Kanaly v. DeMartino

2018 NY Slip Op 4060
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 7, 2018
Docket525459
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 NY Slip Op 4060 (Kanaly v. DeMartino) 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
Kanaly v. DeMartino, 2018 NY Slip Op 4060 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Kanaly v DeMartino (2018 NY Slip Op 04060)
Kanaly v DeMartino
2018 NY Slip Op 04060
Decided on June 7, 2018
Appellate Division, Third Department
McCarthy, J.P., J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided and Entered: June 7, 2018

525459

[*1]DIANNE KANALY, Individually and as Administrator of the Estate of MARY BRONWEN OWENS, Deceased, Appellant,

v

WENDY ANNE DeMARTINO et al., Respondents.


Calendar Date: April 27, 2018
Before: McCarthy, J.P., Egan Jr., Devine, Mulvey and Rumsey, JJ.

LaFave, Wein & Frament, PLLC, Guilderland (Jason A. Frament of counsel), for appellant.

Phelan, Phelan & Danek, LLC, Albany (Timothy S. Brennan of counsel), for Wendy Anne DeMartino, respondent.

O'Connor, O'Connor Bresee & First, PC, Albany (Anne M. Hurley of counsel), for John Krisa and others, respondents.

Thorn Gershon Tyman & Bonanni, LLP, Albany (Marshall Broad of counsel), for Albany Memorial Hospital and another, respondents.



McCarthy, J.P.

Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Chauvin, J.), entered July 20, 2017 in Saratoga County, which, among other things, partially granted defendants' motions for additional disclosure.

Plaintiff commenced this medical malpractice action against defendants in March 2013 alleging that they caused the death of Mary Bronwen Owens (hereinafter decedent) by improperly prescribing her a strong narcotic, fentanyl, when she was opiate naive, or lacked tolerance to opiates. Defendants answered and served plaintiff with, among other things, demands for disclosure related to expert witnesses and authorizations to obtain decedent's medical records. Despite defendants' objections, plaintiff limited the authorizations to permit disclosure of decedent's medical records for only the two-year period prior to her death. Plaintiff also provided a combined expert witness disclosure to all defendants. Defendants moved to compel plaintiff to provide unrestricted medical authorizations and to supplement and amend her expert witness disclosure. Plaintiff cross-moved for a protective order.

Supreme Court denied plaintiff's cross motion and granted defendants' motions to the extent of ordering plaintiff to provide specified information about her expert witnesses and to supplement her disclosure to include "anticipated opinions concerning the specific manner, as applicable to each individual defendant, in which each said defendant deviated from the requisite standard of practice." The court also ordered plaintiff to provide medical authorizations dating back 10 years from decedent's death. Plaintiff appeals.

To the extent that plaintiff argues that Supreme Court's order was improper because defendants did not establish their entitlement to post-note of issue discovery (see Tirado v Miller, 75 AD3d 153, 157 [2010]; 22 NYCRR 202.21 [d]), the parties' disputes over the scope of the medical authorizations were ongoing and began long before the note of issue was filed; these were not new discovery requests. Moreover, plaintiff's expert disclosure was not filed until more than a year after the note of issue was filed, so any disagreement about the scope of that disclosure, or request for additional information about the experts, could not have been addressed pre-note of issue. In any event, Supreme Court had broad discretion to "permit post-note of issue discovery without vacating the note of issue," as no party was prejudiced (Cabrera v Abaev, 150 AD3d 588, 588 [2017]).

Supreme Court did not abuse its discretion in ordering plaintiff to provide unrestricted authorizations for defendants to obtain decedent's medical records for 10 years preceding her death. "[A] litigant is deemed to have waived the physician-patient privilege when, in bringing or defending a personal injury action, that person has affirmatively placed his or her mental or physical condition in issue" (Arons v Jutkowitz, 9 NY3d 393, 409 [2007] [internal quotations marks, brackets and citations omitted]). Plaintiff alleged that defendants committed medical malpractice by prescribing decedent fentanyl when she was opiate naive. The parties dispute the definition of that term, with a possible definition espoused by one of the defense experts requiring knowledge of the patient's medical history for at least a 10-year period prior to death. Defendants have noted that decedent suffered for many years from medical conditions for which pain medication would typically be prescribed. One medical record reveals that decedent received fentanyl — the drug alleged to have caused her death — for a surgical procedure in 2005. Additionally, plaintiff alleged that defendant Wendy Anne DeMartino was negligent for failing to read and use decedent's full medical history, and plaintiff's expert witness disclosure suggested that plaintiff's experts would rely on and testify to decedent's full medical history, but the disclosure did not delineate the extent or time period of that history. Inasmuch as plaintiff placed at issue decedent's full medical history for an extended but unspecified period of time, Supreme Court did not abuse its discretion in ordering plaintiff to provide medical authorizations for a 10-year period (see Reyes v Lexington 79th Corp, 149 AD3d 508, 508-509 [2017]; Farrell v E.W. Howell Co., LLC, 103 AD3d 772, 773 [2013]; Chervin v Macura, 28 AD3d 600, 601 [2006]; Caplow v Otis El. Co., 176 AD2d 199, 200 [1991]).

Plaintiff's remaining arguments pertain to the scope of disclosure ordered by Supreme Court. Trial courts are vested with broad discretion when addressing issues surrounding expert disclosure (see Colucci v Stuyvesant Plaza, Inc., 157 AD3d 1095, 1098 [2018], lv denied ___ NY3d ___ [May 3, 2018]; Mary Imogene Bassett Hosp. v Cannon Design, Inc., 97 AD3d 1030, 1031 [2012]; Mead v Dr. Rajadhyax' Dental Group, 34 AD3d 1139, 1140 [2006]). Pursuant to statute, a party responding to a demand for information about expert witnesses "shall identify each person whom the party expects to call as an expert witness at trial and shall disclose in reasonable detail the subject matter on which each expert is expected to testify, the substance of the facts and opinions on which each expert is expected to testify, the qualifications of each expert witness and a summary of the grounds for each expert's opinion" (CPLR 3101 [d] [1] [i]). An exception in the same paragraph provides that, "[i]n an action for medical . . . malpractice, a [*2]party, in responding to a request, may omit the names of medical . . . experts but shall be required to disclose all other information concerning such experts otherwise required by this paragraph" (CPLR 3101 [d] [1] [i]). Defendants' motions challenged plaintiff's expert disclosure in two main ways: (1) the disclosure did not include reasonable detail as to the subject matter and substance of the facts and opinions of each expert because the disclosure was essentially identical for each expert and as to each defendant, and (2) the disclosure did not provide reasonable detail as to the qualifications of four of plaintiff's experts.

Supreme Court did not abuse its discretion in ordering plaintiff to supplement her disclosure by making it specific to each defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
2018 NY Slip Op 4060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kanaly-v-demartino-nyappdiv-2018.