123 N.Y.S. 725 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
The action is for negligence. The plaintiff had been confined for a time in an insane asylum upon her husband’s petition, to which was annexed a certificate of the defendants as- examiners in lunacy that she was insane and was a proper subject for custody and treatment in some institution for the insane. She complains that the defendants made a false, pretended and grossly negli
The defendants were feed by the h-usband-to make an - examination. Thereupon they implie.dly represented that they possesséd the reasonable, degree .of learning and skill ordinarily possessed by the average, examiners in - lunacy, and in the rendition of the services they undei-took to use such skill and learning, to exert their best" judgment in the application, thereof "and to exercise reasonable care. (Pike v. Honsinger, 155 N. Y. 201, 210 and cases cited.) The burden was upon the plaintiff to show that the defendants fell short in their qualifications or their obligations, (Winner v. Lathrop, 67 Hun, 511; Georgia, Northern R. Co. v. Ingram, 114 Ga. 639.) There is no ‘proof that the statements "made by the husband were false and pretended. The plaintiff did not advance’ the proposition that the defendants were mot qualified. On the other hand, tire evidence shows that they were educated in. their pimfes^ sion, alienists who as.stroll had filled important public positions, and. wéfe of large experience gained frofn thousands of examinations. We, therefore, need, not consider this ground of liability. The question , on this appeal is whether-the plaintiff made proof to justify the verdict of negligence in (to quote the. plaintiff’s charge) the ascertainment of “ plaintiff’s true- mental condition.” The plaintiff’s-case consists largely of testimony of. lay witnesses, her acquaintances and friends, that in their opinions specified words and acts of the plaintiff were rational. The plaintiff contended that at all times she . was sane: Such contention, so. far as it related to the time of her examination, was essential, inasmuch as' she could not have • bee» harmed by a certificate of the' truth (Pennell v. Cummings, 75 Maine, 163) unless her insanity did not require restraint and treatment. A -certificate of her insanity when she was sane could, estab
The defendants testified in detail as to their professional conduct. The testimony of the plaintiff was contradictory, but not contrary to that of the defendants. She testified that an examination was made, but her version varies radically from the versions of the defendants, and upon rebuttal she contradicted certain features thereof described by the defendants. Her contradictions were directed to many of her statements testified to by the defendants which to the lay mind would indicate her abnormal mental condition. As the question of veracity was for the jury, the plaintiff,, when we consider the correctness of the verdict, is entitled to have her version accepted by us rather than that of the defendants. She testified upon her direct examination that the defendants were introduced to her as nerve specialists, of whom one asked her a few questions and the other did not speak; that they were with her about fifteen minutes; that they asked her one or two questions about her general health and drew from her some facts in relation to her recent experiences with her husband ; that they took no notes; that they asked her whether she had ever thought of ending her life, recurring to that question two or three times, and that there was something said about readers which she was making. The reference to the readers is explained by the fact that the plaintiff was the author of several text books used in schools.
The version of the defendants, revised Toy exclusion of the parts thereof contradicted hy the plaintiff on rebuttal, is as follows: The plaintiff was lying on a sort of lounge chair or steamer chair, covered with blankets. She seemed anxious. She was very pale in appearance when they went in, and then her face flushed, her whole manner changed and she showed intense anger and excitement. After the husband left the room the defendants gave their names and said
The defendants testified without contradiction that' they were strangérs to the plaintiff and to her husband until the latter came to retain them, with a letter of introduction to Dr. Packer. Dr. Packer testifies that the plaintiff’s husband laid before him in-a worried and rather impressive way the conduct and the doings of the plaintiff 'as follows: “Mr. Warner said he feared he would have to send Mrs. Warner to a sanitarium; that for three or four years she had been acting strangely, and that for two -or three years they had a great -deal of trouble; that there was nothing he could do to please her, that she attacked him, had threatened him, and had -also threatened to injure herself, and he said he did not want- to do it. He said she was sick, that the city life disagreed with her, and they finally purchased a place in the country. He said she was nervous and ill,, and he took her to the country, and that they bought this country home, hoping that she would recuperate. * * * He Said she worked out of doors in the hot sun carrying these stones and trundling a barrow, and exposed herself, and it injured her health, and that he could not control her in- this, and he said when he went home at night -that
A -striking feature in the plaintiff’s case is the omission of any scientific or expert evidence as to the course pursued by the defendants in the examination, as to what was done that the average examiner in lunacy would-not have done, or as to what was not done which such.an examiner would liave'done under the circumstances of the case. We know insanity is a mysterious disease ; that it may exist without physical indications, is often cunningly concealed so as almost or altogether to baffle detection ■ even by a specialist, or' may be so occult as to cause most eminent alienists to' clash as to its existence in an instance. The diagnosis of it is recognized as a difficult task. (Balfour Browne,.Medical Jurisprudence of Insanity, 320; Mann’s Medical Jurisprudence, 113.) Wharton & Stille on-Medical Jurisprudence (Vol. 1, § 1240) write: “In brief, the task of a physician when' he examines a patient for certification is to make a diagnosis. If, for any reason, he is not able to make a diagnosis, he should not sign the certificate. The whole art of diagnosis may be involved in the case, and there is no rule for it except to have a reliable knowledge of insanity.” It seems to me that the very nature of the subject — the question of negligence in a diagnosis—would almost preclude.a jury from passing upon it by their common knowledge unaided by any scientific or expert information whatever, or by the testimony of any witnesses of special knowledge and skill. Yet there is'not in evidence any standard for comparison of the conduct of the defendants with that which was required, of them. In Van Wycklen v. City of Brooklyn (118 N. Y. 429) the court, per Brown, J., say : “ While it is no longer a valid objection to the expression of an opinion by a witness that it is upon the precise question which the jury are to
There is ground for surmise that the jury found negligence from the premise that the plaintiff was sane at the time tlie defendants certified that she was insane, for the minutes show that they “returned their verdict in which they find that Mrs. Warner was, on the 13th day of July, sane and rational, and find doctors guilty of negligence and fix the damages at $25,000.” The finding of sanity was no more a part of their formal verdict than would be a finding in a verdict for the plaintiff in a. negligence case that the plaintiff was not chargeable .with contributory negligence.
I advise that the judgment and order be reversed and that a new trial be granted, costs "to abide the event. ,
' Burr, Thomas, Rich and Caer, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial- granted, costs to abide the event.