Vasily v. Cole
This text of 413 A.2d 954 (Vasily v. Cole) 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.
Opinion
MARY VASILY, PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,
v.
NATHANIEL COLE, M.D., DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
*154 Before Judges BISCHOFF, BOTTER and DWYER.
*155 Philip G. Auerbach argued the cause for appellant (Auerbach, Rudnick, Waldman and Ford, attorneys).
John G. Rathman argued the cause for respondent (Kirkpatrick & Rathman, attorneys).
The opinion of the court was delivered by BOTTER, J.A.D.
With leave granted by us pursuant to R. 2:2-4, this interlocutory appeal concerns the right of a medical malpractice panel, appointed pursuant to R. 4:21, to ask for and receive plaintiff's hospital records not submitted by either party.
Plaintiff commenced this medical malpractice action in November 1976 against defendant who had treated her over a period of years. According to documents contained in the record before us, plaintiff was first seen by defendant in August 1957 for a growth on the left side of her nose diagnosed as basal cell carcinoma. Defendant removed the growth surgically and apparently there was no recurrence at the site until late in 1966. A second operation was performed in February or March of 1967. This was followed by further recurrences and additional surgery performed by defendant. One operation may have been performed in February 1968 according to information attributed to defendant. Another operation was performed in August 1970 which included removal of a growth and plastic reconstruction, including skin grafting, involving the eyelid, cheek and nose. Further recurrences were treated by defendant in 1974 and 1975. Eventually, in late 1975 plaintiff left the care of defendant in circumstances that are disputed. Apparently both parties agree that defendant recommended that plaintiff go to the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (Memorial Hospital) in New York. Plaintiff was treated at Memorial Hospital in December 1975, followed by extensive surgery there in January 1976. A "massive tumor" was discovered, requiring the removal of plaintiff's left eye and a portion of her nose. Radiation *156 therapy was commenced, but plaintiff's condition deteriorated and she was readmitted to Memorial Hospital in 1978 for "excision of basal cell carcinoma of nose with total amputation of nose," according to the discharge summary of May 13, 1978.
Plaintiff contends that defendant was negligent in failing to give her radiation therapy and more vigorous treatment in the early stages of the disease, specifically, after the recurrence in 1966 or thereabouts. An opinion to this effect is embodied in the report of plaintiff's expert which was submitted to the malpractice panel.
In accordance with R. 4:21-2(c), the pretrial order in this action required the submission of this medical malpractice claim to a panel as provided in R. 4:21, the provisions of which apply to all medical malpractice actions. R. 4:21-2(a). The panel consisted of a judge, a medical doctor and an attorney. R. 4:21-4(a). The pretrial order provided generally that hospital records "may be offered without formal proof." It required the submission of "the information for the panel" by a specified date in 1979. The parties were further ordered to advise the panel whether they intended to rely on testimony in addition to the submitted information, but the record before us suggests the evidence was presented in written form only. It appears that the surgery performed on plaintiff by defendant was done at the Middlesex General Hospital. While portions of the Memorial Hospital records were submitted to the panel, none of the Middlesex General Hospital records were presented by either party.
On May 25, 1979 the judge on the panel wrote the attorneys as follows:
The medical malpractice panel hearing held on this case on Tuesday, May 22, 1979 was a disappointment. The information submitted to the panel on both sides was insufficient to enable a panel to arrive at a decision.
You will shortly receive a request from me for additional information and the panel will be reconvened.
*157 On June 11, 1979 the panel judge again wrote the parties as follows:
The panel would like to receive copies of operative notes, surgical pathology reports and hospital progress notes for the period August 23, 1957 through November 4, 1975.
Any other hospital records available would also be helpful.
This letter was followed by defendant's motion in the Law Division to restrict the material to be considered by the panel to the information submitted to it at the hearing on May 22, and that motion was granted. The order entered on August 1, 1979 restricts "the review and determination" by the medical panel to "the information submitted to it on May 22, 1979." We granted leave to appeal to review that order. The issue posed has not been considered in any previously reported decision in this state.
On the motion below plaintiff argued in favor of giving the panel the additional hospital records of plaintiff's treatment by defendant so that the panel could make a full investigation of the merits of the claim in the spirit of R. 4:21. Defendant argued, as he does on this appeal, that the panel should be limited to those medical issues which are presented by the parties through their written submissions, just as issues in a trial are formed by the pleadings, pretrial order and discovery proceedings. Otherwise, defendant's argument goes, a party would not know what a panel considered and what formed the basis for its decision. In his oral decision the trial judge, who was also the chairman of the malpractice panel as provided in R. 4:21-4(a)(1), reasoned that the panel was "supposed to consider all aspects of the case" and R. 4:21-5(d) authorizes a panel to ask for the appointment of an additional medical expert "to assist it in the determination of the claim." Nevertheless, the trial judge concluded that "the Rule as framed does not give the Court the right to tell parties what to submit." As he saw it, the danger in allowing the panel to request additional information *158 is that it might become "an advocate" for one side or another. Accordingly, defendant's motion was granted.
We disagree with the conclusion reached by the trial judge and with defendant's contentions. Defendant has not contended that anything in the Middlesex General Hospital records was not relevant to the issues in the case. A submission of those hospital records does not necessarily entail an expansion of the issues in the case and plaintiff's basis for her malpractice claim. Just as a trial judge may participate in the production of evidence in a case by questioning witnesses, State v. Riley, 28 N.J. 188, 204-205 (1958), app. dism. 359 U.S. 313, 79 S.Ct. 891, 3 L.Ed.2d 832 (1959), calling witnesses, Band's Refuse Removal, Inc. v. Fair Lawn, 62 N.J. Super. 522, 547-548 (App.Div.), mod. on other grounds, 64 N.J. Super. 1 (App.Div.), certif. den. 33 N.J. 387 (1960), and appointing expert witnesses, Handleman v. Marwen Stores Corp., 53 N.J. 404 (1969), allowing a medical malpractice panel broad power to request information pertinent to the issues before it is in harmony with the spirit of R. 4:21.
R.
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413 A.2d 954, 173 N.J. Super. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vasily-v-cole-njsuperctappdiv-1980.