Rowland Barnes, Administrator of the Estate of Evelyn Elizabeth Adams, Deceased v. Herman Tenin

429 F.2d 117, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 9999
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 2, 1970
Docket593, Docket 34108
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 429 F.2d 117 (Rowland Barnes, Administrator of the Estate of Evelyn Elizabeth Adams, Deceased v. Herman Tenin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowland Barnes, Administrator of the Estate of Evelyn Elizabeth Adams, Deceased v. Herman Tenin, 429 F.2d 117, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 9999 (2d Cir. 1970).

Opinion

IRVING R. KAUFMAN, Circuit Judge:

This wrongful death action arises from the alleged malpractice of appellant Dr. Herman Tenin, an oral surgeon, in an operation he performed on March 8, 1965. The events of that day are not the subject of much dispute. 1 21 Plaintiff’s decedent Mrs. Evelyn Adams visited Dr. Tenin’s office to undergo a full mouth extraction. Upon Mrs. Adams’s arrival at approximately 8:30 a. m., Mrs. Ann Barlow, one of Dr. Tenin’s assistants, a licensed practical nurse, took her blood pressure and administered a sedative.

The operation commenced at 9 a. m. with the administration of anesthesia by Dr. Tenin and Mrs. Barlow. Mrs. Adams received injections of sodium brevital, a general anesthetic, and xyloeaine, a local anesthetic. A second general anesthetic, a mixture of nitrous oxide and oxygen, was administered throughout the operation by means of a nose-piece connected to an anesthesia machine. Dr. Tenin apparently made no detailed examination to ensure this machine was in proper functioning order before commencing the oral surgery. Holding the nosepiece, making appropri *118 ate adjustments in the settings on the anesthesia machine, and administering additional sodium brevital during the extraction were the responsibilities of Mrs. Barlow, whose formal training in anesthetics was extremely limited. Dr. Tenin’s second assistant, Miss Gerry Kaplan, a high school graduate with no medical or dental assistant’s training, was assigned the task of suctioning fluid from Mrs. Adams’s mouth while the extraction was in process.

Because considerable difficulty in performing some of the initial extractions was experienced by Dr. Tenin, the operation was prolonged to an hour and forty-five minutes, a time span one hour longer than anticipated. Moreover, shortly before the mid-point in the operation, Miss Kaplan began to suffer nausea and, although she had no experience in the administration of anesthetics, was directed to hold the anesthesia nosepiece so that Mrs. Barlow would be freed to suction. A series of complications then followed in rapid succession. A change in color in the region of her mouth and irregularities in her breathing indicated that Mrs. Adams was suffering from cyanosis, a condition resulting from lack of oxygen in the bloodstream. But Dr. Tenin did not discontinue the operation at this time. Instead, the machine was adjusted to administer a higher percentage of oxygen, and additional teeth were removed when normal coloration returned. The same course was followed when there were additional indications of lack of oxygen. Finally, dark-colored blood and labored, gasping breathing warned of a most serious cyanotic condition. There is some dispute in the testimony whether at this point Dr. Tenin discontinued the procedure immediately or continued for a brief period with the extractions. In any event, the operation was halted shortly thereafter, and proeedure to resuscitate Mrs. Adams instituted. She was lowered to a position with her head below her feet; a mask through which she could breath oxygen was placed over her face, and Dr. Tenin employed external cardiac massage. The record indicates that the Doctor did not resort to several procedures which would have ensured that the air passage to Mrs. Adams’s trachea was clear. Moreover he failed to utilize any positive pressure, such as the bellows on the anesthesia machine or mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, in order to force the oxygen to her lungs. We are informed also that the rate of cardiac massage appears to have been far too slow to have been effective.

When Mrs. Adams’s respiration failed to recurn to normal, an ambulance was summoned. Although Dr. Tenin was aware that the ambulance crew contained no doctor, he did not accompany Mrs. Adams to the hospital. She was dead on arrival at the Hospital of St. Raphael.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Adams’s administrator, commenced this action in the District of Connecticut in July 1965, alleging that Dr. Tenin’s negligence had caused the death of Mrs. Adams 2 The one-week jury trial took place in March 1969 before Judge Zampano. At its conclusion, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $100,000.

The single issue Dr. Tenin raises on appeal relates to the propriety of the district court’s admission of certain testimony of Mrs. Barlow. The plaintiff called Mrs. Barlow as his witness and on direct examination sought, inter alia, to expose her lack of qualification to administer anesthesia. On cross-examination, the defendant attempted to rebut this contention and establish that Mrs. Barlow was an experienced and able as *119 sistant. In order to do so, counsel for the defendant first elicited the information that beginning in 1962 she had assisted Dr. Tenin on more than 4000 occasions, then posed the questions “In all of that time did you ever have one — and I mean by that, incident similar to this incident? Where someone died?” There were no objections to these questions, and Mrs. Barlow responded in the negative.

Prior to Mrs. Barlow’s redirect testimony, there occurred a colloquy between the court and counsel in the absence of the jury. It appears from this exchange that in December 1960, before the beginning of Mrs. Barlow’s employment, a patient had died in Dr. Tenin’s recovery room. Over the strenuous objections of the defendant, the plaintiff proposed to question Mrs. Barlow concerning this prior death. Although there was no showing that the death had occurred under circumstances similar to those surrounding the death of Mrs. Adams, the court determined after argument to admit the testimony. Accordingly, upon her return to the witness stand, Mrs. Barlow was asked whether “prior to the beginning of [her] employment * * * Dr. Tenin ever had- * * * an incident similar to this incident where somebody died ?” She answered that she did know of such an incident. The court then proceeded to instruct the jury that he had allowed the evidence to come in “in the interest of completeness” but cautioned “under no circumstances should that evidence be considered on the issue of negligence.” Upon recross examination, the further revelation was made that she had no firsthand knowledge of the prior death but had heard of it from another employee and, even from that source, had learned little more than that there had been a death.

We have often emphasized that, “[t]he trial judge has considerable discretion in matters concerning admissibility.” Shaw v. Scoville, 369 F.2d 909 (2d Cir. 1966). The district judge, familiar as he is with the intricacies and dynamics of the trial, is generally in a favored position to weigh the probative value of evidence against any harm its admission may occasion. We are also aware of the claim that the damaging evidence on redirect was allowed because of the trial judge’s concern that if it had been excluded, the jury would have been left with the misleading impression that Dr. Tenin’s safety record was without incident. 3 In the circumstances of this ease, however, we believe it was unwise for the judge to admit any evidence of the prior death. 4

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Bluebook (online)
429 F.2d 117, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 9999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowland-barnes-administrator-of-the-estate-of-evelyn-elizabeth-adams-ca2-1970.