Published on:

An action to recover damages for medical malpractice was filed.

by

An action to recover damages for medical malpractice was filed. The defendant was found by the court, on the issue of liability, to be 75% at fault and the plaintiff 25% at fault in the causation of the plaintiff’s injuries; and, on the issue of damages, that the plaintiff sustained damages in the sums of $150,000 for past mental distress, $50,000 for future mental distress, and $134,000 for loss of past financial support, and awarded the plaintiff the sum of $166,000 in punitive damages.

Defendant then appeals from the aforesaid decision and upon the denial of his motion pursuant to CPLR 4404(a) to set aside the verdict on the issue of liability as contrary to the weight of the evidence and for a new trial or, in the alternative, to set aside the jury verdict on the issue of liability and for judgment as a matter of law, is in favor of the plaintiff and against him in the principal sum of $416,500, and the plaintiff cross-appeals from stated portions of the same judgment.

The Ruling:

Under the rules, a jury verdict should not be set aside as contrary to the weight of the evidence unless the jury could not have reached its verdict on any fair interpretation of the evidence.

Here, the plaintiff sought to recover damages for medical malpractice and, thus, was required to prove that the defendant’s deviation from good and accepted medical practice proximately caused her injury. The credible evidence at trial established that the plaintiff sought and obtained treatment from the defendant for, among other things, mental health issues, and that, during and after the course of the treatment for mental health issues, the defendant and the plaintiff became involved with each other sexually for a period of approximately nine months. After the sexual relationship began, and concurrently with it, the Manhattan plaintiff was also treated by a Long Island therapist who was recommended by the defendant. The plaintiff disclosed to that therapist that she was having an affair, but she did not disclose that the affair was with the defendant since, as the plaintiff explained at trial, the therapist and the defendant were friends. The jury found that the defendant’s conduct departed from good and accepted medical practice, and that this departure proximately caused the plaintiff to suffer emotional distress and economic loss. The jury found that the defendant was 75% at fault and the plaintiff was 25% at fault with respect to the plaintiff’s injuries. The jury also awarded the plaintiff punitive damages in the sum of $166,000.

The court finds that the plaintiff made a prima facie showing at trial that the defendant committed medical malpractice. Furthermore, the jury’s verdict on the issue of liability was supported by a fair interpretation of the evidence and, thus, was not contrary to the weight of the credible evidence. As the plaintiff’s expert has testified, by reason of the particularly sensitive nature of the relationship between a mental health provider and a patient, including the emotional dependence of the patient on the provider, a sexual relationship between the patient and the provider is very likely to harm the patient. A sexual relationship between a mental health provider and a patient is a departure from the standard of care, whether it is characterized as part of the treatment or independent of it and it is a departure even when it takes place after the treatment has ended. In the instant case, the plaintiff relied on the defendant for treatment, medication, and talk therapy relating to mental health issues arising, at least in part, out of problems she was having in her marriage. Her sexual relationship with the defendant began while that mental health treatment was continuing, and it clearly had an impact upon the plaintiff’s level of trust and openness with her other therapist. The fact that the plaintiff acknowledged that the sexual relationship between the defendant and her was not part of the treatment does not mitigate the breach of trust and, therefore, does not mitigate the defendant’s breach of duty. More so, as stated in the expert testimony adduced by the plaintiff, it was entirely foreseeable that eroticized transference, in which the doctor becomes, for the patient, a very sexually charged figure, would occur as a result of the treatment. Rather than competently dealing with that transference, as the applicable standard of care requires, the defendant exploited it. In addition, a mental health provider’s duty is different, and a sexual relationship between that provider and a patient violates the trust that lies at the heart of the relationship. It is irrelevant that the defendant was not actually a psychiatrist. When the defendant started providing talk therapy, he assumed the duty of care applicable to mental health providers.

In sum, the defendant undoubtedly committed medical malpractice by having a sexual relationship with the plaintiff, even where the plaintiff knew that the sexual relationship was not in furtherance or a part of the medical treatment; the jury’s determination to award punitive damages was justified; the evidence established that the defendant’s departure from the standard of care predictably and inevitably damaged the plaintiff in those areas for which she sought treatment and was most vulnerable; over the prolonged period during which the defendant departed from the applicable standard of care, the defendant’s reprehensible conduct evinced a gross indifference to his patient’s well-being; the Court properly denied the defendant’s midtrial application to preclude evidence of certain special damages, inasmuch as, among other things, that application was untimely; and, the jury’s award did not deviate materially from what would be reasonable compensation. The court finds the parties’ remaining contentions without merit. Accordingly, the judgment is affirmed.

For advice on how to deal with these types of cases when you are faced with one, contact Stephen Bilkis & Associates. Be guided by one of the best and most brilliant lawyers in the country with the law and court procedures. Speak with a New York Personal Injury Lawyer like our New York Medical Malpractice Lawyers, among others.

Contact Information