156 N.Y. 219 | NY | 1898
The judgment under review awards to the plaintiff $2,500 for damages sustained by a fall due to a defective sidewalk.
The injuries the plaintiff claimed to have suffered were an umbilical hernia, a prolapsus of the uterus and several bruises. *221
The defendant attempted to show by the plaintiff's physician that she had an umbilical hernia before the accident, and the exception taken to the exclusion of the evidence is relied upon by the appellant as furnishing sufficient ground for a reversal of the judgment. The physician testified that prior to the accident he had attended upon and treated her as a physician more or less during eight or ten years, and within such period had attended her at child birth upon two occasions. Plaintiff's counsel at this point objected to the testimony of the witness under section 834 of the Code.
The court then made some inquiries of the witness with the following result: "The Court: Doctor, I assume that all your visits to this plaintiff were prior to this accident? A. They were. The Court: And all of your visits were visits that were made at her or her husband's request, and you visited her and prescribed for her as her physician? A. I did. The Court: And whatever you know or learned, you know and learned in that capacity? A. Yes, such information was necessary to enable me to easily and understandingly treat the case."
The court decided not to strike out the evidence the witness had given, but inquired of defendant's counsel whether there was any other non-privileged evidence the witness could give. To this inquiry counsel made reply as follows: "In the first instance, this plaintiff says that never prior to this occasion did she have an umbilical hernia, she says that Dr. Cavana never treated her for umbilical hernia; and we can prove by Dr. Cavana that he has never treated her for umbilical hernia, but I can prove also, on the occasion of the other treatment he gave her he discovered an hernia, and that the information wasn't in any manner necessary to enable him to treat her for the other troubles, that he did treat her."
The court answered: "But the difficulty is, if he hadn't been treating her and examining her in that confidential capacity, he never would have discovered it."
The point of difference between the court and counsel was this: Counsel insisted that if the physician discovered the *222 umbilical hernia while attending his patient at child birth, but did not treat her for it, and the knowledge was not necessary for his guidance in assisting in the delivery of a child, he could disclose it, while the position of the court was that the very nature of his employment compelled this disclosure to him by the patient, and, therefore, it is privileged under the statute.
Section 834 of the Code is as follows: "A person, duly authorized to practice physic or surgery, shall not be allowed 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 evidence offered was clearly within the protection of the statute. The witness acquired the information which the defendant desired to elicit from him, while attending the patient in a professional capacity, and the discovery of an umbilical hernia was a necessary incident of the investigations made to enable him to act in that capacity.
Our attention is called to certain authorities which the appellant insists support his position, but the proposition presented in this case was neither involved nor decided in any of them.
In Edington v. Ætna Life Ins. Co. (
It is apparent that in the mind of the judge there was no distinction between the disclosure of ailments by word of mouth and such disclosure by exhibition of the body.
This question was not involved in People v. Schuyler
(
In Hoyt v. Hoyt (
In Fisher v. Fisher (
Other cases are cited, but reference need not be made to them, as none of them holds that the statute permits a physician to disclose what he discovers while making an examination of his patient for the purpose of treatment.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except MARTIN, J., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed.