Saunders v. State

129 Misc. 2d 45, 492 N.Y.S.2d 510, 1985 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2693
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 129 Misc. 2d 45 (Saunders v. State) 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
Saunders v. State, 129 Misc. 2d 45, 492 N.Y.S.2d 510, 1985 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2693 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Bernard F. McCaffrey, J.

This matter concerns a document entitled, "Instructions Relating to Medical Treatment and Death/Refusal of Further Care” (also known as Living Will) of Selma L. Saunders who now asks the court, as a matter of first impression, to rule upon the proposed Living Will and interpret said will and judicially implement her written desires and instructions.

Reduced to its simplest terms a Living Will is a document in which one states, while in good health, what measures he or she does not want used to extend one’s life when one is dying.

The applicant, Selma L. Saunders, is 70 years of age and suffers from both emphysema and lung cancer, and is currently confined to her daughter’s home in Oceanside, New York, where she has oxygen administered to her on an almost continual basis. Her condition is described as being progressive and without current known medical cure.

On or about April 24, 1984, while the applicant was residing in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, she prepared and executed a Living Will; said document was prepared by her attorneys in [47]*47Philadelphia. The document is annexed to the moving papers as an exhibit; it consists of a cover page and 3 Vi typewritten pages signed by the applicant and attested to by witnesses.

The applicant petitions the court to make a determination as to the validity and effectiveness of the document within the State of New York. She seeks this relief at this time in order that the document will be operative without the requirement of any further court determination, if certain events in paragraph B of the document occur. Paragraph B provides as follows: "B. If, due to injury or illness, sudden or gradual, I become incompetent, and my condition becomes such that: (1) I am in irreversible coma, in the opinion of my treating physician; or (2) I have been continuously unconscious for a period of one (1) week, and in the opinion of my treating physician, I have suffered severe irreversible brain damage which will permanently render me incompetent (or that even partial physical recovery would be accompanied by severe, irreversible brain damage rendering me incompetent); or (3) my condition is terminal and hopeless and death is imminent; then, as of that time, I withdraw my actual and implied consent to and substitute this refusal of, all further treatment of me by artificial means and devices (such as the use of a respirator) and all further therapeutic or emergency care; and I direct that all further treatment of me or my condition by such artificial means and devices or the rendition of such further therapeutic or emergency care shall cease.”

The document goes on further to state that the determination of the effective time of the "refusal” in paragraph B of the document is a medical decision and empowers the treating physician to make the determination to honor said "refusal” of further medical treatment, applying his own medical judgment. The document further absolves and releases any physician or hospital on account of honoring the "refusal”, and reaffirms said "refusal” as hers and that any physician or hospital is acting in accordance with her own directions. Finally, the document reflects that the applicant is not claiming any so-called "right to die” or any right to commit suicide through this "refusal”. Rather, according to the document, the applicant is insisting upon what she describes as her "right as a competent adult to refuse to submit to medical and surgical procedures although the inevitable consequences of her decision will be my death.”

The respondent, State of New York, appears in this proceeding by the Attorney-General in opposition to the application [48]*48requesting that it be denied contending that there is no justiciable controversy.

Also as an affirmative defense, the Attorney-General claims it is merely a nominal respondent in this action and, inasmuch as there is no indication that the applicant has had any contact with any State agency or employee relative to her medical treatment, naming the State of New York as a party respondent is improper. Furthermore, it is claimed that the State may only be sued as it has consented to be sued and is otherwise immune from suit and has not consented to be sued as an entity in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, and so the action must be dismissed as the court has no jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action.

A memorandum of law has been submitted by the Society for the Right to Die as amicus curiae. Said society urges the court to find that a Living Will, such as that executed by the applicant, is clear and convincing evidence of a patient’s wishes, which may be acted upon when the patient is incompetent and without hope of recovery.

The society estimates that its members and contributors number 100,000 nationwide, more than 18,000 of whom are in New York. In addition to its members who have requested Living Wills, hundreds of thousands of Living Wills have been distributed on request to people who have not become contributing members. The society estimates that approximately 80,000 Living Wills have been executed in New York.

Although there are aspects of the case at bar wherein it can be said that the application is premature, or not ripe for determination, yet, for all the reasons set forth by the parties, the underlying issue is of public importance and is of a recurring nature of a type that is likely to escape any appropriate court review or determination, because it reaches the court at a time when it is really too late for the court to afford any meaningful relief.

The fact the applicant has not yet entered a specific hospital, or that she has not been denied her choice of medical treatment in the past, is not a sufficient basis on which to deny the application out of hand on technical grounds despite the holding in A.B. v C. (124 Misc 2d 672).

The court finds that even at the present time a substantial controversial issue exists with respect to the applicant’s future rights concerning the manner in which her life and body should be treated in the event her very existence becomes [49]*49dependent upon artificial life-supporting systems. Such an issue pertaining to a prospective right invokes and does not foreclose an application for declaratory relief. (Borg v New York Majestic Corp., 139 NYS2d 72.)

The court is vested with discretionary power to exercise the right of a declaratory judgment. "CPLR 3001 is a remedial provision the primary purpose of which is to stabilize legal relations and eliminate uncertainty as to the scope and content of present or prospective obligations.” (3 Weinstein-Korn-Miller, NY Civ Prac ¶ 3001.02; see, Barry v Ready Reference Pub. Co., 25 AD2d 827.) The aim of a declaratory judgment is to enable a party whose rights, privileges and powers are endangered, threatened or placed in uncertainty to evoke the aid of the court to obtain a declaration of his or her rights or legal relations. The objective of the declaratory judgment in our practice is to obtain relief from just such uncertainty and doubt. (See, Town of Ohio v People, 264 App Div 220.)

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Bluebook (online)
129 Misc. 2d 45, 492 N.Y.S.2d 510, 1985 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-state-nysupct-1985.