Maxwell v. New York City Transit Authority

21 Misc. 2d 671, 195 N.Y.S.2d 525, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2489
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1959
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Misc. 2d 671 (Maxwell v. New York City Transit Authority) 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
Maxwell v. New York City Transit Authority, 21 Misc. 2d 671, 195 N.Y.S.2d 525, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2489 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

J. Irwin Shapiro, J.

Motion by defendant New York City Transit Authority for a new trial ‘ ‘ on the grounds that the evidence set forth in the affidavit and the exhibits referred to above is newly discovered evidence and would have the effect of changing the result upon a new trial which should be granted in the interest of justice.”

The accident occurred on December 22, 1956, while plaintiff was alighting from defendant’s bus. The door of the bus closed [672]*672on him, the bus began to move “ and my body was twisted and my foot was caught under one of the legs.”

The jury, by a unanimous vote, awarded plaintiff a verdict of $65,000 and defendant now seeks a new trial because “ defendant decided to investigate further even though it was after the trial ” and “ the results of that investigation disclosed the newly discovered official documentary evidence which is the basis for this motion, namely, that Dr. Joseph Buchman is the brother-in-law of Max I. Cohen, Esq., one of the attorneys of record for the plaintiff.”

The plaintiff was taken to Jamaica Hospital from the scene of the occurrence of the accident. On April 4, 1957, he was admitted to the Hospital for Joint Diseases where Dr. Buchman had been the chairman of the medical advisory board and was then on its staff as an attending orthopedic surgeon.

So far as the record discloses, he did not know Dr. Buchman prior thereto. Dr. Buchman first saw plaintiff while 1 ‘ making rounds ” on the day the latter was admitted to the hospital. The first recorded ‘ ‘ personal examination ’ ’ of plaintiff by Dr. Buchman took place on April 10, 1957. The examination consisted of ‘ ‘ first, a review of the history as it was obtained by the residents, a review of the previous examinations made by other members of the staff, a review of the clinical findings, that is, the blood chemistries and so on and so forth; and then my own examination. I questioned him and I had additional history which I obtained. And then on my examination I found that he walked with a limp-, his trunk was shifted to the left, and the spine was deviated to the left in the dorsal region, which is the upper part of the back, and somewhat to the right in the lumbar region, which refers to the flank. ’ ’ The patient * had a congenital anomaly at the lowermost portion of the spine.” After this complete examination the doctor came to the conclusion that there was “the possible presence of a herniated disc on the right side at the lumbosacral level.” This conclusion was arrived at by him after a 1 ‘ myelographic study ’ ’ which is “an examination of the spinal canal by means of an opaque material which we inject into the spinal canal and then examine it under X-ray to see ”. Dr. Buchman frankly volunteered the information that the conclusion arrived at by him after the myelographic study was not concurred in by another doctor on the staff who found “ no gross changes.”

As the result of this difference of opinion the plaintiff was re-examined and “ discussed with the staff ” on April 17, 1957. After the discussion with the staff and after further personal examination in which he continued to maintain the same diag[673]*673nosis the plaintiff was operated on by Dr. Buchman ‘ on April 23, 1957 * * * to explore the area, and we found that he had a degenerated disc at the level between the * * * at the lumbosacral level; we removed that disc and performed a spine fusion which extended from the fourth lumbar down to the third sacral segment. * * * It includes two movable segments and three segments which are immovable so that the movable segments are moored, so to say, to the immovable portion and thus prevent motion in this area ’ ’.

The conditions found by Dr. Buchman as a result of the operation were described by him in these words: ‘1 The overall description of the thing would be a lumbosacral derangement with a herniated intervertebral * * * or a herniating inter-vertebral disc superimposed upon a previously existing asymptomatic anomalous condition ”. There is no causal relationship between the congenital anomaly and the accident, incidental to the bus incident”. The degenerated disc in this case was caused by 11 The twisting of his back which he experienced when one of his legs was caught in a door and he was being pulled along by the bus ”.

The defendant, admitting the serious nature of the injuries claimed, disputed the fact that they were caused by the bus accident, but contended that they resulted from the previously existing anomaly in plaintiff’s back. Dr. Robert Tuby and Dr. Sidney A. Bernstein were called to support the defendant in that position. Dr. Tuby testified that in his opinion: ‘ this patient was suffering from the effects of a pre-existing congenital anomaly of the fifth lumbar vertebra. Dr. Buchman explained it very thoroughly. * * * So that primarily the purpose of this operation was to stabilize or fuse this unstable congenital pre-existing vertebra. ’ ’

After detailing the reasons for his opinion he stated: “ So based on that, I would say that this patient had this pre-existing transitional or congenital vertebra for which the doctor operated on, and I see nothing in the record to indicate that there was herniation of this material from the disc into the space pressing on the nerve and causing this neuritis which he had. As a matter of fact, he still has the same neuritis today; the records indicate that the original, loss of sensation over the outer aspect of his right leg, in the foot in the large toe, is still present today. ’ ’

Dr. Tuby summed up his findings by saying: “ * * * my opinion is that the accident had nothing to do with this residual * * * with this condition which developed subsequently and required surgery, your Honor. It had nothing to do with it.”

[674]*674Dr. Bernstein reviewed the records of the Hospital for Joint Diseases and other records, records of other physicians, and this was my opinion: That the records in the case differed somewhat as to the actual onset of back pain. The earliest history that the patient gave to one of the physicians on the service was that the back pain began approximately five weeks after the accident. In this record he said that he was out of work for two weeks, and then he went back to work, and after he had been back at work for about three weeks, that’s when he first felt pain.

“ Then, furthermore, in the record there was no — there was another record in which he said that he had no back pain until March 18, 1957. That was the story that was given to the resident who took the history when he was admitted to the hospital.

* * *

“ It was, therefore, my opinion that the patient’s back symptoms were not causally related to the accident of December 22, 1956. If this had been causally related to that accident, he should have had his symptoms either immediately or within the next day or two definitely.

“ In view of the fact that the first history of a back condition that was given in this record that I studied was five weeks later, it was my opinion that it was not causally related. Furthermore, the medical records indicated that a herniated * * * there

was some question as to whether or not a herniated disc was present on the myelogram. The myelogram is a special X-ray that’s taken to see whether there’s a herniated disc present. The X-ray man, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Misc. 2d 671, 195 N.Y.S.2d 525, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maxwell-v-new-york-city-transit-authority-nysupct-1959.