191 Misc. 285 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1948
The complaint alleges that the moving defendant is the manufacturer of a suppository. Upon the prescription of the other defendant, a physician, suppositories were administered to plaintiff’s intestate, a child, thirteen months old. The suppositories were manufactured in two sizes, one for children, one for adults. The physician prescribed administration of two child-sized tablets daily for two days. It is alleged that a proper dose for a child of this age was one-half tablet daily. It is alleged that the child died as a result of the overdose.
. To establish the liability of the moving defendant, plaintiff alleges that these suppositories were available to the public only upon the issuance of a doctor’s prescription. The complaint further states that the medical profession was not generally familiar with this product and that the defendant advised physicians as to its uses, ingredients and the like by means of advertisements in medical journals. In these advertisements, it is alleged, information as to dosage was either omitted or not given with sufficient emphasis or clarity. Further, it is urged that defendant was negligent in failing to manufacture a suppository of half the strength of the regular children’s size to be used by very young infants.
Plaintiff’s brief makes reference to the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (U. S. Code, tit. 21, § 301 et seq.) and identical provisions in the New York State Education Law. Whether there is a cause of action under these statutes cannot be determined. The complaint is not drawn along those lines and the necessary facts are not alleged.
Motion is granted with leave to serve an amended complaint on or before February 19, 1948, on payment of $10 costs.