Cadicamo v. Long Island College Hospital

124 N.E.2d 279, 308 N.Y. 196
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1954
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 124 N.E.2d 279 (Cadicamo v. Long Island College Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cadicamo v. Long Island College Hospital, 124 N.E.2d 279, 308 N.Y. 196 (N.Y. 1954).

Opinion

*199 Fboessel, J.

Plaintiff’s intestate, a baby less than one day old, was burned to death in her bassinet in the nursery ward of defendant’s hospital under circumstances hereinafter related.. Her father sues here, as administrator, for her conscious pain and suffering and for wrongful death.

The baby was born in the hospital at about 11:25 p.m. on February 21, 1948. The obstetrician gave no special instructions of any kind concerning her postnatal care. She was a normal baby in excellent condition ” and “ excellent health ”, and was therefore placed in the custody of the pediatrics department of the hospital for routine care, her mother also remaining in the hospital. At that time the nursery room, containing fifteen or sixteen infants, was in the care of a student nurse. At two o ’clock the following morning, another student nurse, Miss G-iminez, who had completed but half her training course, began her tour of duty and took charge of the nursery. She learned that the Cadicamo baby’s temperature was below normal, and that the nurse preceding her had placed a lamp over the baby to give her warmth and thus attempt to raise her temperature to normal.

This procedure was said to be the usual practice, and the equipment provided by the hospital was the same as it had been for at least four years. Such equipment consisted of an ordinary floor lamp, having a flexible or “ goose neck ” arm at the end of which was a small metal reflector. An ordinary 100-watt naked and unguarded electric bulb was placed in the reflector. These lamps were used throughout the hospital in the general administrative offices. One was specially provided in each nursery, however, for use as a “ heating lamp ” for furnishing ‘ ‘ additional heat ’ ’ when required to raise the temperature of a newborn infant. To do this, the practice was to wrap the baby in its blanket and then place the lamp so that the bulb and reflector are within six inches of the blanket, facing the baby’s feet. It is left there until temperature becomes normal, a period of time which varies with different babies.

Miss Griminez found the lamp over the baby at 2:00 a.m. and left it there until 4:00 a.m., when she picked up the child to feed and change her. Observing that the baby was still cold, she wrapped her in the blanket, returned her to her bassinet and again turned on the lamp, placing it about three inches from *200 the blanket at the baby’s feet. She then went about her other duties until 6:30 a.m., when she “ walked out of the nursery ” into an adjoining room and cleaned bottles. Then, with the nurse from an adjacent nursery room, she took a cart containing said nursery bottles from the third floor, where the nurseries are, down to the basement. Upon their return to the third floor, at about 6:50 a.m., they smelled smoke and discovered that the baby’s bassinet was enveloped in flames two feet high. After they had extinguished the fire, it was observed that the bedding had been almostly completely burned away. The infant was of course then dead and her body was charred by the flames, which had been so hot that the bulb in the lamp was melted and fused.

An assistant fire marshal in the New York City fire department, who investigated the fire, testified that in his opinion it was caused by the heat from the electric light bulb in the lamp igniting the blanket. He added that Miss Giminez told him she thought the movements of the baby brought its blanket into contact with the electric bulb. Defendant has not attempted to dispute this or any other evidence; no defense witnesses were offered at the trial. Indeed, in his motion to dismiss, defendant’s counsel refers to the fire marshal’s testimony “ that the cause of he [sic] fire was the close proximity of the bulb to the blanket, and the explanation given was that maybe the baby in turning had disturbed or put the blanket closer to the bulb ”. Defendant relies upon the legal defense that the death was caused solely by the negligence of Miss Giminez, acting in her professional capacity as nurse. For such negligence, it argues, defendant would not be liable, under familiar authorities beginning with Schloendorff v. Society of N. Y. Hosp. (211 N. Y. 125).

The Trial Judge submitted to the jury as a question of fact, under “ all the evidence ”, whether the act which caused the death was administrative or professional in nature. Subsequently, however, he set aside the verdict in plaintiff’s favor, and directed a verdict for defendant upon the ground that the placing of the lamp in a negligent manner was a medical act for which the hospital could not be held liable. The Appellate Division affirmed, two Justices dissenting in separate memoranda.

In our opinion, both the trial court and the Appellate Division have overlooked facts and circumstances which the jury was *201 entitled to find. The distance between the lamp and the baby’s feet would necessarily be affected by the baby’s movements. There is evidence that Miss Q-iminez thought the movements of the baby brought the blanket into contact with the electric light bulb, and thus caused the fire. In any event, since it is common knowledge that babies are not immobile, the placing of an unguarded, naked 100-watt electric light bulb within three or six inches of an infant but a few hours old required active supervision.

Thus the jury might find that the furnishing of this type of lamp for use in such dangerous proximity to a helpless infant, who could not be expected to remain motionless, together with the withdrawal of supervision and attendance occasioned by the absence of the nurse on the administrative duty of returning feeding bottles to the basement, caused the fire and its fatal consequences.

It follows that this case is controlled by our decision in Santos v. Unity Hosp. (301 N. Y. 153) where a nurse in attendance in the labor room left, as required by her duties, to answer the telephone, fifteen feet away. During her brief absence, her patient was overcome by a mental derangement called intrapartum psychosis, which caused her to open the window and leap to her death. Such psychosis is extremely rare and had not been observed by the physicians testifying in over 300,000 cases; there had previously been no case thereof in over 25,000 births at defendant’s hospital. Nevertheless it was a recognized hazard of childbirth. The court there submitted to the jury, “on all of the evidence ”, the question whether or not the defendant had been negligent in failing to provide bars on the windows of the labor room and in failing to provide constant supervision or uninterrupted attendance of the patient ”. We held, in the words of Chief Judge Loughran (p. 156): Thus there was left to the jury the question whether the defendant hospital was negligent when in the decedent’s exigency it withdrew from her all personal care without securing the window through which she then and there helplessly fell to her death. This submission of the issue was right, in our judgment.”

Not only does this case fall within that principle, but the facts here shown are much stronger for plaintiff than were the facts in that case. They may be summarized thus:

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Related

Capasso v. Square Sanitarium, Inc.
3 Misc. 2d 273 (New York Supreme Court, 1956)
Berg v. New York Society for the Relief of Ruptured & Crippled
286 A.D. 783 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1955)
Cadicamo v. Long Island College Hospital
285 A.D. 905 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
124 N.E.2d 279, 308 N.Y. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cadicamo-v-long-island-college-hospital-ny-1954.