Appellant George Matukonis appeals a trial court order dismissing a claim for damages against appellee Michael J. Trainer, D.C., for failing to obtain appellant’s informed consent prior to performing a chiropractic manipulation of appellant’s neck. We affirm.
Appellant’s complaint, alleging that he sustained personal injuries as a result of the chiropractic manipulation performed by appellee, set forth four counts: professional negligence, breach of contract, lack of informed consent, and loss of consortium. The trial court sustained appellee’s prehminary objections in the nature of a demurrer to the counts of breach of contract and lack of informed consent. Since the trial court’s actions dismissed less than all claims in the suit, appellant filed a timely motion requesting the trial court to certify that immediate appeal of the dismissal of his claim for damages based on a lack of informed consent would facilitate resolution and materially advance the ultimate determination of the case, pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 341(c). The trial court amended its order dismissing appellant’s claims to include the required certification, and appellant filed a timely notice of appeal to this Court.
We note in passing that prior to the adoption of Rule 341 as amended by our Supreme Court on May 6, 1992, effective July 6, 1992, an order such as this, disposing as it does of less than all claims, would as a general rule have been considered interlocutory and not appealable except by permission.
Praisner v. Stocker,
Appellate review of orders granting preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer is plenary, and requires admitting as true all material facts set forth in the pleadings, as well as all inferences reasonably deducible from them. We then examine the facts as averred to determine whether recovery under any theory of law is possible.
Foflygen v. R. Zemel, M.D. (PC),
Accepting as true all facts as averred, the trial court correctly determined that appellant has no cause of action against appellee for failure to obtain informed consent as a matter of law. Appellant argues that appellee’s allegedly harmful manipulations constituted an unpermitted touching, absent informed consent to undertake the risks involved, and thus a cause of action for battery should lie. However, even were we to assume that appellee did not, in fact, discuss the risks involved in a chiropractic manipulation, or the efficacy of alternative procedures, before touching appellant, appellant
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would still fail to state a cause of action. Although appellant is correct in defining the cause of action as one sounding technically in the intentional tort of battery,
Wu v. Spence,
Order affirmed.
Notes
. A panel of this Court has cautioned that ‘‘[a] determination that an immediate appeal of a non-final order is appropriate should be made only in the most extraordinary circumstances.”
Robert H. McKinney, Jr., Associates, Inc. v. Albright, 429
Pa.Super. 440, 443,
. This Court's decisions in
Foflygen, Wu,
and
Boyer
are dispositive of appellant’s alternative claim that a cause of action for lack of informed consent belongs under the rubric of negligence, not the intentional tort of battery. We are well aware that the Commonwealth falls into a decidedly minority position in adhering to the theory of battery for informed consent cases, and there we will stay until such time as our Supreme Court revisits the issue.
Foflygen,
