Scafidi v. Seiler

543 A.2d 95, 225 N.J. Super. 576
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 14, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 543 A.2d 95 (Scafidi v. Seiler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scafidi v. Seiler, 543 A.2d 95, 225 N.J. Super. 576 (N.J. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

225 N.J. Super. 576 (1988)
543 A.2d 95

JAMIE DERRICOTT SCAFIDI, AND ANTHONY SCAFIDI, INDIVIDUALLY AS ADMINISTRATORS AD PROSEQUENDUM AND GENERAL ADMINISTRATORS FOR THE ESTATE OF DANIELLE SCAFIDI, DECEASED, PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS,
v.
F.U. SEILER, M.D., DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued May 3, 1988.
Decided June 14, 1988.

*577 Before Judges R.S. COHEN and LANDAU.

Benjamin N. Cittadino argued the cause for appellants (Devlin, Cittadino & Shaw and Pellettieri, Rabstein & Altman, attorneys; Benjamin N. Cittadino and E. Elizabeth Sweetser, of counsel and on the brief).

Richard A. Grossman argued the cause for respondents (Grossman & Kruttschnitt, attorneys; Richard A. Grossman, *578 of counsel, Richard A. Grossman and Thomas J. Heavey, on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by COHEN, R.S., J.A.D.

This is a medical malpractice case. The complaint asserted that defendant's deficient care was responsible for the premature birth and resulting death of a newborn infant. Recovery was sought for both lifetime damages and wrongful death. The jury found that defendant was negligent, but also concluded that his negligence was not the proximate cause of the lifetime damages or the death of the infant. Plaintiffs appealed, asserting that the court erroneously instructed the jury on the issue of causation. We agree and therefore reverse.

Plaintiff Jamie Scafidi had a difficult pregnancy, including two brief hospitalizations. On July 7, 1982, when she was about seven months pregnant, she visited her obstetrician, Dr. Franzoni, complaining of heavy bleeding. He sent her home to bed, said there was a danger of premature labor, told her to call with any problems and warned her she was "sitting on a time bomb." Later that day, Jamie experienced cramping and called Dr. Franzoni, but he was unavailable. She spoke to his associate, defendant Dr. Seiler, who was covering. She related her difficulties and told him what Dr. Franzoni had advised her to do. She said she was not then bleeding and her cramps were irregular. He told her she had an irritable uterus and prescribed orally administered medicine to "calm it down." He advised her to keep a prearranged appointment the next morning with Dr. Franzoni. The medicine prescribed by defendant, when taken orally, is ineffective as tocolytic therapy, whose goal is to arrest premature labor.

Next morning, still suffering from cramping, Jamie went to see Dr. Franzoni. After discovering that she was dilated three centimeters, he sent her to the hospital. There, unsuccessful efforts were made to arrest labor. The baby was born at 28 *579 weeks weighing two pounds, six ounces, and died two days later of Respiratory Distress Syndrome, a condition peculiar to preterm infants.

On behalf of plaintiffs, Dr. Marshall Klavan testified that defendant deviated from accepted standards of practice by not immediately hospitalizing Jamie to evaluate whether she was having labor pains, and, if so, to begin tocolytic therapy to halt the premature labor. Effective tocolytic therapy, he said, involved intravenous medication and thus required hospitalization. The medicine defendant prescribed for oral administration was ineffective for the purpose. Defendant's deviation, according to Dr. Klavan, "directly related to the premature birth" of the infant and thus to her death from prematurity. According to Dr. Klavan, timely tocolytic therapy available in 1982 was 75 to 80% successful in halting preterm labor.

Dr. Richard Berman testified for defendant. In addition to supporting the care afforded Jamie by defendant, Dr. Berman said that hospitalization and tocolysis on the evening Jamie telephoned defendant would not have changed the outcome in any way. He believed the labor would have gone to delivery no matter what defendant did. In his view only 25% of women will respond to tocolysis, and nobody could tell if Jamie's labor would have ceased if she had received earlier tocolytic therapy. Dr. Berman was asked if it was not true that the longer the delay in appropriate tocolytic therapy, "the more there is a substantial increase in the risk that the baby will be born prematurely." He first responded that he agreed with the concept, "but there is something wrong with it." He explained that determining whether to institute tocolysis "is the biggest problem." Ultimately, he stated:

And I think that retrospectively the sooner it had been started the better it would have been for her. But I can't say more than that.

Plaintiff requested that the court charge the jury as to causation in accordance with Evers v. Dollinger, 95 N.J. 399 (1984). The court declined to do so because it believed that *580 "this is not an Evers case." The instruction requested by plaintiff was:

Once the plaintiffs in this case have produced evidence of a negligent act or failure to act which increased the risk that plaintiffs' child would be born prematurely and thereafter die of the complications of that premature birth, and that the premature birth and consequent death of the child in fact occurred, you will then consider whether such increased risk was a substantial factor in that result. If you so find, you will proceed to a calculation of damages.

A plaintiff seeking to recover for another's negligence must prove that the negligence was a proximate cause of plaintiff's injuries. Catto v. Schnepp, 121 N.J. Super. 506, 511 (App.Div.), aff'd o.b. 62 N.J. 20 (1972). Plaintiff has the burden of proving by competent, credible evidence that the negligent conduct was a substantial contributing factor in causing the loss. Skripek v. Bergamo, 200 N.J. Super. 620, 634 (App.Div.), certif. den. 102 N.J. 303 (1985); Lamb v. Barbour, 188 N.J. Super. 6, 12 (App.Div. 1982), certif. den. 93 N.J. 297 (1983). Traditionally, courts have held that, if the loss would have occurred in the absence of defendant's negligence, it is not regarded as the cause of the loss. Kulas v. Public Service Elec. & Gas Co., 41 N.J. 311, 317 (1964).

When a patient is on a downward course, and defendant physician negligently fails to intervene, traditional proximate causation doctrine denies recovery unless the evidence shows that the patient's chance of a better outcome was greater than 50-50 absent malpractice. See generally Annotation, "Medical Malpractice, `loss of chance' causality," 54 A.L.R.4th 10 (1987). Many modern cases liberalize the standard in view of the practical difficulties of meeting it. One of them is Evers v. Dollinger. There, the Law Division excluded expert testimony in a medical malpractice case in which plaintiff alleged that negligent failure to diagnose her breast cancer for a period of seven months caused physical and emotional injury and enhanced the risk that cancer would recur after plaintiff's mastectomy. Plaintiff's medical expert was prepared to testify that 25% of people with plaintiff's kind of breast cancer experience a recurrence, and when there is a seven month delay in diagnosis, *581 there is "more of a chance" that a patient would be in the 25% group. Another physician was prepared to testify for plaintiff, according to his written report, that the chances of "a distant spread" of the cancer was increased in an unquantifiable amount by the delay in diagnosis.

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543 A.2d 95, 225 N.J. Super. 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scafidi-v-seiler-njsuperctappdiv-1988.