— Ordеr of the Supreme Court, New York County (Eve Preminger, J.), entered October 1, 1990, which denied plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss certain of defendants’ affirmative defenses, granted defendants’ cross-motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a cause of action and denied plaintiffs’ сross-motion for leave to serve an amended complaint in the event defendants’ cross-motion to dismiss were granted, unanimously affirmed, without costs.
In connection with his application for the position of microbiologist at Bellevue Hospital, plaintiff underwent a pre-employment physical examination at the hospital which included a chest x-ray. The x-ray was interpreted by defendant Melinda Jаne Staiger, M.D. on September 8, 1987. Her report states, "An irregular agrigate [sic] density in the left lung apex is
In June 1988, plaintiff was examined at Booth Memorial Hospital and informed that he had a tumor. Counsel’s affidavit in response to defendants’ motion to dismiss states, “After the diagnosis was made and related to him by physicians at Booth Memorial Hospital, he did return to Bellevue Hospital to have some additional x-rays which confirmed the diagnosis of a malignant lesion on the left lung infiltrating.” A report in the Bеllevue Hospital file dated June 21, 1988 makes reference to an x-ray taken at Booth Memorial Hospital on June 6, 1988 but reaches the same differential diagnosis previously made by Dr. Staiger. Later reports, including one dated July 27, 1988, refer to the mass as "lung carcinoma”. Plaintiff undеrwent an upper lobectomy at New York University Hospital on or about August 8,1988.
Notice of claim pursuant to General Municipal Law § 50-e was not served until October 24, 1988, and no motion was made seeking leave to file a late notice of claim. Supreme Court dismissed the complaint for failure to state a cause of action on the ground that no physician-patient relationship arises as a rеsult of a pre-employment physical examination upon which a claim for medical malpractice may be predicаted, citing LoDico v Caputi (
While a cause of action sounding in medical malpractice must be predicated upon the existence of an express or implied physician-patient rеlationship (Lee v City of New York,
As we noted in Stendig, Inc. v Thom Rock Realty Co. (
We agree with Supreme Court that, in the absence of a physician-patient relatiоnship, a malpractice action may not be maintained. Defendants were under no duty to detect or treat plaintiff’s condition. Hоwever, defendants did detect the presence of a potentially life-threatening condition, differentially diagnosed as either tubеrculosis or other pyoinflammatory disease or a tumor. The operative question is whether, having correctly detected a disеase, defendants were under a duty to disclose the condition to plaintiff.
Our law does not generally impose a duty to make disclosurе, requiring some affirmative misrepresentation before imposing liability (see, Stambovsky v Ackley,
The failure to inform an employee or prospectivе employee that his pre-employment physical has detected a serious medical condition is an act of ordinary negligеnce within the experience of a trier of fact. That, under the circumstances of
We are nevertheless constrained to affirm the dismissal of the complaint. The moving affidavits and medical reports containеd in the record disclose that the pre-employment x-ray and report of Dr. Staiger dated September 8, 1987 were obtained by plaintiff in June 1988, and plaintiff knew of defendants’ failure to inform him of the condition at that time. The period within which to file a notice of claim expired in September 1988 and, thus, plaintiff’s service of the notice of claim on October 24, 1988 was untimely. Concur — Milonas, J. P., Wallach, Kassal and Rubin, JJ.
