Morris v. Crusius

207 A.D. 232, 201 N.Y.S. 766, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5938

This text of 207 A.D. 232 (Morris v. Crusius) 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
Morris v. Crusius, 207 A.D. 232, 201 N.Y.S. 766, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5938 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

Martin, J.:

Plaintiff, a dentist, brought an action to recover damages for alleged shame, mental perturbation, sickness, physical and mental disability and mental anguish, together with financial loss, because of absence from his practice and also by reason of loss in business ventures, all of which are alleged to have been caused by negligence on the part of the defendant in making and interpreting a blood test and in giving plaintiff an erroneous report with reference to the condition of his blood.

The defendant had been the personal owner of a business, operating under the trade name of New York X-Ray and Pathological Laboratories, which trade name had been registered. On or about April 12,1917, a corporation known as X-Ray Laboratories of New York, Inc., was incorporated and it purchased the registered trade name and business of the New York • X-Ray and Pathological Laboratories. The defendant was president of the corporation X-Ray Laboratories of New York, Inc., and had been president for some time before November, 1919. In a certificate filed in the county clerk’s office in January, 1918, it appears that defendant represented himself as being the owner of the business. There was evidence from which the jury might properly find that he was its owner at the time of the transaction between plaintiff and Mr. Maschke referred to in the record, at which time the X-Ray Laboratories of New York, Inc., was doing business at No. 500 Fifth avenue, New York city.

The work in which it was engaged was that of making X-ray and bacteriological examinations for the medical and dental professions; [234]*234On. the windows and doors of the premises occupied by the corporation there were painted the words New York X-Ray and Pathological Laboratories, X-Ray Laboratories of New York, Inc., Proprietor.” The corporation sent printed announcements or circulars to the profession and advertised under the corporation name.

Plaintiff, a dentist, having an office for the practice of his profession at Glen Cove, N. Y., knew of this testing laboratory and referred people to it.

In November, 1919, and for at least two months prior thereto, plaintiff had been suffering from an abnormal condition of his hands or nails which he was unable to heal by use of ointments which he applied on the advice of his physicians.

He testified that on the occasion of a visit to the laboratory in November, 1919, the thought came to him that he might be ab’e to learn whether the condition of his hands was due to something in his blood. Accordingly he made inquiries and was referred to Mr. Maschke, a chemist. Mr. Maschke was not a physician, but was supposed by plaintiff to be one. He was a bacteriologist and chemist in the employ of the corporation X-Ray Laboratories of New York, Inc., making blood tests, doing bacteriological work, blood chemistry, examinations of sputums, urines and tissues. He took a specimen of plaintiff’s blood and a specimen of his urine.

Mr. Maschke made a test of plaintiff’s blood showing the number of blood cells contained therein, and a urinalysis both qualitative and quantitative. The blood test report showed a positive result.

On November 26, 1919, plaintiff visited the laboratories and asked for and received the report in an envelope. Mr. Maschke was not in his office at that time. Subsequent to receiving the report of November 26, 1919, and later in the afternoon plaintiff after calling on the telephone for Mr. Maschke several times, finally reached him and requested information about the report. He says Mr. Maschke told him he was in “ pretty bad shape and have got a bad disease,” suggested treatment and also recommended that he see one of his local doctors.

There is conflict in the evidence as to whether a charge was made to plaintiff for the analysis; but plaintiff testified that he paid Mr. Maschke twenty-five dollars for the analysis and ointments to be furnished.

Plaintiff thereupon went to a drug store to obtain medicine and consulted a practicing physician who did not prescribe for him but referred him to a specialist in seriology and dermatology. He consulted the specialist on December 3, 1919, and asked him to make a blood test, which was made in the early part of December, 1919. It showed negative. Early in 1920 plaintiff went to Dr. [235]*235Joseph Gardner Hopkins, who was in charge of making blood tests at the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Dr. Hopkins at plaintiff’s request made such a test with the result that it also showed negative.

Reports of analyses by the X-Ray Laboratories of New York, Inc., and all communications in respect to such work were given to the profession exclusively, no work being done for the public.

Mr. Maschke testified that he did not at any time characterize the result of the report of the blood test; neither did he prescribe or suggest to plaintiff any method of treatment. But the jury evidently believed plaintiff.

In making the test, Mr. Maschke checked it by the HeehtWeinberg control, which is a recognized method of checking such" a test.

The testimony was that a single test showing positive cannot be depended upon alone; that blood taken from a patient may at one time show plus, yet within two or three weeks, or even less time, another specimen will show negative; that it is necessary in order that a physician may make a proper diagnosis in such cases, to have other manifestations or indications than one blood test: alone; that before reaching a conclusion as to the existence of specific infection', several analyses of the patient’s blood should be ‘ made.

Plaintiff’s position on this appeal is that defendant was employed to tell him what the test disclosed; and that plaintiff did not rely upon his own interpretation of the report, it being stated in respondent’s brief that “ * * * plaintiff disclaimed absolutely undertaking to interpret the report that was handed him and testified in fact that he did not know what it meant and relied entirely on Dr. Maschke’s statement to him of its meaning.” And again in respondent’s brief it is said that plaintiff relied not on his own deductions but solely on what Dr. Maschke told, him.”

At the trial, at the request of counsel for defendant, the court charged: “ * * * that even if the jury find that Dr. Maschke was in the employ of the defendant but acted without the scope of his employment, if he did advise or consult with the plaintiff in connection with any treatment, that he was acting without the scope of his employment and the defendant would not be responsible for any damage resulting therefrom.”

Thereafter the court charged, at the request of counsel for plaintiff: “ * * * that if the defendant, through Dr. Maschke, undertook to advise the plaintiff of the result of his examination, he was under just that high duty of care and responsibility that he was in making the examination,” to which defendant took an excep[236]*236tion. Thereupon the court charged at the request of defendant that “ the ordinary relationship of patient and physician did not exist between the plaintiff and Dr. Maschke.”

Reviewing the testimony as to the scope of Mr..

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Bluebook (online)
207 A.D. 232, 201 N.Y.S. 766, 1923 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-crusius-nyappdiv-1923.