Kret v. Brookdale Hospital Medical Center

93 A.D.2d 449, 462 N.Y.S.2d 896, 1983 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17497
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 9, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 93 A.D.2d 449 (Kret v. Brookdale Hospital 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
Kret v. Brookdale Hospital Medical Center, 93 A.D.2d 449, 462 N.Y.S.2d 896, 1983 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17497 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Boyers, J.

The issue for our consideration is whether a judgment in a prior malpractice action in which it was determined, inter alia, that the defendant attending physician was not guilty of malpractice with regard to the monitoring of the infant plaintiff and his mother during labor (Kret v Gergely, Supreme Ct, Kings County, June 23,1977, Adler, J., Index No. 1775/75), operates to bar the present action on behalf of the same plaintiff against the hospital and its resident physician on the ground that the issues determined or necessarily decided in the prior lawsuit are [450]*450“identical” to those raised herein? We answer this question in the affirmative, holding that since plaintiff was afforded a full and fair opportunity to litigate his contentions, he is collaterally estopped from relitigating issues which were necessarily determined by the jury in the prior action.

This appeal by defendants from an order of Special Term denying their motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint arises out of a second medical malpractice action predicated upon events preceding the birth of the infant plaintiff, Jordan Kret, on July 5, 1972. The initial litigation instituted on behalf of the infant plaintiff was commenced on or about September 27, 1974 against Dr. Klara Gergely, the mother’s attending physician, Dr. Robert Norton, a pediatrician, and Brookdale Hospital Medical Center (hereinafter Brookdale). It was urged that the malpractice included the defendants’ failure to properly monitor the mother’s .condition during labor when, inter alia, her blood loss was allegedly abnormal. While the bill of particulars in the prior action stated that the defendants failed to treat a maternal complication known as “placenta previa”, at trial it was plaintiff’s position and that of his medical expert, Dr. Bernard Nathanson, that the mother’s continuous moderate vaginal bleeding from the time of her admission until delivery approximately four hours later, was symptomatic of a condition known as “abruptio placentae” in which the placenta prematurely separates from the uterine wall1 thereby causing depletion in oxygen transfer from the mother to the fetus. This oxygen depletion caused fetal distress evidenced, plaintiff contended, by a single transitory deceleration in the fetal heart rate from 134 to [451]*45192 beats per minute, during labor and approximately an hour after the mother’s admission to Brookdale. „ It was alleged that as a consequence of defendant Gergely’s failure to monitor the maternal and fetal condition, Jordan Kret sustained permanent brain damage.

After the first action was set down for trial in April of 1977, the plaintiff voluntarily discontinued as against defendants Norton and Brookdale, and the trial proceeded solely against the attending physician Gergely on the theory that the alleged condition of the mother during labor warranted the institution of certain procedures, for example, rupture of the membranes and/or the performance of a cesarean section, which would have prevented brain damage to the infant.

In the trial of the prior action the court submitted six interrogatories to the jury. While inartfully drawn, those questions, answered in the negative by the jury, are relevant to our determination of the instant appeal. They read:

“Question number one. Was the failure to properly monitor the fetal heart rate malpractice causing injury to the infant Jordan Kret?
“Question number two. Was the failure to properly monitor the blood pressure of the mother malpractice causing injury to the infant?
“Question number three. Was the failure to rupture the membrane in the presence of a separation of the placenta malpractice causing injury to the infant Jordan Kret?
“Question number four. Was the failure to have a double set up for an immediate cesarean section if it became necessary malpractice causing injury to the infant Jordan Kret?
“Question number five. Was the failure to properly check the progress of labor malpractice causing injury to the infant Jordan Kret?
“Question number six. Was the failure to do a cesarean section when a drop in the fetal heart rate occurred malpractice causing injury to the infant?”

[452]*452Accordingly, a concomitant and necessary finding with respect to the negative answers to these interrogatories was that the mother was not suffering from the pathology alleged. The jury’s verdict in favor of Dr. Gergely was returned on April 22, 1977 and on June 23,1977 judgment was entered accordingly. No appeal was taken therefrom.

On April 25, 1977, three days after the jury rendered its verdict in favor of Dr. Gergely, this action was instituted on behalf of the infant plaintiff against Brookdale and Dr. Howard J. Novick, a resident in obstetrics and gynecology who assisted in the labor and delivery rooms on the day of Jordan Kret’s birth. This second suit was premised on a theory of malpractice substantially similar to that alleged in the first, namely, the improper monitoring of the mother and fetus during labor, resulting in the failure to diagnose and treat abnormal vaginal bleeding which occasioned the plaintiff’s injuries.

In December, 1977 Brookdale moved “inter alia, to amend the trial transcript so as to indicate that plaintiffs’ discontinuance against [Brookdale] was ‘with prejudice’ ” (see Kret v Gergely, 64 AD2d 692-693). By order dated March 10,1978, Trial Term granted that motion. However, this court reversed and denied the same upon the ground that the trial court and the attorneys for the parties in the first action had not complied with the statutory protections afforded to infants whose rights to proceed against a party are to be terminated (Kret v Gergely, supra, p 693; see, e.g., CPLR 3217,1207,1208). The Court of Appeals affirmed (47 NY2d 990).

Thereafter, in March of 1981, the defendants Brookdale and Novick, having properly raised the defenses of res judicata and collateral estoppel in their responsive pleading (see, e.g., Mayers v D’Agostino, 58 NY2d 696; CPLR 3211, subd [e]), brought on the instant motion for summary judgment dismissing plaintiff’s action on those grounds. In opposition, plaintiff asserted, inter alia, that the necessary prerequisite for application of those defenses had not been met in that while the injuries to Jordan Kret were common to the actions, the factual bases for liability were “wholly distinct from one another”. In denying the motion, Special Term reasoned that: “By virtue of the appellate decisions [453]*453involving the same claim asserted in a prior action (Kret v Gergely, 64 AD2d 692, 693 [2d Dept], aff’d 47 NY2d 990, 991) holding that plaintiff’s discontinuance of said action against Brookdale Hospital Medical Center was without prejudice, plaintiff was in effect given the right to institute and continue his present lawsuit against defendants Brookdale Hospital and Dr. Novick, notwithstanding the jury verdict against plaintiff in the prior action. Accordingly, the court finds that the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel are inapplicable herein”.

We cannot agree.

Special Term erroneously concluded that this court’s prior decision in Kret v Gergely (64 AD2d 692, affd 47 NY2d 990,

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Bluebook (online)
93 A.D.2d 449, 462 N.Y.S.2d 896, 1983 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kret-v-brookdale-hospital-medical-center-nyappdiv-1983.