Herrick v. State

177 Misc. 1009, 32 N.Y.S.2d 607, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1278
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedJanuary 23, 1942
DocketClaim No. 25670
StatusPublished

This text of 177 Misc. 1009 (Herrick v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herrick v. State, 177 Misc. 1009, 32 N.Y.S.2d 607, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1278 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinion

Greenberg, J.

Claimant, twenty-one years of age, a student nurse at the Syracuse Memorial Hospital, was sent to the Utica State Hospital on March 3, 1939, as an affiliate nurse for a three months’ course in psychiatry and psychiatric nursing. Prior thereto, and while in her second year of training at the Syracuse Memorial Hospital, she suffered from a detached retina of her left eye, as a result of which she was bedridden for approximately three months and incapacitated until January 1, 1939, when she returned to the Syracuse Memorial Hospital to resume her course in training. This was done upon the advice of Dr. David P. Gillette, chief of the eye department of the Syracuse Memorial Hospital, with the admonition that she could live a normal life ” but that she could not do any lifting or engage in active sports. The n ature of her illness was such that the retina of her left eye might again easily become detached, by any sudden movement, force or any unexpected muscular strain. In line with the advice of her physician, and in accordance with the requirements of the Utica State Hospital, a report of claimant’s physical condition was filed by the Syracuse Memorial Hospital upon her admission to the Utica State Hospital. Said report contained the statement that claimant had trouble with her eyes ” and requested that she be not allowed to do any heavy lifting. It did not inform the Utica State Hospital of the exact nature of her eye trouble and that her left eye was predisposed to a detachment of the retina.

On April 10, 1939, at or about seven-fifteen a. m., while claimant was in ward 24 of the State hospital, she, together with a regular nurse and an attendant, took some sixty female patients to the cafeteria for breakfast. There were at the time about fifty other women patients from ward 20 in the cafeteria in charge of two attendants from that ward. In addition thereto, there were in the cafeteria four dining room attendants. While the claimant was at one end of the cafeteria collecting the trays and knives and spoons from the inmates as they passed her on their way out of the cafeteria, it is claimed that one of the patients, Sophie Miakisz, suddenly struck the claimant on the head with her fist, bending her eyeglasses and causing the alleged injuries to hér left eye, the same eye in which she had suffered from the detached retina above referred to.

The inmate assailant was suffering from dementia praecox of the catatonic type and her hospital record was as follows: “ Patient tears clothing and is very untidy in appearance. She [1011]*1011is over-active, dances about the ward and annoys the other patients. Disoriented. Usually sleeps well but is disturbed at times. * * * ” She was not a violent, dangerous type of patient, necessitating isolation or special or extraordinary attention.

After the alleged assault, claimant continued to do her work in the cafeteria and claims to have reported the accident later in the day to Mrs. Wamphler, the nurse in charge of ward 24. However, the proof is that Mrs. Wamphler was not in attendance that day and there is no record or report of such an incident. Claimant also contends that on the day following she reported the assault to Miss Clough, the assistant principal of the school of nursing, who did not recall the same and had no record of it. Claimant continued doing the work assigned to her at the hospital until May fourteenth, when she went to Syracuse to see Dr. Gillette, who had previously treated her eye. She did not inform him that she was struck on the head on April tenth. The doctor found, upon examination, a slight edema but did not consider it serious enough to keep claimant from continuing her studies and work at the Utica State Hospital. Thereupon she returned to the Utica State Hospital and continued her studies and course of work and instructions until after classes were over on May 22, 1939, when she informed Miss Loretta Clough that she could not see out of her eye, whereupon Miss Clough caused an examination to be made by Dr. Werner Hamburger, a member of the medical staff of the Utica State Hospital, and her condition was diagnosed as a detachment of the retina and she was ordered to bed. Dr. Francis T. Chase, an eye specialist, was then called, and in getting the claimant’s history had no information about a blow or attack on claimant’s eye. After remaining in bed for three days she was taken by ambulance to the Syracuse Memorial Hospital where she remained, receiving medical care and attention until November 23, 1939.

The claim herein is based upon the failure of the Utica State Hospital and the authorities in charge thereof to maintain adequate supervision of the inmates, including the inmate Sophie Miakisz, while they were in the cafeteria, as a result of which claimant was assaulted. The assailant was not violent nor did the hospital authorities have any notice of any predisposition on her part to commit violence. On the contrary, the record herein is devoid of any proof that she was the type of inmate that should have been isolated and kept apart from other inmates or specially guarded by nurses or attendants or that her association with other patients of her ward and her attendance in the cafeteria for breakfast was not in accordance with the ordinary, customary and usual practice of caring for such inmates. The State, therefore, cannot be charged [1012]*1012with negligence because Sophie Miakisz was allowed to be in the cafeteria with the other women of her ward. There was nothing unusual about her mental condition to justify any reasonable perception of any risk in allowing her to be with the other inmates in the cafeteria nor was any risk on that account within the range of reasonable apprehension.

Can the State be charged with negligence because of its failure to have additional nurses and attendants in charge of the patients while in the cafeteria? Would additional nurses or attendants have prevented such an accident? There were, at the time of the alleged assault, in addition to the claimant, four regular nurses or attendants and four dining room attendants. Even if there were more attendants or nurses in charge of the patients in the cafeteria, the assault might not have been prevented. The alleged striking was sudden and momentary and the hospital authorities had no notice of its imminence. How, then, could such a happening have been avoided? Even a guard or attendant for each and every inmate would not have avoided what is alleged to have happened to the claimant. There is no such duty on the part of the State to maintain such supervision. Any such rule of law would place an unreasonable burden upon the State or upon the authorities of the State in charge of insane patients. They would, under such circumstances, be obliged to have a guard or attendant for each and every inmate and might even be compelled to handcuff or otherwise control the activities and each and every motion of such patients so as to prevent any possible injury or harm to any nurses or attendants in such institutions. They might even have been obliged to isolate and seclude each and every patient in the hospital.

Furthermore, there is no causal connection between the alleged negleci of the State authorities to have more adequate supervision and the happening of the alleged assault on the claimant. Such neglect, if it really existed, was not the proximate cause thereof. “ The damages must be so connected with the negligence that the latter may be said to be the proximate cause of the former.” (Palsgraf v. Long Island R. R. Co., 248 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
177 Misc. 1009, 32 N.Y.S.2d 607, 1942 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herrick-v-state-nyclaimsct-1942.