Firestein v. Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center

137 A.D.2d 34, 528 N.Y.S.2d 85, 1988 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4986
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 9, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 137 A.D.2d 34 (Firestein v. Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Firestein v. Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center, 137 A.D.2d 34, 528 N.Y.S.2d 85, 1988 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4986 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Bracken, J.

The question presented for our determination is whether [36]*36the plaintiff Helene Firestein’s application for, and acceptance of, workers’ compensation benefits preclude her from bringing a separate common-law action to recover damages based on subsequent acts of negligence committed by a coemployee which resulted in the aggravation of the work-related injury, where the subsequent aggravation of the initial injury did not arise out of and in the course of the plaintiff Helene Fire-stein’s employment. We determine that the plaintiff Helene Firestein has the right to maintain such an action and accordingly affirm.

The plaintiff Helene Firestein was employed by the defendant Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center (hereinafter Kings-brook) as a patient accounts clerk. On June 16, 1982, during the course of her employment, she slipped and fell at Kings-brook, and was admitted to its hospital for medical treatment. An X-ray photograph disclosed that she had suffered an intertrochanteric fracture of the right femur, which condition was treated by an open reduction and internal fixation of a screw and plate, and Knowles pins.

Mrs. Firestein alleges that, on July 22, 1982, the defendant Scott, another employee of Kingsbrook, negligently caused "the plaintiff [sic] to be precipitated to [a] wheelchair with undue force”. This negligent act allegedly resulted in a rein-jury of the plaintiff’s hip. It is alleged that the previously inserted Knowles pins and compression screw and plate had to be removed, and that Mrs. Firestein then had to undergo a hip replacement.

Mrs. Firestein applied for, has received and continues to receive, workers’ compensation benefits. It is undisputed that these benefits have been computed so as to provide compensation for all of the injuries which were suffered by Mrs. Firestein because of her work-related accident; that is, the scope of the workers’ compensation benefits includes not only the injury originally suffered by Mrs. Firestein on June 16, 1982, but also the aggravation, or new injury, which occurred on July 22, 1982, and which would not have occurred but for the original work-related accident.

Mrs. Firestein commenced this action against Kingsbrook and Scott by the service of a summons and complaint. The complaint refers only to the incident of July 22, 1982. The defendants Kingsbrook and Scott each appeared and answered separately; in neither appellant’s original answer was the defense of the exclusivity of workers’ compensation asserted. [37]*37By notice of motion dated August 12, 1986, the defendant Scott moved (1) for leave to amend her answer for leave to assert a defense based on workers’ compensation and (2) to dismiss the plaintiffs’ complaint insofar as it is asserted against her, based on that defense. By notice of cross motion dated September 17, 1986, the defendant Kingsbrook cross-moved to dismiss the plaintiffs’ complaint insofar as it is asserted against it on that basis.

The Supreme Court, Kings County, denied the motion and the cross motion in a decision and order (one paper) dated December 2, 1986. These appeals followed.

It is well settled that a person who is injured in the course of his or her employment and who later suffers an aggravation of this injury due to medical malpractice has a remedy against his employer under the Workers’ Compensation Law, both as a result of the original injury and as a result of the malpractice (Matter of Parchefsky v Kroll Bros., 267 NY 410). In Matter of Parchefsky v Kroll Bros. (supra, at 417), the court stated that "[cjompensation for the original injury includes the ultimate results of the injury, though the injury has been aggravated by intervening malpractice”. In the present case, if Mrs. Firestein had been treated at a different hospital, and if she had suffered a similar aggravation of her injury as the result of the negligence of some other person, who was not a coemployee, there is no question that the aggravation of the initial injury would be compensable.

The payment of compensation under the rule of the Parchefsky case (supra) is not dependent on whether the subsequent aggravation of the original injury occurred within the scope of the claimant’s employment. Rather, the plaintiff is entitled to compensation for his or her total disability provided that the original injury was work related, and further provided that "the chain of causation between accidental injury and ultimate disability remains unbroken” (Matter of Parchefsky v Kroll Bros., supra, at 412).

It was recognized in Parchefsky (supra) that the entitlement of an injured employee to workers’ compensation benefits, inclusive of damages for subsequent medical malpractice, did pose the risk of an unjust double recovery should such an employee also be permitted to recover in his action for damages against the subsequent tort-feasor. This risk was obviated, however, by the terms of the then extant Workers’ Compensation Law § 29, pursuant to which the acceptance of [38]*38workers’ compensation benefits, which were inclusive of damages for subsequent medical malpractice, operated as an assignment of the employee’s cause of action against the successive tort-feasor to the person or insurance carrier responsible for making the workers’ compensation payments (Matter of Parchefsky v Kroll Bros., supra, at 415). Under the law then in effect, "where an employee accepts compensation, under a Workers’] Compensation Law for an industrial injury including the results of malpractice in the treatment of such injury, he [could not] maintain an action against the negligent physician” (Matter of Parchefsky v Kroll Bros., supra, at 417). In that event the right of action for malpractice passed under the statute to the party paying the compensation.

Although Workers’ Compensation Law § 29 has since been amended so as to alter the mechanism by which a double recovery in cases such as this is prevented, the Parchefsky rule that workers’ compensation covers not only the original work-related injury but any aggravation thereof, is still valid. The Court of Appeals has reaffirmed the rule that: "Where * * * the aggravation injuries are the direct consequence of the initial compensable injury and the chain of causation between the accidental injury and the ultimate disability remains unbroken, an injured employee is entitled to the statutory compensation for the ultimate disability so resulting from the initial injury” (Matter of Roach v Hastings Plastics Corp., 57 NY2d 293, 296).

The current provisions of Workers’ Compensation Law § 29 no longer provide for an assignment by the injured employee of his cause of action against a third party where the injured employee accepts workers’ compensation. Instead, the injured employee may accept workers’ compensation and also bring an action against the third-party tort-feasor, and the party responsible for the payment of compensation is entitled to a lien on whatever recovery there might be in the third-party action (see, Workers’ Compensation Law § 29 [1], amended by L 1937, ch 684; Hession v Sari Corp., 283 NY 262).

In Matter of Roach v Hastings Plastics Corp. (supra),

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Bluebook (online)
137 A.D.2d 34, 528 N.Y.S.2d 85, 1988 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4986, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/firestein-v-kingsbrook-jewish-medical-center-nyappdiv-1988.