Young v. Sethi

2020 NY Slip Op 06330, 134 N.Y.S.3d 571, 188 A.D.3d 1339
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 5, 2020
Docket530445
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2020 NY Slip Op 06330 (Young v. Sethi) 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
Young v. Sethi, 2020 NY Slip Op 06330, 134 N.Y.S.3d 571, 188 A.D.3d 1339 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Young v Sethi (2020 NY Slip Op 06330)
Young v Sethi
2020 NY Slip Op 06330
Decided on November 5, 2020
Appellate Division, Third Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided and Entered: November 5, 2020

530445

[*1]Lisa M. Young, Appellant,

v

Khalid Sethi et al., Respondents.


Calendar Date: September 16, 2020
Before: Garry, P.J., Egan Jr., Lynch, Mulvey and Reynolds Fitzgerald, JJ.

Richard Engelberg, Plainview, for appellant.

Aswad & Ingraham, LLP, Binghamton (Thomas A. Saitta of counsel), for respondents.



Garry, P.J.

Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Tait, J.), entered June 26, 2019 in Broome County, which granted defendants' motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint.

In July 2013, defendant Khalid Sethi, a neurosurgeon, and defendant Christian Tvetenstrand, a general surgeon, performed interbody fusion surgery on plaintiff's spine to correct her spondylolisthesis, in which her L5 vertebrae was displaced over the S1 vertebrae. In February 2016, plaintiff commenced this medical malpractice action. As later amplified in discovery, plaintiff asserted that she was born with a genetic physical anomaly known as a twisted or rotated pelvis that had been present throughout her life without causing pain or other complications. The complaint alleged that defendants acted negligently during the July 2013 surgery by repositioning or derotating plaintiff's pelvis without her knowledge or consent, causing her to suffer permanent injuries and debilitating pain. Defendants joined issue, denying, among other things, that they had repositioned or manipulated plaintiff's pelvis in any way. Following discovery, defendants moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint. Supreme Court granted the motion. Plaintiff appeals.

"In a medical malpractice action, the plaintiff must show that the defendant deviated from acceptable medical practice, and that such deviation was a proximate cause of the plaintiff's injury" (Mazella v Beals, 27 NY3d 694, 705 [2016] [internal quotation marks and citation omitted]; accord Gallagher v Cayuga Med. Ctr., 151 AD3d 1349, 1351 [2017]). "Accordingly, on a motion for summary judgment, the defendant must establish 'either that there was no departure from accepted standards of practice in the plaintiff's treatment or that any such deviation did not injure the plaintiff'" (Butler v Cayuga Med. Ctr., 158 AD3d 868, 869 [2018], quoting D'Orta v Margaretville Mem. Hosp., 154 AD3d 1229, 1231 [2017]). Upon their summary judgment motion, defendants asserted that they did not depart from the standards of practice for interbody fusion surgery, supporting their motion with, among other things, Sethi's testimony that he "absolutely" did not change the orientation of plaintiff's pelvis and that it was not anatomically possible to do so during such surgery. Defendants also submitted the expert affirmation of John Pollina Jr., a board-certified neurosurgeon, who opined that defendants were not negligent and did not deviate from the applicable standard of care in recommending and performing the surgery.[FN1] Pollina stated that his review of preoperative and postoperative films revealed that plaintiff did not have a rotated pelvis before the surgery and that there was no change in the orientation of her pelvis in relation to her spine after the surgery.[FN2] Pollina noted that neither the operative reports nor Sethi's records of plaintiff's postoperative visits referenced any derotation or manipulation of plaintiff's pelvis. He stated that nothing in the procedure of interbody fusion surgery involved any change in the orientation of plaintiff's pelvis along the transverse plane and that such a change would be "clinically impossible."

As to informed consent, Pollina opined that Sethi gave plaintiff the information about the reasonably foreseeable risks and benefits of interbody fusion surgery that a reasonable medical practitioner would have disclosed under similar circumstances, and that Sethi was not required to inform plaintiff that her pelvis might be derotated during that surgery. Pollina's affirmation was "detailed, specific and factual in nature and [did] not [merely] assert in simple conclusory form that [defendants] acted within the accepted standards of medical care" (Toomey v Adirondack Surgical Assoc., 280 AD2d 754, 755 [2001]; see Martino v Miller, 97 AD3d 1009, 1010 [2012]; Derusha v Sellig, 92 AD3d 1193, 1193-1194 [2012]). Thus, "Supreme Court properly shifted the burden to plaintiff to provide competent expert medical opinion evidence raising genuine issues of material fact as to deviation and causation" (Fuller v Aberdale, 130 AD3d 1277, 1283 [2015]; see Conto v Lynch, 122 AD3d 1136, 1137 [2014]; Friedland v Vassar Bros. Med. Ctr., 119 AD3d 1183, 1187 [2014]; Helfer v Chapin, 96 AD3d 1270, 1272 [2012]).

Plaintiff asserts that her submissions established the existence of triable issues of fact as to whether her pelvis was derotated "separate and apart from the lumbar fusion described in the operative note." She submitted her testimony and that of her sister that Sethi told them after the surgery that he had derotated her pelvis, and she asserted that she did not agree to this procedure and would not have done so had her consent been requested. As expert medical opinion evidence, plaintiff submitted the affirmation of Stephen Macagnone, a chiropractor.[FN3] Macagnone asserted that he took X rays of plaintiff's spine in 2002 and observed that she had a congenitally rotated pelvis. He opined that his comparison of plaintiff's preoperative films to those taken after her surgery showed "a definite realignment of her pelvis by a few millimeters," revealing that her pelvis had been derotated during the procedure. He stated that "[a] manipulation under general anesthesia is a chiropractic procedure and not one performed by a neuro or orthopedic surgeon during fusion surgery," and concluded that "[d]efendants departed from good and accepted medical and chiropractic care by, without consent, derotating [p]laintiff's pelvis traumatically" rather than treating it through nonsurgical chiropractic procedures.

Plaintiff asserts that Macagnone was qualified to offer a competent expert medical opinion as to whether defendants deviated from chiropractic standards of care (see Executive Law § 6551) and, thus, that her submissions establish triable issues of fact. It is, however, critically significant that any claim that defendants derotated plaintiff's pelvis as a separate procedure from the surgery to which she consented is necessarily an allegation that they acted intentionally. Despite the fact that plaintiff's complaint alleges only negligence, "when a patient agrees to treatment for one condition and is subjected to a procedure related to a completely different condition, there can be no question but that the deviation from the consent given was intentional" (Messina v Alan Matarasso, M.D., F.A.C.S., P.C., 284 AD2d 32, 34 [2001]).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2020 NY Slip Op 06330, 134 N.Y.S.3d 571, 188 A.D.3d 1339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-sethi-nyappdiv-2020.