Rockefeller v. Moront

618 N.E.2d 119, 81 N.Y.2d 560, 601 N.Y.S.2d 86, 1993 N.Y. LEXIS 1864
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 6, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 618 N.E.2d 119 (Rockefeller v. Moront) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rockefeller v. Moront, 618 N.E.2d 119, 81 N.Y.2d 560, 601 N.Y.S.2d 86, 1993 N.Y. LEXIS 1864 (N.Y. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Titone, J.

In this medical malpractice action, we are called upon to determine whether a suture that was improperly affixed to an organ not involved in the operation for which plaintiff sought medical treatment constitutes a "foreign object” sufficient to delay accrual of the governing Statute of Limitations until the date that the object’s presence was or reasonably should have been discovered. Because the misplaced suture is not a "foreign object” within the rule of Flanagan v Mount Eden Gen. Hosp. (24 NY2d 427), and is more readily characterized as a "fixation device” excluded from the benefit of that rule, we conclude that the Appellate Division erred in denying defendants’ respective motions to dismiss the complaint as time-barred.

In June 1971, defendant George Moront, a licensed physician, performed left hernia repair surgery at defendant Columbia Memorial Hospital on plaintiff Mark Rockefeller, who was then four years old. Seventeen years later, when plaintiff’s wife was unable to conceive, plaintiff underwent a medical examination which revealed that his semen contained no sperm. Exploratory surgery performed on plaintiff in November 1989 revealed that a suture had been permanently placed on his vas deferens, most likely during the 1971 herniorrhaphy.

*563 Plaintiff instituted this medical malpractice action against defendants Moront and Columbia Memorial in October 1990, seeking damages for his irreversible sterility and emotional distress, as well as derivative damages on his wife’s behalf. 1 Supreme Court denied defendants’ respective motions to dismiss on Statute of Limitations grounds and granted plaintiff’s cross motion to dismiss those affirmative defenses, holding, inter alia, that the action was timely because it was commenced within three years of the discovery of the misplaced suture, a "foreign object.” The Appellate Division modified, by holding that the dismissal of the Statute of Limitations defense under the "foreign object” exception was without prejudice to its reassertion if, following discovery, defendants demonstrate that there is a triable issue concerning whether plaintiffs could have reasonably discovered the malpractice "at a point in time more than three years prior to the commencement of this action.” (182 AD2d 160, 164.) The dissent voted to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint as time-barred on the ground that the "foreign object” rule is inapplicable where an object "is deliberately, albeit negligently, placed in the patient” (id., at 165). For the following reasons, we now reverse.

The limitations period for medical malpractice actions generally runs from the date of the last act constituting the basis of the claim, and not from the date of discovery of the resulting injury (Rodriguez v Manhattan Med. Group, 77 NY2d 217, 220). The "foreign object” rule, first enunciated by this Court in Flanagan (24 NY2d 427, supra), provides an exception to that general principle, where an object not intended to remain is negligently "left in a patient’s body” after the completion of a medical procedure (id., at 430 [emphasis added]). In such instances, the applicable limitations period will not commence to run "until the patient could have reasonably discovered the malpractice” (id., at 431). We stated in Flanagan that, unlike in cases where the plaintiff’s malpractice claim is predicated on negligent "medical treatment” or practice (id., at 431), application of a discovery rule is justified in foreign object cases because the presence of the foreign object — in that case, surgical clamps forgotten in the plaintiff’s body after surgery — did not create a danger of false or belated claims, did not "raise questions as to credibility,” and did not "rest on professional diagnostic judgment or discretion” (id., at 431). The principles enunciated in Flana *564 gan, which have since been codified (see, CPLR 214-a), 2 make clear that claims founded on negligent medical diagnosis or treatment should not be considered within the category of claims covered by the "foreign object” rule because they involve the evaluation of treatment decisions made by medical professionals.

In determining whether an object which remains in the patient constitutes a "foreign object,” the courts should consider the nature of the materials implanted in a patient, as well as their intended function. Objects such as surgical clamps, scalpels, and sponges are introduced into the patient’s body to serve a temporary medical function for the duration of the surgery, but are normally intended to be removed after the procedure’s completion. Clearly, when such objects are left behind, no assessment of the medical professional’s expert judgment or discretion in failing to remove them is necessary to establish negligence. By contrast, items which are placed in the patient with the intention that they will remain to serve some continuing treatment purpose constitute "fixation devices” (Lombardi v DeLuca, 71 NY2d 838, affg 130 AD2d 632), a category of medical material that the pre-CPLR 214-a case law excludes from the "foreign object” rule, and is now explicitly excluded by the terms of that statute. That "fixation devices” were considered exempt from coverage under the judicially created "foreign object” rule prior to enactment of CPLR 214-a is confirmed by this Court’s holding in Lombardi (supra) that "[a] fixation device, in this case, suture material, intentionally placed in the body and not left there in the course of some later procedure in which it should have been removed, does not constitute a 'foreign object’, even though the claim arose prior to July 1, 1975, the effective date of *565 CPLR 214-a” (130 AD2d 632, affd on mem below 71 NY2d 838, supra; accord, Goldsmith v Howmedica, Inc., 67 NY2d 120, 123; Mitchell v Abitol, 130 AD2d 633).

We have previously rejected an argument that the negligent failure to remove a "fixation device” from a patient’s body transforms that material into a "foreign object” (see, Rodriguez v Manhattan Med. Group, supra, at 222). In so doing, we reasoned that while the "foreign object” rule applies where the negligent act of forgetting a device in the patient’s body forms the basis of the complaint, it should not be extended to cover the "very different circumstances” presented by the "failure to detect the continued presence of a previously inserted device,” a form of negligence analogous to misdiagnosis (id., at 223). By parity of reasoning, a claim based on a medical professional’s deliberate implantation of a "fixation device” in the wrong place does not transform it into a foreign object. Such a claim is more readily characterized as one predicated on negligent medical treatment, which, like misdiagnosis, is a category of malpractice not covered by the "foreign object” rule (see, Merced v New York City Health & Hosps. Corp., 44 NY2d 398).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
618 N.E.2d 119, 81 N.Y.2d 560, 601 N.Y.S.2d 86, 1993 N.Y. LEXIS 1864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rockefeller-v-moront-ny-1993.