Stone v. Goodman

241 A.D. 290, 271 N.Y.S. 500, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8233
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 4, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 241 A.D. 290 (Stone v. Goodman) 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
Stone v. Goodman, 241 A.D. 290, 271 N.Y.S. 500, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8233 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Martin, J.

On April 30,. 1931, the plaintiff suffered an injury in the course of his employment through a fall from a scaffold, by striking an iron bar which lay across a vat beneath. In falling he straddled the bar with his legs, struck his stomach on the edge of the vat and received severe injuries, from which he suffered pains in the abdomen.

The defendant Brunswick Radio Corporation, his employer, sent him to the office of a Dr. Russell. When the plaintiff reached that office, because of the absence of Dr. Russell, he was examined by another doctor. Later, however, Dr. Russell examined him and found that he was suffering from an umbilical hernia and contusions of the right lower groin.

On May 4, 1931, the plaintiff was examined by Dr. Hawes, one of the defendants in this action, in whose favor a verdict was directed. Dr. Hawes advised an operation, and eventually the plaintiff decided to have the operation performed. He was referred by Dr. Hawes to the Broad Street Hospital to be operated upon by Dr. Goodman.

Before deciding to have the operation performed and on May 19, 1931, the plaintiff consulted and was examined by a Dr. Rivkin, whom he personally selected and paid. He also went to the Hospital for Ruptured and Crippled, and was there examined on May 20, 1931. He finally decided to have the operation performed at the Broad Street Hospital in accordance with the wishes of his employer’s insurance carrier, and on June 12, 1931, went to the hospital for that purpose and was there examined by Dr. Goodman who operated upon him the following day.

The question here presented is whether Dr. Goodman was within his rights in operating upon the plaintiff for a direct inguinal hernia on the left side, or whether he was bound to confine his [292]*292efforts to an operation on the umbilical hernia and the oblique inguinal hernia on the right side.

The plaintiff says that he went to the hospital to be operated upon for the umbilical hernia and a hernia on the right side; that he had no hernia on the left side, but that if he did have such a hernia, the doctor had no right to operate upon it without his consent.

The plaintiff admitted that Dr. Goodman examined his right side and his left side and also examined him for an umbilical hernia; that the doctor asked if he had pain on the left side; that be told the doctor he had no pain there. Regarding the umbilical hernia, there is no dispute, it being conceded by the plaintiff that he had such a hernia and no claim is made that Dr. Goodman was guilty of any malpractice in operating thereon.

While the plaintiff at first denied that anything was said about the left side, on cross-examination he was forced to admit that fact. He testified as follows: “ Q. Now, sir, I wrote down, and if I am mistaken you may tell me, you remember distinctly Dr. Goodman examined you on the left side, didn’t he? A. When? Q. At the time of his examination? A. On the 12th? Q. Yes. A. He examined both sides. Q. You remember distinctly that he examined you on the left? A. Yes. Q. You said that while he was examining you on the left side he said to you, ' Didn’t you ever have any pain in your left side? ’ Do you remember telling us that? A. He asked me where the pain was. Q. Now didn’t you, say while examining you on the left side he said to you, Didn’t you ever have any pain on this left side? ’ A. Yes. Q- You remember that, don’t you? A. Yes, I remember that.”

Dr. Goodman testified that on June 12, 1931, the day before the operation, he met the plaintiff at the Broad Street Hospital and after obtaining his history made a very thorough examination of his abdomen. He says he found him suffering from an umbilical hernia and a direct inguinal hernia on the left side; that this latter condition was dangerous and required immediate attention. He also found symptoms of a slight indirect oblique inguinal hernia on the plaintiff’s right side, but was of the opinion that plaintiff’s trouble on the right side was due to adhesions which could be relieved in the course of the operation on the umbilical hernia. He said: I asked him what he complained of. He said: Pain in the belly.’ He said that he had been told that he had trouble with his navel and in the right groin. * * * In examining his abdomen I found that he had a protrusion at the site of his navel. * * * He had tenderness extending along the right side of his abdomen, of his belly. On the right side he had symptoms of a [293]*293small, incomplete, indirect, oblique inguinal hernia. On the left side he had a direct hernia. The direct hernia on the left side permitted the introduction of the fingers directly into the peritoneal cavity, in contradistinction to the one on the right side.”

The doctor testified that the condition on the left side could not be discovered by looking at it and could not be ascertained except by introducing the finger, and that upon tugging upon the abdominal wall the patient complained of pain and a tender area. The examination disclosed that the plaintiff was suffering not only from an umbilical hernia which everyone agreed upon, but from a hernia on both the right and left sides; the one on the left side being dangerous and requiring immediate operation for the reason that a direct hernia is potentially more dangerous than an indirect hernia. It was at this time that Dr. Goodman told the patient about the left hernia.

Dr. Goodman also testified that before operating, he saw the written consent to the operation which the plaintiff had signed; that there was no limitation stated therein, and that the nature or extent of the operation, or the necessity therefor could not be fully determined until a complete examination and diagnosis was made.

Dr. Hawes, the doctor who had examined the plaintiff on May 4, 1931, and sent him to the hospital for the operation by Dr. Goodman, assisted Dr. Goodman and saw the direct hernia on the plaintiff’s left side when it was pointed out to him by Dr. Goodman. He testified: “ Q. Now, in the meantime, after Dr. Goodman stopped his work on the umbilicus, did you observe what next step he took so far as the left inguinal hernia was concerned? A. He started ahead on the left inguinal and when he got it open, then he called my attention to the hernia that was there. Q. When you get it open, is there hernia •—■ is the hernia something that you can see? A. See and feel. You can put your finger on it. Q. Of course you can tell by the sense of feeling before it is ever opened, but after it is opened up, what is there to see? What do you see and what do you feel? A. You see a bulging, a pouch, a bulging. Q. That was there, was it? A. That was there, yes. Q. That was something you could see and there was no question about it? A. No question about it. Q. Did he call it to your attention? Of course, you were working on the same abdominal wall and did you see it or don’t you recall? A. I saw the hernia.”

If, as claimed by the plaintiff, he was sent to the hospital for a specific operation, it is remarkable that Dr. Hawes, who sent him there for the operation and who assisted Dr. Goodman, did not consider that the plaintiff had been sent to the Broad Street Hospital for an operation for a hernia on the right side.

[294]*294In any event, the operation was performed on the umbilical hernia, and also for the left inguinal hernia, which Dr. Goodman said he found on his physical examination of the plaintiff and of the existence of which he informed the plaintiff. No operation was performed on the plaintiff’s right side.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 A.D. 290, 271 N.Y.S. 500, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-goodman-nyappdiv-1934.