Vaccaro v. Squibb Corp.

71 A.D.2d 270, 422 N.Y.S.2d 679, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13468
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 6, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 71 A.D.2d 270 (Vaccaro v. Squibb Corp.) 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
Vaccaro v. Squibb Corp., 71 A.D.2d 270, 422 N.Y.S.2d 679, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13468 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

Fein, J.

In these consolidated medical malpractice actions, defendants Squibb Corporation, E. R. Squibb & Sons, Inc. and Dr. [272]*272Emil E. Maffucci appeal from an order denying their motion and cross motion to dismiss the first nine causes of action of the complaint in Action No. 2 for failure to state a cause of action as a matter of law.

Plaintiff mother Inez Vaccaro, who previously had given birth to a stillborn child and had miscarried once, became pregnant again. During the course of her pregnancy, she received from Dr. Maffucci, first weekly, then monthly, injections of Delalutin, a progestational hormone manufactured, sold and distributed by Squibb and intended to prevent miscarriage. The injections continued until the infant’s birth. The child was born on January 10, 1974 without arms or legs and with other severe birth defects.

Action No. 1 commenced by the plaintiff father Juan Vaccaro on behalf of the infant daughter Martha and himself, seeks damages for her injuries and for loss of her services. Action No. 2, later commenced by the mother and father, seeks recovery for "emotional damage”, "mental anguish” and other psychic injuries allegedly sustained by reason of the birth of their deformed child.

The first cause of action against Squibb for negligence alleges that as a result of the ingestion of the drug by the mother during her pregnancy, the child was born without limbs, causing the mother to sustain "severe and permanent personal injuries and fear for her own well-being and health including injury to her nervous system, emotional damage, personality changes * * * extreme mental anguish.” The second cause of action against Squibb alleges that the child’s birth caused the father "severe and permanent injuries, including injuries to his nervous system, emotional damage, personality changes, extreme mental anguish, loss of salary due to his inability to perform his vocation and duties * * * extensive medical expenses for his daughter * * * his wife * * * and himself.”

In causes three through five both plaintiffs allege against Squibb and the doctor, breach of warranties of merchantable quality and fitness for use; violation of statutes; and liability under the doctrine of strict liability.

In causes six and eight the wife alleges negligent medical care by the physician and hospital and loss of her husband’s services.

In causes seven and nine the husband makes similar allegations.

[273]*273The issue is whether New York recognizes a parent’s cause of action for mental and emotional damage, purely psychic injuries sustained upon the birth of a deformed child, whose deformity was the result of the ingestion of a drug prescribed and administered by the doctor.

In Howard v Lecher (42 NY2d 109) relied upon by the dissent, recovery was denied to the parents of an infant daughter who was born with and eventually succumbed to Tay-Sachs disease, a progressively degenerative genetic disorder affecting the nervous system which primarily affects Eastern European Jews and their progeny. The plaintiffs claimed that the doctor was negligent in failing to take a proper genealogical history and in failing to inform them that the fetus might suffer from the disease since both parents were Eastern European Jews, a fact known to the doctor. They claimed that had they known of the risk involved and of the available tests to determine the existence of the disease, the pregnancy would have been aborted. No such claim is made here. The Court of Appeals held that to afford the parents relief against the doctor would require the extension of traditional tort concepts beyond manageable bounds.

Writing for the four-man majority, Judge Wachtler relied heavily upon Tobin v Grossman (24 NY2d 609) denying recovery to a mother who did not witness the accident but who allegedly sustained mental and physical injuries when she found her seriously injured two-year-old child lying on the ground immediately after the mother heard the screech of automobile brakes. The Tobin court considered whether the concept of duty in tort should be extended to third persons who sustained no physical impact in an accident nor fear for their own safety, but who asserted liability for mental trauma against those responsible for the accident. The court said that it was being called upon to create a new duty and an entirely new cause of action although it acknowledged that recoverability for mental trauma without physical impact was well settled since Battalla v State of New York (10 NY2d 237). In that case the infant had been negligently strapped into a ski lift and allegedly "became frightened and hysterical upon the descent, with consequential injuries.” (10 NY2d, at p 239.) The Battalia complaint was sustained although it alleged mental and emotional injuries, without impact. The fact that the injuries were consequent upon fright, not impact, did not bar recovery.

[274]*274In Tobin the court suggested that the tests to-be used in determining whether a new cause of action should be recognized are (1) foreseeability of the injury; (2) proliferation of claims; (3) fraudulent claims; (4) inconsistency of the zone of danger rule; (5) unlimited liability; (6) unduly burdensome liability and (7) the difficulty of circumscribing the area of liability. The court denied liability on the ground that the ramifications were such that the limit of liability: "will not stay defined or limited. There are too many factors and each too relative to permit creation of only a limited scope of liability or duty.” (Tobin, supra, p 619.)

However, some time later, in Johnson v State of New York (37 NY2d 378) the court unanimously held that a daughter might recover for emotional harm sustained by her when she was negligently misinformed by defendant hospital that her mother, a patient, had died. Plaintiff only discovered the error after viewing the body at a wake. The test of liability was stated as follows (p 380): "Key to liability, of course, is the hospital’s duty, borne or assumed, to advise the proper next of kin of the death of a patient.”

The court distinguished Tobin v Grossman (supra), ruling that the hospital breached its duty to the daughter when it negligently sent the false message. The false message and the events flowing from its receipt were the proximate cause of plaintiff’s emotional harm.

It would appear that our case is more nearly akin to Johnson than it is to Tobin or to Howard. In our case a duty was owed to the mother, as it was to the daughter in Johnson. The doctor was the mother’s gynecologist. He was apprised of her prior stillborn child and miscarriage. He selected and administered the drug manufactured, sold and distributed by Squibb, now said to be responsible for the birth of the deformed child. The mother was not a mere bystander as in Tobin. She ingested the drug prescribed and administered to her by the doctor. The duty of Squibb to the mother is manifest. It manufactured, sold and distributed the drug designed to prevent miscarriage. Here, there was something more than the failure to disclose the danger of bearing a child with the Tay-Sachs syndrome to the putative parents of such a child, as in Howard. In Howard, there were no affirmative acts, no errors of commission, no affirmative treatment. Moreover, Howard

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Bluebook (online)
71 A.D.2d 270, 422 N.Y.S.2d 679, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaccaro-v-squibb-corp-nyappdiv-1979.