Virginia Modave v. Long Island Jewish Medical Center and the County of Nassau (Meadowbrook Hospital)

501 F.2d 1065, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 7907
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 27, 1974
Docket906, Docket 73-1470
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 501 F.2d 1065 (Virginia Modave v. Long Island Jewish Medical Center and the County of Nassau (Meadowbrook Hospital)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virginia Modave v. Long Island Jewish Medical Center and the County of Nassau (Meadowbrook Hospital), 501 F.2d 1065, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 7907 (2d Cir. 1974).

Opinion

FRIENDLY, Circuit Judge:

In this case we are forced to decide questions of New York law on which, as Judge J. Skelly Wright has said with elegant understatement, “state law on the point at issue is less than immaculately clear.” 1 We must do this because plaintiff, a former American Airlines stewardess living on Long Island, alleged that at the time the suit was filed she was a citizen and resident of Florida, and the defendants Long Island Jewish Medical Center (LIJ) and the County of Nassau, which operates Meadowbrook Hospital, are citizens of New York. It is unfortunate that the rights of the parties to the substantial sums at stake must be adjudicated by a court which can make only educated guesses on a close and serious issue of New York law. 2

I.

Because of the nature of the issues, it is necessary to state the facts in some detail, although neither defendant questions the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict that both were guilty of malpractice.

On the night of June 8, 1968, the plaintiff, Virginia Modave, was injured in an automobile accident on the Long Island Expressway. Immediately after the accident she was taken to LIJ where she received emergency treatment. 3 She testified that, when she arrived there, she had pains in her lower neck and a “pins and needles feeling” in her fingertips, as well as other minor cuts and bruises. After a doctor examined her briefly, she was placed on a stretcher in a hall for about an hour. During that time, her neck was not immobilized, and she was not told to keep her head still. Hospital personnel then moved her into the x-ray room where she was told to “scoot over on the table.” While positioning her for the x-rays, the technician twisted her neck in a manner that produced “shooting pains down my left arm, like someone put it in a light socket.” After that, she said, “it became very difficult for me to move my neck.” *1068 According to her testimony, the x-ray technician “came over several times to push my neck to get an x-ray.” After the session in the x-ray room, she said her neck felt much worse; she could barely move it, and then only with great pain. She was then moved back to the hall. Again, no one immobilized her neck or told her to keep her head still. After roughly an hour, a hospital representative told Miss Modave’s mother, who had arrived at the hospital, that no beds were available there, and that she should transfer to Meadowbrook Hospital. In moving her from the stretcher to the ambulance for transfer to Meadow-brook, the hospital staff again took no measures to immobilize her neck.

Upon her arrival at Meadowbrook, Miss Modave was given another set of x-rays. By then her arms were starting to ache and were becoming numb; her neck had become harder to move. The hospital placed her in a bed and put her head in a harness with a halter under her chin. She wore the harness intermittently while she was at Meadow-brook. During that time, she testified, her arms became numb, and she noticed a loss of coordination, particularly in her arms. Throughout this period, she was allowed to leave her bed on occasion. Although a doctor apparently examined her regularly, she was never treated or examined by an orthopedic or neurological specialist. After five days, she was told she could leave. She was given a sponge collar, which offered some support but did not prevent her moving her neck. When she was discharged, she said that the doctor told her, “You will have a stiff neck. Go home and take aspirin, maybe apply a little heat.” She testified that she was instructed to see her family doctor if she felt that was necessary, but she was not told she should not move her neck. When she left the hospital, she testified she had no intention of returning.

For about ten days after her release from Meadowbrook, Miss Modave’s condition continued to deteriorate. Finally she consulted her family physician, who directed her to an orthopedic specialist, Dr. Irving Miner. After examining, her, Dr. Miner immediately placed her in Manhasset Hospital. X-rays showed a dislocation of the sixth vertebra over the seventh and a slight fracture of the body of the seventh. When traction proved unsuccessful in relieving the neck condition, Dr. Miner performed a cervical fusion on July 1, 1968. Following the operation, Miss Modave remained in the Manhasset Hospital until August 8, 1968.

Upon her release, she was required to wear a full body cast until some time in October 1968. After that was removed, she was fitted with a “four poster neck brace,” which she wore continuously through December of that year. At that time Dr. Miner, who was still supervising her treatment, placed her in a conventional round collar brace. He continued to treat Miss Modave actively until June 1969, when he told her there was nothing else he could do for her, and advised her to begin a program of physiotherapy and vocational therapy. When she explained that she could not afford private facilities, he suggested that she return to Meadowbrook Hospital for the therapy. Starting on July 1, 1969, she was given physical and vocational therapy at Meadowbrook. The treatment there, which lasted until September 12, 1969, occupied three one-hour sessions per week. She was given some medication and did lifting exercises, hand exercises, and coordination drills. At the end of the two and one-half month period, she returned to her job as an airline stewardess, although she was able to work on only a limited basis. She testified that her strength and coordination deteriorated over the next year and that in August 1970 she was forced to resign.

It was during the period of her re-employment, on November 24, 1969, that Miss Modave served by registered mail the notice of claim with Nassau County which § 50-e(l) of the New York Municipal Law requires to be given “within ninety days after the claim arises.” She subsequently visited specialists at the *1069 New York University Medical Center and sought treatment in two hospitals in Florida, but her condition continued to deteriorate and she had increasing difficulties with her coordination and in walking. Since she stopped working as a stewardess for American Airlines, Miss Modave has been unemployed. One of her experts testified that she “could do some sitting work, but I would say that she would be qualified as highly disabled.” Her condition, he said, was not likely to improve, and in all likelihood would gradually worsen.

On the basis of x-rays and reports of neurological tests done between the night of the accident and the date of the cervical fusion operation three weeks later, plaintiff’s experts explained the probable course of her injury: In the accident, Miss Modave suffered a sharp shock to the base of the neck, which apparently resulted in a partial dislocation or subluxation in the cervical region of the spine. The dislocation might have occurred in the accident, the experts testified, or the accident may merely have torn the supporting ligaments and permitted the dislocation to occur at a later time. In either case, the experts agreed that the condition was very serious and could lead to injury to the spinal cord, resulting in nerve damage or paralysis. 4

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Bluebook (online)
501 F.2d 1065, 1974 U.S. App. LEXIS 7907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-modave-v-long-island-jewish-medical-center-and-the-county-of-ca2-1974.