble to prepare his “client” to the minimal extent of letting him review the medical records he had created some 3V2 years previously. Defendant first saw those records when plaintiff’s counsel confronted him with them as the deposition progressed. The result was pre[91]*91dictably disastrous. Faced with a group of strangers and subjected without preparation to cross-examination about three year old professional activity, defendant reacted as almost any normal human being would. Having had no chance meaningfully to refresh his recollection, he took refuge in the unprepared layman’s haven of “I don’t remember”, claiming to be able to add nothing to the records themselves.5 In light of the dramatic nature of the accident and of the injuries, this appeared to be an absurd position. Plaintiff was thus able to represent defendant doctor at trial as some sort of ogre who had been satisfied with going through the forms of medical care without the slightest concern for the welfare of his patient. The carrier had not, of course, made any attempt to present the defendant doctor’s view of the case by taking its own deposition of the defendant.

Not only did the carrier fail to present any testimony by the doctor stating his view of the facts, but it offered none from any of the professional or para-professional hospital personnel who had worked with him in the emergency room. Consequently, there was absolutely no medical testimony as to the critical nature of the condition with which defendant doctor was confronted when he first undertook to care for plaintiff. The jury’s earliest view of the plaintiff was after he had been admitted to the intensive care unit, by which time defendant doctor had apparently pulled him through his crisis and his condition had become stabilized.

Having thus failed to present any evidence as to the doctor’s need to concentrate on saving plaintiff’s life, the carrier predicated its defense almost exclusively on the proposition that the eye had been hopelessly lost before defendant encountered plaintiff. Two excellent witnesses were available to support this proposition, but the carrier had spent no time preparing either of them for trial. Their testimony therefore proved ineffective.

The first witness called on this subject was Kenneth Adams, M.D. the ophthalmologist to whom plaintiff had been referred upon his discharge from the Community Hospital and who had ultimately enucleated the eye. He was obviously a competent physician and his direct testimony was straightforward and persuasive. Basing his opinion in part upon his study of a government prepared pathological report and in part upon his own observations, he concluded that the eye had been irretrievably lost at the moment of impact.

However, in introducing this witness to the jury defense counsel advised them that he had spoken to him only “for two minutes” before putting him on the stand. Cross-examination had not long been in progress before the disastrous effect of this lack of preparation became apparent. It soon developed that Doctor Adams had made two previous statements which appeared to be diametrically opposed to his conclusion that the eye had been destroyed at the moment of impact.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 F.R.D. 88, 1977 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bevevino-v-saydjari-nysd-1977.