Escudero v. Long Beach Med. Ctr.

2003 NY Slip Op 51480(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 2003
DocketIndex No. 105803/03
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2003 NY Slip Op 51480(U) (Escudero v. Long Beach Med. Ctr.) 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
Escudero v. Long Beach Med. Ctr., 2003 NY Slip Op 51480(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2003).

Opinion

Escudero v Long Beach Med. Ctr. (2003 NY Slip Op 51480(U)) [*1]
Escudero v Long Beach Med. Ctr.
2003 NY Slip Op 51480(U)
Decided on December 5, 2003
Supreme Court, New York County
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
As corrected in part through April 17, 2015; it will not be published in the printed Official Reports.




Decided on December 5, 2003
Supreme Court, New York County


MARIA ESCUDERO and NICOLASA PACHECO, as Co-Guardians of the Person and Property of JOSE HERNANDEZ a/k/a JOSEPH HERNANDEZ, an incapacitated person, Plaintiffs, - -

against

LONG BEACH MEDICAL CENTER, MOUNT SINAI HOSPITAL, NATIONAL EMERGENCY SERVICES, INC., and DR. ALBERT LEE, Defendants.




Index No. 105803/03

Alice SCHLESINGER, J.

On June 23, 2002, Jose Hernandez (a.k.a. Joseph) went to the Emergency Room of defendant Long Beach Medical Center ("Long Beach") complaining of acute pain in his left eye. He was examined there by co-defendant Dr. Albert Lee. Soon after, before even leaving the facility, Mr. Hernandez suffered a subdural hematoma which required emergency surgery. The aftermath of this is a claim of serious permanent mental and physical incapacitation.

Co-guardians for Mr. Hernandez commenced a lawsuit on his behalf against Long Beach alleging medical malpractice. They also included as defendants Dr. Lee, National Emergency Services, Inc. and Mount Sinai Hospital ("Hospital" or "Mount Sinai"). The Hospital is now moving for summary judgment dismissing the claims against it, in their entirety, pursuant to CPLR §3212. Mount Sinai has answered the complaint, as have the other two institutional defendants, but there has been no discovery. Dr. Lee had not yet been served when this motion was made.

Long Beach, who clearly supports the Hospital's motion, has cross-moved to change venue to Nassau County pursuant to CPLR §510(1). The plaintiffs vigorously oppose both motions.

The Hospital argues that, even at this early stage, it is entitled to a dismissal because there can be no evidence of any departure by it from accepted standards of medical practice. Nor can there be presented any evidence showing that actions by the Hospital proximately caused Mr. Hernandez's injuries. In this regard, the Hospital points out that Mr. Hernandez never received any care at Mount Sinai and in fact was never there. All the events of significance occurred on June 23, 2002 at Long Beach Medical Center.

The Hospital suggests that plaintiffs' sole reason for naming Mount Sinai as a defendant is that Long Beach is a "clinical affiliate" of Mount Sinai. They argue that, as shown in an accompanying affidavit by Robert Southwick, Director of Alliance Development at Mount Sinai NYU Health, the agreements establishing this "affiliation" are very limited in scope and insufficient to establish liability on the part of Mount Sinai.

There are, in fact, two agreements, the Alliance Agreement dated December 12, 1994 and the Transfer Agreement dated January 1997. Mr. Southwick points out that a principal purpose of [*2]the Alliance Agreement was "to provide opportunities for managed care through development of an integrated delivery system". In the Agreement, Long Beach was specifically permitted to describe itself as "a clinical affiliate of the Mount Sinai Hospital".

Primarily, the Hospital agreed to provide Long Beach tertiary care services, meaning that the former would accept the transfer of the latter's patients to it when tertiary care, including specialized diagnostic services, were needed. "Tertiary care" is defined, in the "Physician and Managed Care Glossary" complied by New York Medical College, as "subspecialty care usually requiring the facilities of a university affiliated or teaching hospital that has extensive diagnostic and treatment capabilities". Mount Sinai is such an institution. Long Beach, a community hospital, is not.

Mr. Southwick continues that the Agreements do not provide for the rotation of any Mount Sinai physicians, including residents, to the Long Beach Emergency Department. Indeed, pursuant to an inquiry made by the Hospital after being noticed with this lawsuit, no residents were rotating to Long Beach on June 23, 2002, the date when Mr. Hernandez was there. Further, the Hospital says, the doctor charged with caring for Mr. Hernandez, Dr. Albert Lee, had no affiliation with Mount Sinai, and the Emergency Department chart for Mr. Hernandez contains no reference to the Hospital.

It is on these facts and assertions that Mount Sinai urges that it is entitled to the dismissal of the complaint against it.

In the cross-motion, Long Beach moves pursuant to CPLR §510(1) to change venue to Nassau County, where its facility is located. Long Beach argues that, assuming that Mount Sinai is let out of the case, then no other party would have a connection with New York County, and since all of the events occurred in Nassau County, the action should be tried there.

Plaintiffs oppose the cross-motion on the merits and on the timeliness or lack of it. (See CPLR §511(a)). They believe the summary judgment motion should be denied, keeping Mount Sinai as a defendant in the case and keeping the action here in New York County. But "in the unlikely event" that the Hospital's motion is granted, plaintiffs argue that venue should still not be changed because New York County was a proper choice when the action was commenced.

As to the main motion, plaintiffs urge the Court to deny the requested dismissal on the merits and/or because it is premature. In other words, pursuant to CPLR §3212(f) and the complete lack of discovery, they say they lack the factual wherewithal at this time to satisfactorily address the issues.

Nevertheless, plaintiffs do present a picture of a sign directly outside the Long Beach facility which identifies that Medical Center as "a clinical affiliate of the Mount Sinai Hospital". Further, in this regard, is the letterhead of Long Beach containing the same legend, directly under its name. Finally, plaintiffs point out that even Mr. Southwick acknowledged, in his affidavit in support of the Hospital's motion, that "a principal purpose of Mount Sinai's Alliance Agreement with Long Beach was to provide opportunities for managed care through development of an integrated delivery system."

Armed with these limited facts, plaintiffs urge that, at a minimum, because the Hospital and Long Beach did have some affiliation, specifically a "clinical" one which was announced repeatedly in a very public way, Long Beach became the Hospital's agent for the treatment of patients coming to its Emergency Room. As such, plaintiffs assert, the Hospital is not entitled to a dismissal at this stage as a matter of law. This argument is predicated on the theories of vicarious liability and agency by estoppel. [*3]

The Hospital counters that no further disclosure is necessary, as it would be irrelevant to the ultimate outcome. Again, they rely on the Agreements between the institutions and point out that these Agreements give Mount Sinai no right to control any actions or policies of Long Beach. In fact, they point out that in situations such as this one, the Agreements provide for the indemnification of the Hospital by Long Beach.

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Bluebook (online)
2003 NY Slip Op 51480(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/escudero-v-long-beach-med-ctr-nysupct-2003.