130 Misc. 301 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1927
The defendant, a physician, is being sued by plaintiff for malpractice. This physician attended plaintiff for injuries she had received in the regular course of her employment. Plaintiff claims defendant was unskillful and negligent, and that as a result of his lack of skill and his negligence she was greatly damaged. In defendant’s separate and complete defense he alleges that plaintiff’s employer was subject to the terms and provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Law of this State; that plaintiff gave notice of her original injury, for which defendant treated her, to her employer; that she sought and received compensation, and that the State Industrial Commission made certain awards to this plaintiff which were paid to her. Defendant claims that said awards made to plaintiff were accepted by plaintiff as full compensation for all the injuries set forth in her complaint in this action; that plaintiff, in accepting said awards, is now barred from “ further prosecuting a claim for said injury or the consequential result of said injury against this defendant; ” that the remedy by way of a claim under the Workmen’s Compensation Law is exclusive, and that the complaint should, therefore, be dismissed.
It would seem from the facts before me that this defendant was employed by plaintiff’s employer to treat the plaintiff’s injuries received in the course of her employment. If one injured, suing at common law for damages, has his injuries added to by malpractice on the part of the physician engaged to treat the injury, it would seem that one liable for the original injury may be held hable for the entire damages sustained. In Lyons v. Erie R. Co. (57 N. Y.
The test seems to be whether the added injury arose out of the first injury, or would not have happened but for the first injury, and was not due to the negligence or carelessness of the injured party. (Wagner v. Mittendorf, supra, 486.) It seems clear, therefore, that a recovery against and a satisfaction by the first tort feasor would bar an action against the physician guilty of malpractice. That principle would seem to hold good, whether or not the satisfaction was obtained by the injured person as a result of an action at common law or as result of an election made to obtain compensation under the Workmen’s Compensation Law. In Pitkin v. Chapman (121 Misc. 88) the court stated: “ There can (be but one recovery for the same wrong. Satisfaction by one joint tort feasor has always been considered a bar to an action against another. (Knapp v. Roche, 94 N. Y. 329.) Though an original injury be added to by a second fracture resulting while
The complete defense which plaintiff seeks to strike out, among other things, alleges that the “ said awards made to plaintiff under the Workmen’s Compensation Law were in compensation of all the injuries set forth in the complaint herein.” I am, therefore, of the opinion that, if the facts are as stated in the separate defense, plaintiff is entitled to obtain no further recovery, and that the said defense is sufficient in law.
Plaintiff’s motion to strike out is, therefore, denied.