Weinstein v. Prostkoff

23 Misc. 2d 376, 191 N.Y.S.2d 310, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3131
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 21, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 23 Misc. 2d 376 (Weinstein v. Prostkoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weinstein v. Prostkoff, 23 Misc. 2d 376, 191 N.Y.S.2d 310, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3131 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Louis L. Friedman, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff, as administrator of his deceased wife’s estate, to recover damages occasioned by reason of her death, allegedly caused by malpractice occurring during the delivery to her of a child. The delivery took place at the hospital of the defendant, Maimonides Hospital of Brooklyn, hereinafter referred to as Maimonides ”, The defendant Prostkoff was the physician who performed the delivery, the defendant Evans was the nurse-anesthetist who administered the anesthetic, and the hospital was brought in under the theory of respondeat superior, the nurse having been its full-time employee.

The trial before the court and a jury extended over a period of three weeks. Each of the defendants was represented by different counsel. The jury’s verdict was in favor of plaintiff against the defendant Prostkoff for the sum of $60,000, and in favor of the defendants Evans and Maimonides.

Motions by the defendant Prostkoff to set aside the verdict as against him, and by the plaintiff to set aside the verdicts in favor of the successful defendants, are now before this court for determination. However, since such motions were made, the plaintiff and the defendant Prostkoff have settled and adjusted the potential liability of said defendant, for the sum of $30,000, so that the motions made by him need no longer be considered. This decision therefore deals only with the motions of the plaintiff to set aside so much of the verdict as is in favor of the two [378]*378successful defendants. The court has been advised that as part of the settlement, a conditional release is to be executed and delivered, plaintiff thus reserving his rights as against the other defendants.

The court is convinced that this verdict must be set aside and that there are many reasons justifying the court’s action in so doing. Summarized, the court is convinced that (1) the verdict is contradictory of the jury’s verdict as to the defendant doctor, since by said verdict they found that malpractice did in fact take place; (2) the verdict is the result of passion and prejudice; (3) the verdict may be somewhat attributed to the court’s own error in permitting the introduction into evidence of certain pathological and photographic slides; (4) the verdict was caused by unfair and unjustified remarks made during summation by one of defendants’ counsel and by'-some of the tactics employed during the course of the trial; (5) the verdict is a result of perjured testimony; and (6) a miscarriage of justice has taken place which should be rectified by this decision.

The decedent, a young woman about 33 years of age, married in February, 1951 and mother of a child who was born at the end of that year, was in her approximate ninth month of pregnancy on April 28, 1955. At about 6:45 on the morning of that day, she and her husband had breakfast together, preparatory to his leaving for his place of employment. About 8:00 a.m, shortly after he had left for work, she began to experience labor pains, called the defendant Prostkoff who had been taking care of her prenatal condition, and was instructed by him to go to the hospital of the defendant Maimonides for the purpose of giving birth to her expected child. She was there examined by him. He testified that such examination revealed that the unborn child was suffering from fetal distress, since there was a faint heart beat as well as a leakage of meconium through the birth canal. The decedent was immediately prepared for the delivery, taken into the delivery room, and an oral request made for the services of someone in the hospital to administer the anesthesia. This was the usual procedure. The proof shows that there was no set practice with respect to who would be assigned, but anyone of the anesthetists available would respond to the call. Although this hospital employed about five or six anesthesiologists, they were not used for delivery cases, absent -complications, but ordinary deliveries used the services of nurse-anesthetists employed by the hospital, of whom there were approximately six, defendant Evans being one of them.

The office of the anesthetist was alongside of the delivery room and they were called merely by raising the voice and [379]*379calling for one of them. When the request in this case was made, the defendant Evans immediately responded to the delivery room, was told by Prostkoff that the baby was in distress and that 100% oxygen was to be immediately administered to the mother. This was done by placing an inhalator mask over the face of the patient. Although it was customary and exceedingly important that information be obtained as to whether a patient about to be given an anesthetic, had partaken of any food within a reasonably short time before administration of the anesthesia, no such inquiries were made of the decedent. The failure to do so is ascribed to the supposedly emergency condition of the unborn child. Nevertheless, it was admitted by all defendants that one of the dangers from the administration of anesthesia, is the frequent incidence of vomiting, and that a large percentage of deaths following anesthesia, are due to this cause. After the mask was placed over her face, the oxygen was fed to her through this mask by means of a tube connected to it, which led from a tank containing such oxygen, and it was administered by turning a valve on the oxygen tank. In the meanwhile, Prostkoff finished scrubbing and putting on his surgical gown and then proceeded with the delivery. When he was about to perform the episiotomy (cutting the vagina to prevent tearing) Prostkoff. instructed nurse Evans to put the patient to sleep. He gave no further instructions as to the type of anesthesia to be used or as to the method of administering same, although it was admitted that there were many different types and methods of anesthetizing a patient.. It is the contention of defendant Evans that upon receiving the instructions to put the patient to sleep she then reduced the flow of oxygen and started the flow of nitrous oxide-ether and oxygen, so that the patient was being given 80% of nitrous oxide-ether and 20% of oxygen. This continued for about five minutes and the patient was delivered of her child. During all of this time, nurse Evans sat on a chair alongside of the delivery table, regulating the valves on the three tanks from which ether, nitrous oxide, and oxygen were being separately drawn. There is no testimony by her or by any other witness, that after putting the mask on the patient’s face, she ever again put her hands, or either of them, on or near the mask, although as was later discovered from the testimony of one of defendant’s own experts, this was a most important procedure to follow.

When the child was born, it was covered with meconium, and the physician immediately began working with this child so that it would remain alive. What occurred at that time is, of [380]*380course, solely within the knowledge of those who were in the delivery room, other than the decedent, she being under the influence of the anesthetic. The testimony given on the examination before trial and upon the trial, is to the effect that approximately two minutes after the baby was horn, the patient gave several gasps and died. The mask was immediately pulled from her face by nurse Evans. Prostkoff testified that he immediately saw large amounts of vomit coming from the patient’s mouth. The testimony of the nurse as to what occurred, as well as the testimony of Prostkoff as to what he saw when the mask was ripped off of the decedent’s face, leaves no doubt that this occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Misc. 2d 376, 191 N.Y.S.2d 310, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weinstein-v-prostkoff-nysupct-1959.