82 A.D. 359 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The plaintiff, being the beneficiary named in a membership certificate issued upon the application of her husband, Emanuel Meyer, by the defendant, a fraternal mutual benefit corporation, sues for the amount of insurance on the life of her husband specified in the certificate. The defense was that Meyer had committed suicide, which by the terms of the certificate renders it null and void.
When the case came on for trial before Mr. Justice Gaynor and a jury, the defendant claimed and obtained the affirmative of the
. The only question which we are required'to consider is the exception to a refusal to admit the testimony of three physicians who-attended Meyer, as to declarations concerning the cause of his death made by hiin in their presence. Plaintiff’s counsel objected to their admission on the. ground that such testimony was incompetent and improper and also privileged; that any knowledge obtained by the witnesses was obtained by them, while they were 'acting as physicians for the deceased and was not admissible unless expressly waived at the trial. Plaintiff’s counsel stated that the plaintiff did not waive any of the.privileges given by sections 834 and 836 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The court excluded the testimony and the defendant excepted. It also excepted to so much of the' charge as stated that the physicians’ testimony, is excluded on the-ground that they attended the deceased professionally.
Dr. Bruso, one of these physicians, was' summoned to the Iroquois Hotel, Buffalo, about seven o’clock in the morning to attend Meyer, who was lying in bed in one of the rooms of the hotel. When the defendant’s counsel offered to read certain portions of the deposition of Dr. Bruso, taken de bene, which disclosed information as to the condition of the patient, plaintiff’s counsel objected and the court asked: “ Did this doctor treat him ? ” to which defendant’s counsel answered: “ He inserted something hypodermi
Dr. Thornton, junior surgeon of the hospital, assisted Dr. McCarthy in the examination and treatment of Meyer. He also was examined on deposition as to- his examination of Meyer and the condition in which they found him. The entire deposition was excluded and the defendant excepted.
These several exceptions distinctly raise the question whether sections 834 and 836 relate to cases-where physicians professionally attend a patient who does not voluntarily require their services. There is no evidence that Meyer employed any one of. these physicians,, but it is none the less true that they attended him in no other than a professional capacity. Section 834 forbids any physician “ to disclose any information which he acquired in attending a patient, in a professional capacity, and which was necessary to enable him to act in that capacity.” The language is broad enough to cover-cases of medical attendance, whether such attendance results- from the voluntary call of the patient upon a physician or from the exigencies of the patient’s situation. If the relation is that of a physician attending a patient in a professional capacity, no matter-how the relation was brought about, the sections apply.
Section 836 provides that section 834 applies to any examination of the physician as a witness “unless the provisions thereof are expressly waived upon the trial or examination by * * * the patient * * *. But a physician * * * may upon a trial or examination disclose any information as to the mental or physical condition of a patient who is deceased, which he acquired in attend
The defendant contends that the. plaintiff at the trial waived the physicians’ privilege by offering in evidence Meyer’s application for insurance,'which contained a waiver of the provisions of sections . 834-and 836, but the Court of Appeals .has held. the contrary in Holden v. Metropolitan life Ins. Co. (165 N. Y. 13) and thus set at rest a question which has been, much litigated. ' .
There was no error in the exclusion of .the testimony in question and the-judgment and order should bé affirmed.
Bartlett, Woodward, Hírsohberg and Hooker, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs:
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