Greenberg v. Mahoney

202 Misc. 1073, 121 N.Y.S.2d 375, 1952 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2291
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1952
StatusPublished

This text of 202 Misc. 1073 (Greenberg v. Mahoney) 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
Greenberg v. Mahoney, 202 Misc. 1073, 121 N.Y.S.2d 375, 1952 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2291 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1952).

Opinion

Moss, J.

Petitioner seeks an order under the provisions of article 78 of the Civil Practice Act, to annul the determination of respondents denying the application of petitioner for a permit to conduct an X-ray laboratory. The application was made pursuant to section 107 of the Sanitary Code of the City of New York and the regulations promulgated thereunder.

The laboratory is known as the Practitioners X-Bay Laboratory and conducted at 699 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. It is owned by Practitioners X-Bay Laboratory, Inc., a domestic corporation, the stock of which is held by laymen. Petitioner stated on October 16, 1951, at the hearing held before the board of review of respondent department of health, that the individuals owning the same were named Ludegate and Bubinoff who were not physicians or chiropractors. One Martin I. Phillips is the managing agent of the corporation. Petitioner was engaged to be the director of the laboratory effective as of June 8, 1950. Petitioner is a physician who was duly licensed on January 30, 1936, to practice medicine. He had been doing X-ray work almost from the time he opened his medical office. Bespondents admit that petitioner is fully qualified by training and education to operate an X-ray laboratory wherein radio-graphs are taken, diagnoses made or human beings examined by X ray. Bespondents also admit that the equipment of the laboratory fully complies with pertinent regulations governing the maintenance of X-ray laboratories in New York City.

On the effective date of petitioner’s employment, petitioner applied for a permit to conduct an X-ray laboratory at the [1075]*1075aforesaid premises under the said section of the sanitary code which requires that every X-ray laboratory shall be in charge of a duly licensed physician or other person licensed under the laws of New York to diagnose and treat disease. Incidentally, petitioner had been granted a permit to conduct the same X-ray laboratory at the identical premises during a prior period but petitioner voluntarily surrendered the permit for business reasons. Immediately after the filing of the application on June 8, 1950, petitioner entered upon his duties as director of the X-ray laboratory. This was permitted under a policy of respondents whereby a duly licensed physician filing an application for such a permit is permitted to enter upon his work pending the determination of the application.

Hearings were held before the board of review of the department of health on October 16, 1951, and December 13, 1951. On January 14, 1952, the application was denied by respondent commissioner of health. An appeal was taken by petitioner to the board of health of the department of health. A hearing of the appeal was had by respondent board of health on February 4, 1952. Subsequently, at the meeting of April 14, 1952, respondent board of health affirmed the decision of respondent commissioner of health denying the application filed on June 8, 1950. Minutes of all hearings, except the meeting of April 14, 1952, at which final decision was made, are annexed to respondents’ formal answer.

The decision of the board of health (Exhibit C ” annexed to moving papers) held that the commissioner of health in denying the application for a permit did not take such action because of the fact that “ the applicant would among other things perform x-ray work for chiropractors ”. The board said that “ the record does not show that the Commissioner based his action on this ground.” (See second paragraph, opinion, Board of Health, April 14, 1952.) The basis for the board’s decision, specifying other grounds, is succintly shown in the last paragraph of its opinion, as follows: The petitioner has not shown such regard for the public health and for the standards of professional conduct prescribed by law as to require the Board of Health to hold that the judgment of the Commissioner in denying the application was erroneous. Accordingly that decision is affirmed.”

The court has read the minutes of all hearings a number of times. With the greatest respect for the learned and distinguished members of the board of health, the court is never[1076]*1076theless constrained to disagree with the hoard of health as to the basis or foundation for the decision of the commissioner of health. The following excerpts are samples of minutes which have persuaded the court to this view. At the very beginning of the initial hearing on October 16, 1951, before any statement whatever was made by petitioner and prior to any evidence being adduced as to the conduct or operation of the laboratory the following transpired (Exhibit No. 2, Minutes, Oct. 16,1951, first page. Reference to “ Dr. Greenberg ” relates to Dr. Morris Greenberg, Acting Chairman, Board of Review, and not to petitioner bearing same name. Reference to Mr. Ginsburg ” relates to the supervising inspector):

“ Mr. Ginsburg: The previous Board of Review meeting and the last deliberation of the Board of Health set a policy which we implemented by requesting denial of this application. The only circumstances that were different from, the previous case was that this was a different applicant.

“ Dr. Greenberg: What is the policy that was set?

“Mr. Ginsburg: The policy that was outlined — I have a copy, it is a little lengthy — this is a previous Board of Review meeting and the following deliberations of the Board of Health over three meetings which Mr. Hollander and members of our Bureau went over in detail sustained this policy of denying a permit to operate an x-ray laboratory where chiropractors refer patients and the reports on x-ray radiographs are sent to chiropractors as an aid in spinal manipulation, because on the ground that such a practice would be in aid of manipulations which are against the public policy of this day (state) since chiropractic is not recognized by the State. I think that is contained in the last couple of paragraphs.”

The acting chairman, Dr. Morris Greenberg, then read as a precedent the decision of the board in the case of one Dr. Edward Parrish who was denied a permit for the sole reason that the granting thereof would aid the practice of chiropractic. In fact, virtually the entire hearing, as shown by the minutes, was devoted almost exclusively to the chiropractic angle. The emphasis on this point is shown by the following (Exhibit No. 2, Minutes, Oct. 16, 1951, 11th page):

“ Mr. Hollander (Chief of the Legal Division): There has to be a first time. We didn’t pick out this particular case because of any personal reasons. It happens this is the first laboratory that I happened to sit on in the Board of Review. I think that it is the illegal practice of chiropractic against public policy.”
[1077]*1077“Mr. Hollander: If it were a question of our trying to revoke it, it would be entirely different but we don’t want to start by issuing a permit now. If you think it wrong you have a perfect right to —.” and at the bottom of the 12th page and top of the 13th page: “ Mr. Hollander: I have no feelings one way or the other for or against chiropractic. I am not a doctor but I say that it is against public policy to illegally practice chiropractics. Now I say we shall not permit a situation where it might be said that we gave assistance in the illegal aid of chiropractics. We have got to try to prevent harm to the public.”

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Related

Matter of Sausser v. Dept. of Health
150 N.E. 603 (New York Court of Appeals, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
202 Misc. 1073, 121 N.Y.S.2d 375, 1952 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenberg-v-mahoney-nysupct-1952.