Lead Opinion
On July 5, 1957 plaintiff sustained a whiplash injury when his automobile was struck in the rear by a motor vehicle driven by defendant. Inasmuch as plaintiff is a practicing physician and surgeon, he received medical treatment, physiotherapy and care from his professional colleagues and his nurse, and incurred no out-of-pocket expenses therefor. Nevertheless, in his bill of particulars, he stated that his special damages for medical and nursing care and treatment amounted to $2,235. The trial court ruled thаt the value of these services was not a proper item of special damages, and that no recovery could be had therefor since they had been rendered gratuitously. He thus excluded evidence as to their value. The sole quеstion here presented is the correctness of this ruling.
In the leading case of Drinkwater v. Dinsmore (
As recently as 1957, the Legislature declined to enact a proposed amendment to the Civil Practice Act, the avowed purpose of which (1957 Report of N. Y. Law Rev. Comm., p. 223) was “ to abrogate the rule of Drinkwater v. Dinsmore,
We find no merit in plaintiff’s contention that the medical and nursing services for which dаmages are sought were supported by consideration. Plaintiff testified that he did not have to pay for the physiotherapy, and his counsel confirmed the fact that “ these various items were not payable by the doctor nor were they actual obligations of his, and that he will not have to pay them ”.
Plaintiff’s colleagues rendered the necessary medical services gratuitously as a professional courtesy. It may well be that as a result of having accepted their generosity plaintiff is under a moral obligation to act for them in a similar manner should his services ever be required; such need may never arise, however, and in any event such a moral obligation is not an injury
We are also told that the physiotherapy treatments which plaintiff received from his nurse consumed approximately two hours per week, and that they were given during the usual office hours for which she received her regular salary. Plaintiff does not claim that he was required to or in fact did рay any additional compensation to his nurse for her performance of these duties, and, therefore, this has not resulted in compensable damage to plaintiff.
Finally, we reject as unwarranted plaintiff’s suggestion that our decision in Healy v. Rennert (9 N Y 2d 202, 206) casts doubt on the continued validity of the Drinkwater rule in a case such as the instant one. In Nealy, we held that it was error to permit defendants to establish on cross-examination that plaintiff was a member of a health insurance plan and that he was receiving increased disability pension benefits. In that case, however, the plaintiff had given value for the benefits he received; he paid a premium for the health insurance, and had worked for 18 years, in order to be eligible for the disability retirement benefits. Wе were not confronted with — and did not attempt to pass upon—a situation where the injured plaintiff received wholly gratuitous services for which he had given no consideration in return and which he was under no legal obligation to repay. In short, insurancе, pension, vacation and other benefits which were contracted and paid for are not relevant here. Gratuitous services rendered by relatives, neighbors and friends are not compensable.
This is not a case such as Woods v. Lancet (
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
It is elementary that damages in personal injury actions are awarded in order to compensate the plaintiff, but, under an established exception, the collateral source doctrine—which we recognized in Healy v. Rennert (
In the Healy case (9 N Y 2d 202, supra), this court held that, if one is negligently injured by another, the damages recoverable from the latter are diminished neither (1) by the fact that the injured party has been indemnified for his loss by insurance effected by him nor (2) by the fact that his medical expenses were paid by HIP or some other health insurance plan (p. 206). In the case before us, the plaintiff suffered injuries and required medical and nursing care. He had no health insurance, but he received the necessary medical care and services from fellow doctors without being required to pay them in cash. In addition, he received physiotherapy treatments from the nurse employed by him in his office and to whom he, of course, paid a salary.
I fail to see any real difference between the situation in Healy v. Rennert and the case now before us. In neither case was the injured person burdened with any charges for the medical services rendered and, accordingly, when the defendant is required to pay as “ damages ” for those services or their value, such damages are no less “compensatory” in the one case than in the other. Nor do I understand why a distinction should be made depending upon whether the medical services were rendered gratuitously or for a consideration.
The rule reflected by the decision in Drinkwater v. Dinsmore (
I would reverse the judgment appealed from and direct a new trial.
Judges Dye, Van Voorhis, Burke and Foster concur with Judge Froessel ; Chief Judge Desmond concurs in a separate opinion; Judge Fuld dissents in an opinion.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. I shаll assume that in this case the doctors’ services were given gratuitously, though a strong argument could be made to the contrary, that is, that they were supported by consideration in that the plaintiff came under a duty to reciprocate and render medical services to his colleagues. Be that as it may, though, I see no basis for labeling the physiotherapy treatments given by the plaintiff’s salaried nurse gratuitous. They were given during the nurse’s normal working day for which she received wages from the plaintiff. Had she not been required to give such treatments, she would undoubtedly have been free to perform other work for the plaintiff.
. It is not amiss to note that the courts of a number of other jurisdictions permit the plaintiff to recover from the defendant the rеasonable value of nursing care and services furnished him by his wife or other members of his family. (See, e.g., Strand v. Grinnell Auto. Garage Co.,
Concurrence Opinion
The reason why this plaintiff cannot include in his damages anything for physicians’ bills or nursing expense is that he has paid nothing for those services. It has always been the rule in tort cases that * ‘ damages must be compensatory only ” (Steitz v. Gifford,
Settled and consistent precedents provide the answer to the question posed by this appeal. Neither justice nor morality require a different answer. Diminution of damages because medical services were furnished gratuitously results in a windfall of sorts to a defendant but allowance of such items although not paid for would unjustly enrich a plaintiff. í I vote to affirm.
