JOY MARY GREGORY, Individually and as Parent and Natural Guardian of ZACHARY GREGORY-STREET, an Infant, Appellant, v CORTLAND MEMORIAL HOSPITAL et al., Respondents. (Appeal No. 1.)
Appeal No. 1
Supreme Court, Appellate Division, Fourth Department, New York
802 NYS2d 579
It is hereby ordered that the judgment so appealed from be and the same hereby is unanimously affirmed without costs.
Memorandum: Plaintiff appeals from a judgment dismissing the complaint in this medical malpractice action upon a jury verdict rendered in favor of defendants. Plaintiff‘s four-year-old son sustained a fractured skull when he fell headfirst from a hayloft onto a concrete floor. Plaintiff‘s son was treated for a concussion at defendant Cortland Memorial Hospital and discharged to the care of his parents several hours after the injury. The fracture was diagnosed several months later by the family‘s physician when the hematoma on the skull was healed and plaintiff felt a “dent” in her son‘s skull. At trial, plaintiff presented evidence that her son, who was 12 years old at the time of the trial, sustained permanent brain damage as a result of the fall and that the permanent brain damage could have been abated with proper diagnosis and treatment by defendants. The jury found that defendants were negligent but that their negligence was not a proximate cause of the injuries.
Plaintiff contends on appeal that Supreme Court erred in denying her motion seeking to set aside the jury verdict on the ground that the court‘s charge with respect to proximate cause was confusing and contrary to law and the interest of justice. Plaintiff failed to object to the charge given in response to her objection to the court‘s use of the article “the” in the court‘s initial charge on proximate cause, and also failed to object to the definition of proximate cause provided by the court in re
JOY MARY GREGORY, Individually and as Parent and Natural Guardian of ZACHARY GREGORY-STREET, an Infant, Appellant, v CORTLAND MEMORIAL HOSPITAL et al., Respondents. (Appeal No. 2.) [801 NYS2d 198]
Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court, Cayuga County (Peter E. Corning, A.J.), entered April 13, 2004. The order denied plaintiff‘s motion to set aside the jury verdict.
It is hereby ordered that said appeal be and the same hereby is unanimously dismissed without costs (see Smith v Catholic Med. Ctr. of Brooklyn & Queens, 155 AD2d 435 [1989]; see also
