On a prior appeal in this action, we held that the defendant attorneys in this legal malpractice action breached a nondelegable duty of care owed to plaintiffs, their former clients, in failing to make proper service of process in the underlying medical malpractice suit which plaintiffs had engaged them to prosecute on their behalf (Stanski v Ezersky,
On the trial of the underlying case, plaintiffs offered evidence that following surgery at St. John’s Episcopal Hospital in Queens to relieve an enlarged prostate, Mr. Stanski suffered a conditiоn known as abdominal myoclonus, the pathology of which involves violent, jerking abdominal contractions which persisted through (аnd, indeed, even at) trial. He also claimed to have suffered penile burns in the course of the surgery.
In order to succeеd in the medical malpractice action, it was
Even were we to аssume that a departure from acceptable anesthesiology standards had been proven, plaintiffs failed to еstablish the essential causal link. Dr. Greene admitted that he had never before seen a case of abdominal myoclonus; he did not know of a single reported case of abdominal myoclonus caused by spinal anesthesia such as Tetraсaine; and the studies he relied upon (involving some 65,000 cases) reported only one or two cases of myoclonus, but only in the legs, not the abdomen. Dr. Greene also agreed that abdominal myoclonus could occur spontaneously, without any drugs, trauma or evidence of disease—a concession which, standing alone, created a gap fatal to this claim (Storniolo v Bauer,
Plaintiffs called other experts in a futile attempt to buttress Dr. Greene’s testimony. Dr. Sobin, a neurologist, examined Mr. Stanski two months after the surgery. He also opined that the abdominal myoclonus had been caused by a Tetracaine overdose, but admitted that he had never seen a single case of spinal anesthesia-induced abdominal myoclonus and that such rеsult was an extreme rarity in the literature. He also conceded that myoclonus could be caused by other things, such as latеnt spinal cord disease. After examining Mr. Stanski and reading
Mr. Stanski’s penile burn injury claim also lacked sufficient evidentiary support to permit its submission to the jury. This claim rested on the theory that the burn was caused by mechanical defect in thе Bovie machine, a piece of standard electrosurgical equipment used by the surgeon in the course of the operation. The jury made a special finding that this equipment was defective, but not a proximate cause of the myoclonus. The jury did find proximate cause for the burn arising from the defective machine, but plaintiffs never produced any competent proof establishing any defect in the Bovie machine. Accordingly, this aspect of the verdict also lacked a ratiоnal basis since it rested explicitly upon the court’s charge, to which exception was duly taken, of res ipsa loquitur. Such a charge was manifest error here since plaintiffs’ attempted proof of specific acts of negligence squаrely negated any resort to that doctrine (Abbott v Page Airways,
Since no viable compensatory award remains standing, that portion of the judgment purporting to award treble damages under Judiciary Law § 487 must also be vаcated. Furthermore, on the merits, the statute has no application here, since the wrongful conduct asserted by plаintiffs occurred either when there was no longer a pending judicial proceeding or before such a proceеding commenced (Bankers Trust Co. v Cerrato, Sweeney, Cohn, Stahl & Vaccaro,
Were we not to dismiss this complaint in its entirety against these defendants, a more limited reversal would be requirеd, remanding the matter for a new trial in view of several prejudicial rulings that deprived defendants of a fair trial. However, in light of оur present disposition, it is unnecessary to reach
