Doe v. Roe

93 Misc. 2d 201, 400 N.Y.S.2d 668, 1977 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2650
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 93 Misc. 2d 201 (Doe v. Roe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Roe, 93 Misc. 2d 201, 400 N.Y.S.2d 668, 1977 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2650 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1977).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Martin B. Stecher, J.

This action for an injunction and for damages for breach of privacy is a matter of first impression in this State, and so far as I am able to ascertain, a matter of first impression in the United States. It arises out of the publication, verbatim, by a psychiatrist of a patient’s disclosures during the course of a lengthy psychoanalysis. I have made and filed detailed findings of fact which are briefly summarized here.1

Dr. Joan Roe is a physician who has practiced psychiatry for more than 50 years. Her husband, Peter Poe, has been a psychologist for some 25 years. The plaintiff and her late, former husband were each patients of Dr. Roe for many years. The defendants, eight years after the termination of treatment, published a book which reported verbatim and extensively the patients’ thoughts, feelings, and emotions, their sexual and other fantasies and biographies, their most intimate personal relationships and the disintegration of their marriage. Interspersed among the footnotes are Roe’s diagnosis of what purport to be the illnesses suffered by the patients and one of their children.

The defendants allege that the plaintiff consented to this publication. This defense is without substance. Consent was sought while the plaintiff was in therapy. It was never obtained in writing. In Dr. Roe’s own words consent "was there one day and not there another day. That was the nature of the illness I was treating, unreliable.” I need not deal with the value of an oral waiver of confidentiality given by a patient to a psychiatrist during the course of treatment. It is sufficient to [205]*205conclude that not only did the defendants fail to obtain the plaintiffs consent to publication, they were well aware that they had none.

The plaintiff seeks to prevail on any or all of four theories: that violation of CPLR 4504 (subd [a]) gives rise to a cause of action;2 that the provisions of section 6509 of the Education Law and the regulations of the Commissioner of Education (8 NYCRR 60.1 [d] [3])3 establish a public policy whose breach gives rise to a cause of action in tort; that the physician-patient relationship is contractual and in it there is implied the physician’s promise to obey the Hippocratic oath4 whose violation gives rise to a cause of action for breach of contract; and, finally, "in light of the expanding recognition of invasion of privacy actions” (Doe v Roe, 42 AD2d 559, 560, affd 32 NY2d 902, cert granted 417 US 907, cert dsmd 420 US 307) a separate cause of action exists for unreasonably publicizing elements of plaintiffs life which ought to have been left in confidence.

The defendants contend not only that there was no unlawful disclosure, the patient’s identity having been fully concealed, but that no right of action exists even if the plaintiff is recognizable in this volume. The defendants assert that neither the "evidentiary privilege” contained in CPLR 4504 (subd [a]) nor the regulations of the Commissioner of Education, by their history, are intended to give rise to a cause of action for their violation; that the only cause of action for invasion of privacy recognized in the State of New York is the statutory [206]*206cause of action set forth in sections 50 and 51 of the Civil Rights Law; that the invasion of privacy concept as developed in the Federal courts and elsewhere is a constitutional guarantee of a right to privacy against intrusion by governments and has no reference to non-State action; that the volume in question is of such scientific merit that the professional need which it fills transcends the patient’s right of nondisclosure; that the plaintiff is guilty of laches in bringing this action; and, finally, that the defendants’ right to publication is protected by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.

The few New York cases dealing with a physician’s unauthorized disclosure of a patient’s confidences usually turn on other issues, restrict themselves for the most part to a discussion of the effect of the current evidentiary statute (CPLR 4504, subd [a]) or its predecessor (Civ Prac Act, § 352) and in their dicta reach contradictory conclusions. In Munzer v Blaisdell (183 Misc 773, affd 269 App Div 970) a patient in a State psychiatric institution sued its director for unauthorizedly releasing his case record in violation of the Mental Hygiene Law. The cause of action founded on section 352 of the Civil Practice Act was dismissed because there was no physician-patient relationship between the parties. The court did, however, offer the opinion (p 775) that "where the statutory duty is violated, the patient is entitled to redress; for it is well settled that, where a positive duty is imposed by statute, a breach of that duty will give rise to a cause of action for damages on the part of the person for whose benefit the duty was imposed; and, in such cases, if the statute itself does not provide a remedy, the common law will furnish it. Willy v. Mulledy 78 N. Y. 310, 314; Racine v. Morris, 201 N. Y. 240, 244; Amberg v. Kinley, 214 N. Y. 531, 535; 3 Cooley on Torts [4th ed.], § 477, p 361.) This principle was recognized by the decision of the Appellate Division in the case at bar (see Munzer v. Blaisdell, 268 App. Div. 9).”

In Clark v Geraci (29 Misc 2d 791), the court found that the patient had waived the privilege and stated in a dictum that CPLR 4504 (subd [a]), section 6509 of the Education Law and the regulations issued thereunder (8 NYCRR 60.1 [d] [3]) provided no cause of action for breach of confidentiality. Felis v Greenberg (51 Misc 2d 441) on the other hand expresses the view that such disclosure gives rise to a cause of action but turns on the sufficiency of a pleading alleging the publication [207]*207of false information. Curry v Corn (52 Misc 2d 1035) suggests that violation of CPLR 4504 (subd [a]) was not intended by the Legislature to create an independent cause of action; but there the physician’s disclosure was to the plaintiff’s husband and the court held that a husband is entitled, as a matter of right, to be informed of his wife’s medical condition. In Hammer v Polsky (36 Misc 2d 482) the court, in a dictum, said that neither section 352 of the Civil Practice Act nor the regulations issued under the Education Law will support a cause of action; but as in Munzer v Blaisdell (183 Misc 777) recovery was denied on the ground that no physician-patient relationship was alleged to have existed.

The most frequently cited cases arising in other jurisdictions suffer from the same limitations. Although in Smith v Driscoll (94 Wash 441, 442) the court said that "for so palpable a wrong, the law provides a remedy,” the case turned on a question of pleading. A dictum in Simonsen v Swenson (104 Neb 224) suggests the availability of a remedy for violation of the duty of secrecy, but the issue involved what the court held to be a limited right of disclosure of the existence of a communicable disease. The court in Berry v Moench (8 Utah 2d 191) expressed the opinion that violation of evidentiary statutes gives rise to a cause of action, but like Felis v Greenberg (supra) the action was for libel, the issue turning on whether or not the physician’s disclosures were truthful. Alexander v Knight

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Bluebook (online)
93 Misc. 2d 201, 400 N.Y.S.2d 668, 1977 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-roe-nysupct-1977.