OPINION
Plaintiff claims that her husband died as a result of exposure in 1956 to the substance Thorotrast, a form of thorium dioxide, with which he was injected during a diagnostic medical procedure called a cere
*1083
bral arteriography.
1
She alleges Thoro-trast is an inherently unsafe product and that defendants knew or should have known that it is so. Defendant Thomas Jefferson University Hospital (“Hospital”) moves to dismiss several paragraphs of the complaint, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
2
In reviewing the sufficiency of the complaint, I am mindful that “a complaint should not be dismissed for failure to state a claim unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of [her] claim which would entitle [her] to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
The Hospital asks that I dismiss three- sub-paragraphs within ¶167 of the complaint, which begins:
[the Hospital] was jointly and/or severally negligent and grossly reckless in permitting its staff, associates, and personnel to use its equipment and products, including Thorotrast, for the purpose of performing a cerebral arteriography procedure, and in not monitoring its Thoro-trast patients thereafter. Said negligent, careless and reckless conduct under the above alleged circumstances consisted of any and all of the following: ...
The first challenged sub-paragraph is (a), which states:
failing to undertake or support research to find a remedy or palliative procedure for the conditions, symptoms or untoward effects caused by Thorotrast ...
The Hospital argues that under Pennsylvania law, and moreover the law of any other state, a hospital has no duty to undertake or support research.
Plaintiff cites Schwartz.
v. U.S.,
The Hospital next challenges 1167(f) and 11 67(s):
(f) failing to warn plaintiff’s decedent or his family of the dangerous propensities, risks and consequences of the administration of Thorotrast; ...
(s) failing to require and/or obtain a proper informed consent from plaintiff’s decedent prior to the use or administration of Thorotrast on [him].
The Hospital argues that, when the physician is not an employee of the hospital, the duty to warn and the duty to obtain the informed consent of a patient are imposed upon the physician and not upon the hospital.
Plaintiff argues that
Thompson v. Nason Hospital,
The Hospital also argues, with respect to ¶ 67(s), that the duty to obtain informed consent does not extend to the administration of a drug or a contrast medium like Thorotrast, being instead limited to surgery. If this premise is correct, then neither the Hospital nor the physician could be liable for not informing the patient of the hazards of Thorotrast and obtaining his consent before administering it.
The parties agree that
Boyer v. Smith,
Having reasoned thus, the
Boyer
court went beyond the facts of the case before it to state that “the doctrine of informed consent should be limited ... to only those cases involving surgical or operative medical procedures.”
When it is the need for an injection which the patient disputes, it is reasonable to impose a duty of informed consent. For example, there are some drugs which may be administered either orally or by injection; the decision to inject such a drug should be made only with the patient’s informed consent. On the other hand, when it is the substance administered, not the method of administration, which is challenged I agree with Judge Hoffman that it is absurd to invoke the duty of informed consent simply because the physician or nurse must touch the patient to inject the drug.
Plaintiff claims in 1166 both that (1) no injection was needed and, in the alternative, that (2) even if an injection were needed something other than Thorotrast should have been used. I.will let 1167(s) stand, with the understanding that it is limited to the first theory. 3
Finally, the Hospital asks me to dismiss paragraphs 80 and 81 of the complaint,' which allege
80. [The Hospital] sold, supplied and/or distributed a defective and dangerous product, Thorotrast, which was administered to plaintiff’s decedent substantially unchanged from the form that it was received in.
81. [The Hospital] is strictly liable to plaintiff’s decedent for the injuries and resulting death sustained under §§ 402A and/or 519 and 520 of the Restatement *1085 (Second) of Torts as adopted in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
Section 402A provides, in part, that
(1) One who sells any product in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the user or consumer ... is subject to liability ... if (a) the seller is engaged in the business of selling such a product. ...
The Hospital cites two Superior Court decisions which hold that a hospital cannot be liable under § 402A when a defective surgical tool injures a patient during an operation.
Podrat v. Codman-Shurtleff,
— Pa.Super. —,
Plaintiff seeks to limit the holding in Podrat to products which are approved but turn out to be defective; she argues that Thorotrast, because it is alleged to be inherently unsafe, is distinguishable. I do not find this proposed distinction persuasive.
It might be supposed that surgical tools like the forceps in
Podrat
and the bone plug cutter in
Grubb
are different from contrast media because those surgical tools may be reused on a number of patients, while a dose of Thorotrast is completely consumed by a single patient. However, in
Francioni v. Gibsonia,
A decision of a state’s intermediate appellate court “is a datum for ascertaining state law which is not to be disregarded by a federal court unless it is convinced by other persuasive data that the highest court of the state would decide otherwise.”
West v. A.T. & T.,
Comment (f) to § 402A explains what the Restatement’s authors meant by the “business of selling.”
It is not necessary that the seller be engaged solely in the business of selling such products. Thus the rule applies to the owner of a motion picture theatre who sells popcorn or ice cream, either for consumption on the premises or in packages to be taken home.
The rule does not, however, apply to the occasional seller of food or other such products who is not engaged in that activity as a part of his business. Thus it does not apply to the housewife who, on one occasion, sells to her neighbor a jar of jam....
So long as a hospital regularly supplies contrast media to its patients, albeit as an incidental part of its service operations, it seems to fall within § 402A as explained by comment (f). The comment draws no distinction between suppliers of goods who also supply services, and those suppliers who simply supply goods.
Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court recently cited comment (f) to § 402A with approval in
Musser v. Vilsmeier Auction Co.,
— Pa. —,
(1) In some instances the lessor, like the seller, may be the only member of the marketing chain available to the injured plaintiff for redress; (2) As in the case of the seller, imposition of strict liability upon the lessor serves as an incentive to safety; (3) The lessor will be in a better position than the consumer to prevent the circulation of defective products; and (4) The lessor can distribute the cost of compensating for injuries resulting from defects by charging for it in his business, i.e. by adjustment of the rental terms.
The
Musser
court reasoned that the auctioneer should not be liable because the injured party could always sue the owner of the item auctioned, rather than the auctioneer; and because the auctioneer would be in no better position than the consumer to influence the safety of the design or manufacture of the product. The auctioneer had not been shown to have a continuing relationship with the manufacturer; rather he was “an ad hoc salesman of the goods of another for a specific purpose and a specific time.”
Id.
at-,
It is not beyond doubt that plaintiff can prove no facts which would establish that the Hospital was a seller of Thorotrast for purposes of § 402A. Unlike the product auctioned in Musser, the Thorotrast allegedly came from the Hospital’s own inventory, 1133, which I take to mean the Hospital owned it until it supplied it to plaintiff’s decedent, via his physician, and that the Hospital regularly supplied Thorotrast to other patients. Plaintiff must be given the opportunity to present evidence concerning the other factors identified in Musser and Francioni.
I am also influenced by the thoughtful discussion of Judge Pollak in
Villari v. Terminix,
I will deny the Hospital’s motion to dismiss ¶¶ 80 and 81 of the complaint. Plaintiff will, however, have to establish the factual bases I outlined above before she can recover against the Hospital under § 402A. Neither party has briefed the question of whether the Hospital can be liable under § 519 and § 520 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, dealing with abnormally dangerous activities. I will leave that imaginative theory of liability for another day.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 26th day of July, 1989 IT IS ORDERED that sub-paragraph 67(a) of the complaint is DISMISSED; and that in all other respects the motion of defendant Thomas Jefferson University Hospital to dismiss certain claims is DENIED.
Notes
. According to Stedmati's Medical Dictionary, 5th Ed. (1982), a cerebral arteriography, also called a cerebral angiography, is “visualization of an artery or arteries by x-rays after injection of a radiopaque contrast medium.” "[I]njection may be made by percutaneous puncture or after exposure_” It appears from the complaint that Thorotrast was used as the contrast medium.
. Although the Hospital presented no extrinsic material with its motion, the plaintiff presented some materials with its response. Plaintiffs materials would be of little consequence to the disposition of the Hospital’s motion, particularly because one deposition to which plaintiff makes frequent reference in her brief was not attached to her brief. Because there has been relatively little time for discovery, I will exclude the extrinsic materials and treat this as a straight 12(b)(6) motion.
. The Hospital also argues that informed consent sounds in intentional tort, not negligence. For purposes of ruling on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion it is irrelevant where a claim sounds, so long as it does sound.
. In Grubb, the per curiam opinion states that a hospital can be liable under § 402A; however, four of the seven judges dissented from this statement, and the hospital was held liable only under a negligence theory.
. To offer another analogy, a restaurant patron who enjoys an exquisite souffle values the services of the chef more than the eggs with which it is made, since the eggs could be had for less than a dollar at any store. Nonetheless, if fate has it that the eggs are bad, the restaurant would be liable under § 402A as a supplier of eggs, even though the eggs were but an incidental part of what the patron paid for. And this is not to mention the services of the maitre d’ who seats her, and the waiter who serves her.
