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Document 1 of 2.
In the Matter of John Storar. Charles S. Soper, as Director of Newark
Developmental Center, et al., Appellants; Dorothy Storar, Respondent; In the
Matter of Philip K. Eichner, On Behalf of Joseph C. Fox, Respondent, v. Denis
Dillon, as District Attorney of Nassau County, Appellant
[NO NUMBER IN ORIGINAL]
Court of Appeals of New York
52 N.Y.2d 363;
420 N.E.2d 64;
1981 N.Y. LEXIS 2234;
438 N.Y.S.2d 266
December 15, 1981, Argued
March 31, 1981, Decided
PRIOR HISTORY:
[***1]
Appeal, in the first above-entitled proceeding, from an order of the Appellate
Division of the Supreme Court in the Fourth Judicial Department, entered
October 30, 1980, which, by a divided court, affirmed an order of the Supreme
Court at a Trial Term (David O. Boehm, J.; opn
106 Misc 2d 880), entered in Monroe County, denying petitioner's application to continue blood
transfusions and intravenous fluids for John Storar and vacating a prior order
of said court (Arthur B. Curran, J.) authorizing continuation of such treatment.
Appeal, in the second above-entitled proceeding, by permission of the Appellate Division of the Supreme
Court in the Second Judicial Department, from an order of said court, entered
March 27, 1980, which modified, on the law, and, as modified, affirmed an order
of the Supreme Court at Special Term (Robert C. Meade, J.; opn
102 Misc 2d 184), entered in Nassau County, appointing Father Philip K. Eichner, S.M., committee
of the person of Brother Joseph Charles Fox, finding Brother Fox to be in a
"chronic vegetative state", and authorizing Father Eichner to terminate the respirator assisting Brother
Fox.
In these two
cases, the guardians of incompetent patients
[***2] objected to the continued use of medical treatments or measures to prolong the
lives of the patients, who were diagnosed as fatally ill with no reasonable
chance of recovery. In Matter of Storar, a State official applied for
permission to administer blood transfusions to a profoundly retarded
52-year-old man with terminal cancer of the bladder. The patient's mother, who
was also his legal guardian, refused consent on the ground that the
transfusions would only prolong his discomfort and would be against his wishes
if he were competent. In Matter of Eichner, Brother Fox, an 83-year-old member
of the Society of Mary, was being maintained by
a respirator in a permanent vegetative condition. The local director of the
society applied to have the respirator removed on the ground that it was
against the patient's wishes as expressed prior to his becoming incompetent.
In each case, the trial courts and the Appellate Divisions found that the
measures should have been discontinued. The orders of the lower courts were
stayed and the
treatments continued pending appeals to the Appellate Division and the Court of
Appeals. However, both of the patients have died.
The Court of Appeals reversed
[***3] the order in the Storar case and modified the order in the Eichner case,
holding, in an opinion by Judge Wachtler, that the cases are reviewable despite
the mootness of the controversies due to the
death of the patients; that the State facility in which Mr. Storar resided,
where he was being treated by doctors assigned by the facility, had standing to
oppose the discontinuance of the transfusions due to its role as the patient's
treating physician, although a hospital would normally lack sufficient interest
to warrant court relief; that Mr.
Storar's guardian could not make the determination to decline the blood
transfusions, on which he was able to maintain the same level of physical and
mental activity as he had previously, just as the parent or guardian of an
infant could not so decide; that in the case of Brother Fox, clear and
convincing proof of his expressed desire that such life sustaining measures as
a
respirator should not be employed to maintain him in a permanent vegetative
state, as well as clear and convincing proof of his subsequent incompetency and
chances of recovery, support court approval of the discontinuance of the
respirator, based on the common-law right of a
[***4] competent adult to refuse medical treatment, even where such treatment is
necessary to
sustain his life, which determination the patient effectively made for himself
while competent.
Matter of Storar, 78 AD2d 1013.
Matter of Eichner (Fox), 73 AD2d 431.
DISPOSITION: In
Matter of Storar: Order reversed, without costs, cross petition denied and petition granted.
In
Matter of Eichner: Order modified, without costs, in accordance with the opinion herein, and, as
so modified, affirmed.
HEADNOTES:
Appeal -- Court of Appeals -- Academic and Moot Questions
1. Lower court rulings in controversies involving objections by guardians of
two incompetent patients to the continued use of medical treatments, or
measures to prolong the lives of the patients, who were diagnosed as fatally
ill with no reasonable chance of recovery, which controversies have been
rendered moot by reason of the death of both patients while appeals of the
matters were pending, are, nevertheless, reviewable in the Court of Appeals,
since the underlying issues are of public importance, are recurring in other
courts throughout the State, are likely to escape full appellate review even
when the appeals have been expedited
[***5] and,
particularly, since said controlling principles have not been previously
identified and discussed by the court.
Insane and Other Incompetent Persons -- Persons in Permanent Vegetative
Condition
2. Court approval for the discontinuance of an 83-year-old patient's
respirator, on which he was being maintained in a permanent vegetative
state with no reasonable chance of recovery, granted at the request of the
patient's guardian, is supported by the common-law right of a competent adult
to decline medical treatment, even where such treatment may be necessary to
save his life, where, prior to becoming incompetent due to illness, the patient
consistently expressed his considered
desire that such measures not be taken to preserve his life if he were in such
a situation and evidence on this point and proof of the patient's subsequent
incompetency and chances of recovery was clear and convincing.
Insane and Other Incompetent Persons -- Sustaining Life of Terminally Ill Person
3. Although a parent or guardian has a right to
consent to medical treatment on behalf of an infant (Public Health Law,
§ 2504, subd 2), the parent may not deprive a child of life saving treatment,
[***6] however well intentioned; similarly, the guardian of a retarded individual who
has never been competent to make a reasoned decision about
medical treatment may not deny the incompetent all treatment for a condition
which threatens his life. Accordingly, an application by the guardian of a
terminally ill, profoundly retarded adult cancer patient for permission to
discontinue blood transfusions, which do not involve excessive pain and are
necessary to compensate
for blood loss which is related to his disease, should have been denied, where
the patient is functioning at his usual level of mental and physical activity
with the blood transfusions, whereas this would not be possible were they
discontinued.
Hospitals and Asylums -- Standing to Oppose Discontinuance of Life Sustaining
Treatment
4. A State hospital properly commenced a proceeding
seeking authorization to continue blood transfusions for a profoundly retarded
resident of the facility who was suffering from a terminal illness after the
man's guardian refused to give her permission for continued transfusions, where
his medical care was provided by doctors assigned by the State facility; the
facility's role,
insofar
[***7] as it was that of a treating physician, was more than that of a hospital,
which would generally lack sufficient interest to warrant court relief.
Physicians and Surgeons -- Right of Patient to Refuse Medical Treatment
5. A competent adult has a common-law right to decline or accept medical
treatment, a violation of which
right results in civil liability for those who administer medical treatment
without consent, although the treatment may be beneficial or even necessary to
preserve the patient's life; the patient's right to determine the course of his
own medical treatment is paramount to what might otherwise be the doctor's
obligation to provide needed medical
care and, thus, a doctor cannot be held to have violated his legal or
professional responsibilities when he honors the right of a competent adult
patient to decline medical treatment.
COUNSEL:
Stephen R. Sirkin, District Attorney (John B. Nesbitt of counsel), for District Attorney of Wayne County, appellant in the first
above-entitled proceeding. I. The patient's right to life is sufficiently
compelling to mandate the continuance of blood transfusions.
(New York State Assn. for Retarded Children v Carey, 393
[***8] F Supp 715;
Roe v Wade, 410 U.S. 113;
Matter of Eichner [Fox], 73 AD2d 431;
Miranda v Arizona, 384 U.S. 436.) II. The incompetent patient's right to privacy does not empower the judiciary
to decide that the
repose of death outweighs the value of life.
(Matter of Farmers' Loan & Trust Co., 181 App Div 642, 225 NY 666;
Matter of Turner v Turner, 61 Misc 2d 153;
Mohrmann v Kob, 291 NY 181;
Mainzer v Avril, 108 Misc 230;
Matter of Weberlist, 79 Misc 2d 753;
Becker v Schwartz, 46 NY2d 401;
Eisenstadt v Baird, 405 U.S. 438.) III. The treatment plan devised by the patient's physicians realizes an
acceptable goal of law and medicine -- comforting the dying and preserving
life to the extent it can be humanely accomplished.
(Matter of Weberlist, 79 Misc 2d 753;
Pike v Honsinger, 155 NY 201.),
Robert Abrams, Attorney-General (Stanley Fishman, Shirley Adelson Siegel and
Vincent M. Barone of counsel), for Charles S. Soper, appellant
in the first above-entitled proceeding. Life support systems should be
continued for a terminally ill, profoundly retared person lacking the mental
capacity to give consent where: (a) the patient is not
[***9] in a vegetative coma but, on the contrary, retains his lifelong level of
cognitive functioning and
remains alert and ambulatory, and (b) notwithstanding the wishes of his
committee, there is no evidence to support the conclusion that if competent, he
would have refused such treatment.
(Roe v Wade, 410 U.S. 113;
Matter of President & Directors of Georgetown Col., 331 F2d 1000, 377 U.S. 978.)
James I. De Point
for respondent in the first above-entitled proceeding. Blood transfusions for
an incompetent, terminally ill person, who has been a lifelong resident of a
State institution, should be discontinued where: (a) there are no compelling
State interests to override that decision, and (b) the discontinuance of
treatment reflects the opinion of the incompetent's committee and there is
absolutely no proof that the incompetent wanted such treatment.
Arlene A. Hughes, guardian ad litem for John Storar in the first above-entitled proceeding. I.
The lower court did not err in concluding that Mr. Storar, despite his mental
retardation, was entitled to the right to die with
dignity guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment.
(Union Pacific Ry. Co. v Botsford, 141 U.S. 250;
[***10]
Griswold v Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479;
Roe v Wade, 410 U.S. 113;
Matter of Erickson v Dilgard, 44 Misc 2d 27;
Matter of Melideo, 88 Misc 2d 974;
Matter of President & Directors of Georgetown Coll., 331 F2d 1010, 377 U.S. 978;
Dunn v Blumstein, 405 U.S. 330.) II. The lower courts did not err in concluding that they were empowered to
protect Mr. Storar's rights by
exercising for him the power of informed consent which he is incompetent to
exercise for himself.
(Matter of Sampson, 37 AD2d 668, 29 NY2d 900;
Matter of Weberlist, 79 Misc 2d 753;
Matter of Eichner [Fox], 73 AD2d 431.) III. The lower court did not commit reversible
error in finding, as a matter of fact, that Mr. Storar's best interests were
promoted by refusing painful, frightening, useless blood transfusions which may
at best briefly prolong the process of dying. IV. The courts of New York are
the appropriate forum for balancing the State and the individual interests, and
for determining
"substituted judgment" or
"best interests" of the patient.
Denis Dillon, District Attorney (William C. Donnino, Anthony J. Girese and
Judith R. Sternberg of counsel), for appellant in the
[***11] second above-entitled proceeding. In the absence of express legislative
guidance, the courts below
improvidently authorized the removal of a life support system from an
incompetent person.
(Roe v Wade, 410 U.S. 113;
Schloendorff v Society of N. Y. Hosp., 211 NY 125;
Matter of Nemser, 51 Misc 2d 616;
Matter of Erickson v Dilgard, 44 Misc 2d 27;
Matter of Long Is. Jewish-Hillside Med. Center v Levitt, 73 Misc 2d 395;
Matter of President & Directors of Georgetown Coll., 331 F2d 1000, cert den
sub nom.
Jones v President & Directors of Georgetown Coll, 377 U.S. 978;
Matter of Melideo, 88 Misc 2d 974;
Matter of Collins v Davis, 44 Misc 2d 622;
Matter of Sampson, 29 NY2d 900;
People v Easley, 42 NY2d 50.)
William F. Levine, Michael B. Grossman, Bertram B. Daiker and
George Danzig Levine for respondent in the second above-entitled proceeding. I. Appellant's brief
is legally ineffectual to support his appeal.
(Cleveland v Town of Lancaster, 239 App Div 263, 264 NY 568;
Hagopian v Samuelson, 236 App Div 491;
People v Velez, 88 Misc 2d 378;
Schloendorff v Society of N. Y. Hosp., 211 NY 125;
Roe v Wade, 410 U.S. 113.)
[***12] II. The order of the court below approving, on constitutional and common-law
grounds, the discontinuance of the mechanical respirator treatment
for Brother Fox should be affirmed.
(Roe v Wade, 410 U.S. 113;
Katz v United States, 389 U.S. 347;
Schloendorff v Society of N. Y. Hosp., 211 NY 125;
Matter of Erickson v Dilgard, 44 Misc 2d 27;
Matter of Collins v Davis, 44 Misc 2d 622;
United States v Guest, 383 U.S. 745;
Meyer v Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390;
Griswold v Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479;
National League of Cities v Usery, 426 U.S. 833;
United Public Workers v Mitchell, 330 U.S. 75.) III. The portion of the opinion of the court below mandating in future cases
prior judicial approval for the discontinuance of life sustaining treatment for
a terminally ill, irreversibly comatose patient and ordaining procedural rules
for such
cases is dictum in the nature of an advisory opinion and need not be accepted
by this court.
(Schloendorff v Society of N. Y.
Hosp., 211 NY 125.)
Robert C. Minion, guardian ad litem
pro se, and
John F. Mulholland for guardian ad litem
in the second above-entitled proceeding. The court below did not err in
[***13] granting the petition.
(Union Pacific Ry. Co. v Botsford, 141 U.S. 250;
Olmstead v United States, 277 U.S. 438;
Griswold v Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479;
Poe v Ullman, 367 U.S. 497;
Prince v Massachusetts, 321 U.S. 158;
Eisenstadt v Baird, 405 U.S. 438;
Roe v Wade, 410 U.S. 113;
Meyer v Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390;
Pierce v Society of Sisters, 268 U.S. 510;
Canterbury v Spence, 464 F2d 772.)
Jacqueline Nolan-Haley for Americans United for Life,
amicus curiae in the second above-entitled proceeding. I. This case should be resolved
under the common law.
(St. Clair v Yonkers Raceway, 13 NY2d 72.) II. The court below erred by establishing a constitutional right to refuse
treatment through substituted judgment.
(Roe v Wade, 410 U.S. 113.)
JUDGES: Chief Judge Cooke and Judges Jasen, Gabrielli and Meyer concur with Judge
Wachtler; Judge Jones dissents in part and votes to modify in an opinion; Judge
Meyer votes to reverse, agrees with the reasoning in Part I of opinion by Judge
Jones; Judge Fuchsberg dissents and
votes to reverse and remit the matter to Supreme Court, Monroe County, with
directions to dismiss the proceeding for mootness
[***14] in a separate opinion.
Chief Judge Cooke and Judges Jasen, Gabrielli and Meyer concur with Judge
Wachtler; Judge Jones concurs in result in an opinion in
Part I of which Judge Meyer also concurs; Judge Fuchsberg dissents and votes to
reverse and remit the matter to Supreme Court, Nassau County, with directions
to dismiss the proceeding for mootness in a separate opinion.
OPINIONBY: WACHTLER
OPINION:
[*369]
[**66]
OPINION OF THE COURT
In these two cases the guardians of incompetent patients objected to the
continued use of medical treatments or measures to prolong the lives of the
patients who were diagnosed as fatally ill with no reasonable chance of
recovery. In Matter of Eichner, Brother Fox, an 83-year-old member of the
Society of Mary, was
being maintained by a respirator in a permanent vegetative state. The local
director of the society applied to have the respirator removed on the ground
that it was against the patient's wishes as expressed prior to his becoming
incompetent. In Matter of Storar, a State official applied for permission to
administer blood
transfusions to a profoundly retarded 52-year-old man with terminal cancer of
the bladder. The patient's
[***15] mother, who was also his legal guardian, refused consent on the ground that
the transfusions would only prolong his discomfort and would be against his
wishes if he were competent. In each case the courts below have found that the
measures should have been discontinued.
The orders of the lower
courts were stayed and the treatments continued pending appeals to the
Appellate Division and this court. Nevertheless both of the patients have
died, thus rendering these particular controversies moot. n1 However, the
underlying
[**67]
issues are of public importance, are recurring in other courts throughout the
[*370] State and, as these cases illustrate, are likely to escape full appellate
review
even when the appeals have been expedited. Under those circumstances we may,
and often have, addressed the issues despite the mootness (see, e.g.,
Matter of Oliver v Postel, 30 NY2d 171, 177-178;
Matter of Westchester Rockland Newspapers v Leggett, 48 NY2d 430, 436-437), particularly when, as here, the controlling principles have
not been previously identified and discussed by this court (cf.
Matter of Hearst Corp. v Clyne, 50 NY2d 707).
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n1 Brother Fox died after the case had been argued at the Appellate Division
but before the decision had been handed down. John Storar died after the case
had been
argued in this court.
We also note that certain types of actions abate upon the death of a party (1
Am Jur 2d, Abatement Survival and Revival,
§ 75). The reason for the rule is lost in antiquity (1935 Report of NY Law Rev
Comm, pp 157, 159,
176-179) and in modern times the rule itself has been abrogated by statute,
except in a few cases (see, e.g., EPTL 11-3.2, 11-3.3;
People v Mintz, 20 NY2d 753). In the absence of any reason or controlling precedent to the contrary we have
concluded that the problems
posed by the death of the patients in these particular cases are properly
resolved by consideration of the principles applicable to moot controversies
(cf.
People v Smith, 44 NY2d 613, 617).
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***16]
It should be emphasized though, that any guidance we may provide for future
cases is necessarily limited.
Unlike the Legislature, the courts are neither equipped nor empowered to
prescribe substantive or procedural rules for all, most, or even the more
common contingencies. Our role, especially in matters as sensitive as these,
is limited to resolving the issues raised by facts presented in particular
cases. n2
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n2 The need
for judicial restraint in this area is illustrated by the dissent which has
abstractly endorsed the right of third parties, at least family members, to
adopt a course of
"passive euthanasia" with respect to fatally ill incompetent patients, although it is not necessary
to reach that issue on the facts of these cases. Presumably this right could
only be exercised by family members, thus imposing a
"restriction" which itself is open-ended, reaching to the limits of the family tree. We
also assume that despite the blanket indorsement, the dissenter realizes the
potential abuses involved in that concept and that because of that danger, the
propriety of applying that concept can only be assessed in the context of
a particular case.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***17]
On the records we have concluded that the order should be reversed in the
Storar case. In the Eichner case the order should be modified and resolved on
a narrower ground than relied on by the Appellate Division.
THE EICHNER CASE
For over 66 years Brother Joseph Fox was a
member of the Society of Mary, a Catholic religious order which, among other
things, operates Chaminade High School in
[*371] Mineola. In 1970 Brother Fox retired to Chaminade where he resided with the
religious members of the school's staff and continued to perform limited
duties. In late summer of 1979 he
sustained a hernia while moving some flower tubs on a roof garden at the
school. He was then 83 years old and, except for the hernia, was found to be
in excellent health. His doctor recommended an operation to correct the
condition and Brother Fox agreed.
While the operation was being performed on October 1,
1979 he suffered cardiac arrest, with resulting loss of oxygen to the brain and
substantial brain damage. He lost the ability to breathe spontaneously and was
placed on a respirator which maintained him in a vegetative state. The
attending physicians informed Father Philip Eichner, who was
[***18] the president of Chaminade and the director of the society at the school, that
there was no
reasonable chance of recovery and that Brother Fox would die in that state.
After retaining two neurosurgeons who confirmed the diagnosis, Father Eichner
requested the hospital to remove the respirator. The hospital, however,
refused to do so without court authorization. Father Eichner then applied,
pursuant to article 78 of the Mental Hygiene Law, to be appointed
committee of the person and property of Brother Fox, with authority to direct
removal of the respirator. The application
was supported by the patient's 10 nieces and nephews, his only surviving
relatives. The court appointed a guardian ad litem and directed that notice be
served on various parties, including the District Attorney.
At the hearing the District
Attorney opposed the application and called medical experts to show that there
might be some improvement in the patient's condition. All
[**68] the experts agreed, however, that there was no reasonable likelihood that
Brother Fox would ever emerge from the vegetative coma or recover his cognitive
powers.
There was also evidence, submitted by the petitioner,
[***19] that before the operation rendered him incompetent the patient had made it
known that under these circumstances he would want a respirator removed.
Brother Fox had first expressed this view in 1976 when the Chaminade community
discussed the moral implications of the celebrated Karen Ann Quinlan
[*372] case, in which the parents of a 19-year-old New Jersey girl who was in a
vegetative coma requested the hospital to remove the respirator (see
Matter of Quinlan, 137 NJ Super 227, revd
70 NJ 10, cert den
sub nom.
Garger v New Jersey, 429 U.S. 922). These were formal discussions prompted by Chaminade's mission to teach and
promulgate Catholic moral principles. At that time it was noted that the Pope
had stated that Catholic principles permitted the termination of extraordinary
life support systems when there is no reasonable hope for the patient's
recovery and that church officials in New Jersey had concluded that use of the
respirator in the
Quinlan case constituted an extraordinary
measure under the circumstances. Brother Fox expressed agreement with those
views and stated that he would not want any of this
"extraordinary business" done for him under those circumstances.
[***20] Several years later, and only a couple of months before his final
hospitalization, Brother Fox again stated that he would not want his life
prolonged
by such measures if his condition were hopeless.
In a thoughtful and comprehensive opinion, Mr. Justice Robert C. Meade at the
Supreme Court held that under the circumstances Brother Fox would have a
common-law right to decline treatment and that his wishes, expressed prior to
becoming incompetent, should be honored. The court noted that the
evidence of his stated opposition to use of a respirator to maintain him in a
vegetative state was
"unchallenged at every turn and unimpeachable in its sincerity."
The Appellate Division modified in an exhaustive and wide-ranging opinion by
Presiding Justice Milton A. Mollen. The court held that the patient's right to
decline treatment was not only guaranteed by the common law but by the
Constitution as well. It also found that this right should not be lost when a
patient becomes incompetent and, if a patient has not made his wishes known
while competent as Brother Fox had done, an appropriate person should be
appointed to express the
right on his behalf by use of
"substituted judgment". The
[***21] court went on to establish an elaborate set of procedures to be followed by
doctors, hospitals, family members, parties and the courts before future
applications of this nature may be entertained or granted.
[*373] THE STORAR CASE
John Storar was profoundly retarded with a mental
age of about 18 months. At the time of this proceeding he was 52 years old and
a resident of the Newark Development Center, a State facility, which had been
his home since the age of 5. His closest relative was his mother, a
77-year-old widow who resided near the facility. He was her only child and she
visited him
almost daily.
In 1979 physicians at the center noticed blood in his urine and asked his
mother for permission to conduct diagnostic tests. She initially refused but
after discussions with the center's staff gave her consent. The tests,
completed in July, 1979, revealed that he had cancer of the bladder. It was
recommended that he
receive radiation therapy at a hospital in Rochester. When the
hospital refused to administer the treatment without the consent of a legal
guardian, Mrs. Storar applied to the court and was appointed guardian of her
son's person and property
[***22] in August, 1979. With her consent he received radiation therapy for six
weeks,
after which the disease was found to be in remission.
However in March, 1980 blood was again observed in his urine. The lesions in
his
[**69] bladder were cauterized in an unsuccessful effort to stop the bleeding. At
that point his physician diagnosed the cancer as terminal, concluding that
after using all medical and surgical means then available, the patient would
nevertheless die from the disease.
In May the physicians at the center asked his mother for permission to
administer blood transfusions. She initially refused but the following day
withdrew her objection. For several weeks John Storar received blood
transfusions when needed. However, on June 19 his mother requested that the
transfusions be
discontinued.
The director of the center then brought this proceeding, n3 pursuant to section
33.03 of the Mental Hygiene Law, seeking authorization to continue the
transfusions,
[*374] claiming that without them
"death would occur within weeks". Mrs. Storar cross-petitioned for an order prohibiting the transfusions, and
named the District Attorney as a party. The
court appointed a guardian
[***23] ad litem and signed an order temporarily permitting the transfusions to
continue, pending the determination of the proceeding.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n3 [4] In response to the dissent we note that as a matter of public policy a
medical facility generally has no responsibility or right to supervise or
interfere with the
course of treatments recommended by the patient's private physician, even when
the patient is incapable of consent due to age
(Fiorentino v Wenger, 19 NY2d 407). That would be a matter to be decided by the private physician with the
patient's family and the hospital would have no power to intervene or standing
to sue.
In this respect this
case is unusual because John Storar did not have a personal physician. His
medical care was provided by various physicians assigned by the State facility
where he resided. Thus under the peculiar facts of this case the center's
concern for potential liability was real, at least insofar as it related to its
role as treating physician.
In other words here the center's status was more than that of a hospital which
generally would lack sufficient interest to warrant any court relief.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***24]
At the hearing in September the court heard testimony from various witnesses
including Mrs. Storar, several employees at the center, and seven medical
experts. All the experts
concurred that John Storar had irreversible cancer of the bladder, which by
then had spread to his lungs and perhaps other organs, with a very limited life
span, generally estimated to be between 3 and 6 months. They also agreed that
he had an infant's mentality and was unable to comprehend his predicament or to
make a reasoned choice of treatment. In addition, there was
no dispute over the fact that he was continuously losing blood.
The medical records show that at the time of the hearing, he required two units
of blood every 8 to 15 days. The staff physicians explained that the
transfusions were necessary to replace the blood lost. Without them there
would be insufficient oxygen in the patient's blood stream. To
compensate for this loss, his heart would have to work harder and he would
breathe more rapidly, which created a strain and was very tiresome. He became
lethargic and they feared he would eventually bleed to death. They observed
that after the transfusions he had more energy. He was able
[***25] to resume most of his usual activities -- feeding himself, showering, taking
walks and running --
including some mischievous ones, such as stealing cigarette butts and
attempting to eat them. n4
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n4 The attending physicians recognized that it was possible that at some point
the rate of blood loss might increase to such an extent that transfusions would
be completely ineffective. At the time of the hearing, however, the rate had
remained relatively constant.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[*375] It was conceded that John
Storar found the transfusions disagreeable. He was also distressed by the
blood and blood clots in his urine which apparently increased immediately after
a transfusion. He could not
comprehend the purpose of the transfusions and on one or two occasions had
displayed some initial resistance. To eliminate his apprehension he was given
a sedative approximately one hour
before a transfusion. He also received regular doses of narcotics to alleviate
the pain associated with the disease.
On the other hand several
[***26] experts testified that there was support in the medical
[**70] community for the view that, at this stage, transfusions may only prolong
suffering and that treatment could properly be limited to administering pain
killers. Mrs.
Storar testified that she wanted the transfusions discontinued because she only
wanted her son to be comfortable. She admitted that no one had ever explained
to her what might happen to him if the transfusions were stopped. She also
stated that she was not
"sure" whether he might die sooner if the blood was not replaced and was unable to
determine whether he wanted to live. However, in view of the fact that he
obviously disliked the
transfusions and tried to avoid them, she believed that he would want them
discontinued.
The court held that the center's application for permission to continue the
transfusions should be denied. It was noted that John Storar's fatal illness
had not affected his limited mental ability. He remained alert n5 and carried
on many of his usual activities. However, the court emphasized that the
transfusions could
not cure the disease, involved some pain and that the patient submitted to them
reluctantly. The court held that
[***27] a person has a right to determine what will be done with his own body and,
when he is incompetent, this right may be exercised by another on his behalf.
In this case, the court found that John Storar's
[*376] mother was the person in the
best position to determine what he would want and that she
"wants his suffering to stop and believes that he would want this also."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n5 The court observed that
"He remains alert to his environment, and he apparently recognizes the presence
of others * * * He recognizes his attending day nurse, and pulls down his
pajama bottoms when it is time for administration of his medicine."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The Appellate
Division affirmed in a brief memorandum.
I
In the Eichner case the Supreme Court properly granted the petition. At common
law, as Cardozo noted, every person
"of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what should be done with
his own body; and a surgeon who performs an operation
without his patient's consent commits an assault, for which he is liable in
damages * * *.
[***28] This is true except in cases of emergency where the patient is unconscious and
where it is necessary to operate before consent can be obtained"
(Schloendorff v Society of N. Y. Hosp., 211 NY 125, 129-130; see, also,
Pearl v Lesnick, 20 AD2d 761, affd
19 NY2d 590;
Garzione v Vassar Bros.
Hosp., 36 AD2d 390, affd
30 NY2d 857; 2 Harper and James, Law of Torts, 61 [1968 Supp]; Patient's Right to Refuse
Treatment Allegedly Necessary to
Sustain Life, Ann.,
93 ALR 3d 67). Even in emergencies, however, it is held that consent will not be implied if
the patient has previously stated that he would not consent (Restatement, Torts
2d,
§ 62, Illustration 5; Powell, Consent to Operative Procedures,
21 Md L Rev 189, 199; Bryn, Compulsory Life Saving Treatment for the Competent Adult,
44 Fordham L Rev 1, 15, n 64). The basic right of a patient to control the course of his medical treatment
has been recognized by the Legislature (see Public Health Law,
§§ 2504,
2805-d; CPLR 4401-a).
Father Eichner urges that this right is also guaranteed by the Constitution, as
an aspect of the right to privacy. Although several courts have so held (see,
e.g.,
Matter of Quinlan, 70 NJ 10,
[***29]
supra;
Superintendent of Belchertown State School v Saikewicz, 373 Mass 728), this is
a disputed question (see, e.g., Bryn,
op. cit., pp 5-9), which the Supreme Court has repeatedly declined to
consider (see Note, The
"Living Will": The Right to Death With Dignity?, 26 Case Western Reserve L Rev 485, 501, n
76; see, also,
Garger v New Jersey, 429 U.S. 922,
supra).
[*377] Neither do we reach that question in this case because the relief granted to
the petitioner, Eichner, is adequately supported by common-law principles.
[**71] The District Attorney urges that the patient's right to decline medical
treatment is outweighed by important State interests when the treatment is
necessary to preserve the patient's life. We recognize that under certain
circumstances the common-law right may have to yield to superior State
interests, as it would even if it were constitutionally based
(Roe v Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 154-155;
Doe v Bolton, 410 U.S. 179). The State has a
legitimate interest in protecting the lives of its citizens. It may require
that they submit to medical procedures in order to eliminate a health threat to
the community (see, e.g.,
[***30]
Jacobson v Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11). It may, by statute, prohibit them from engaging in specified activities,
including medical
procedures which are inherently hazardous to their lives
(Roe v Wade, supra, pp 150, 154). In this State, however, there is no statute which prohibits a patient from
declining necessary medical treatment or a doctor from honoring the patient's
decision. To the extent that existing statutory and decisional law manifests
the State's interest on this
subject, they consistently support the right of the competent adult to make his
own decision by imposing civil liability on those who perform medical treatment
without consent, although the treatment may be beneficial or even necessary to
preserve the patient's life (see, e.g.,
Schloendorff v Society of N. Y.
Hosp., 211 NY 125,
supra;
Matter of Erickson v Dilgard, 44 Misc 2d 27;
Matter of Melideo, 88 Misc 2d 974; Public Health Law,
§§ 2504, 2805-d; CPLR 4401-a). The current law identifies the patient's right to
determine the course of his own
medical treatment as paramount to what might otherwise be the doctor's
obligation to provide needed medical care. A State which imposes civil
liability
[***31] on a doctor if he violates the patient's right cannot also hold him criminally
responsible if he respects that right. Thus a doctor cannot be held to have
violated his legal or professional responsibilities when he
honors the right of a competent adult patient to decline medical treatment. n6
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n6 In other cases the State may be able to assert additional interests, such
as, prevention of suicide or, perhaps, protection of minor children or
dependents. Those concerns are inapplicable here. Brother Fox' condition was
not self-inflicted (see, e.g., Bryn,
op. cit., pp 16-24) and he has no children or dependents.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[*378] The District Attorney also urges that whatever right the patient may have is
entirely personal and may not be exercised by any third party once the patient
becomes incompetent. He notes that although a
court may appoint a guardian to manage an incompetent's financial affairs and
to supervise his person, some rights have been held to be too personal to be
exercised by an incompetent's representative
[***32] (see, e.g.,
Mainzer v Avril, 108 Misc 230, 232;
Matter of Barletta, 2 Misc 2 135, 139;
Matter of Rasmussen, 147 Misc 564, 566; cf.
Matter of Buttonow, 23 NY2d 385, 394;
Matter of Hills, 264 NY 349, 354; 44 CJS, Insane Persons,
§ 49; 27 NY Jur, Incompetent Persons,
§ 81). He argues that a right to decline lifesaving
treatment conflicts with the patient's fundamental and constitutionally
guaranteed right to life (US Const, 14th Amdt) and to permit a third party to
choose between the two means, in effect, that the right to life is lost once
the patient becomes incompetent. Finally he urges that if a patient's right to
decline medical
treatment survives his incompetency, it must yield to the State's overriding
interest in prohibiting one person from causing the death of another, as is
evidenced by the homicide laws.
The District Attorney's arguments underscore the very sensitive nature of the
question as to whether, in case of incompetency, a decision to discontinue life
sustaining medical
treatment may be made by some one other than the patient (see, also, Kamisar,
Some Non-Religious Views Against Proposed
"Mercy-Killing" Legislation,
42 Minn L Rev
[***33] 969; Collester, Death,
[**72] Dying and the Law: A Prosecutorial View of the Quinlan Case,
30 Rutgers L Rev 304). However, that issue is not presented in this case because here Brother Fox
made the decision for himself before he became incompetent. The Supreme Court
and the Appellate Division found that the evidence on this point, as well as
proof of the patient's subsequent incompetency and chances of recovery was
"clear and convincing". We agree that this
[*379] is the appropriate burden of proof and that the
evidence in the record satisfies this standard.
Although this is a civil case in which a preponderance of the evidence is
generally deemed sufficient, the District Attorney urges that the highest
burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt should be required when granting the
relief may result in the patient's death. But that
burden, traditionally reserved for criminal cases where involuntary loss of
liberty and possible stigmatization are at issue
(Addington v Texas, 441 U.S. 418, 428), is inappropriate in cases where the purpose of granting the relief is to give
effect to an individual's right by carrying out his stated intentions.
However, we agree with the
[***34]
courts below that the highest standard applicable to civil cases should be
required. There is more involved here than a typical dispute between private
litigants over a sum of money. Where particularly important personal interests
are at stake, clear and convincing evidence should be required
(Addington v Texas, supra, p 424). It is
constitutionally required in cases of involuntary civil commitments
(Addington v Texas, supra) and we have recognized the need for the higher standard in exceptional civil
matters (see, e.g.,
Ross v Food Specialties, 6 NY2d 336;
Amend v Hurley, 293 NY 587;
Porter v Commercial Cas. Ins. Co., 292 NY 176). Clear and convincing proof should also be required in cases where it is
claimed that a person, now incompetent, left instructions to terminate life
sustaining procedures when there is no hope of recovery. This standard serves
to
"impress the factfinder with the importance of the decision"
(Addington v Texas, 441 U.S. 418, 427,
supra) and it
"'forbids relief whenever the evidence is loose, equivocal or contradictory'"
(Backer Mgt. Corp. v Acme Quilting Co., 46 NY2d 211, 220).
In this case the proof was compelling. There
[***35] was no suggestion that the witnesses who testified for the petitioner had any
motive other than to see that Brother Fox' stated wishes were respected. The
finding that he carefully reflected on the subject, expressed his views and
concluded not to have his life prolonged by medical means if there were no hope
of recovery is supported by his religious beliefs and
[*380] is not inconsistent with his life of unselfish religious devotion. These were
obviously
solemn pronouncements and not casual remarks made at some social gathering, nor
can it be said that he was too young to realize or feel the consequences of his
statements (cf.
Matter of Quinlan, 70 NJ 10,
supra). That this was a persistent commitment is evidenced by the fact that he
reiterated the decision but two months before his final hospitalization. There
was, of
course, no need to speculate as to whether he would want this particular
medical procedure to be discontinued under these circumstances. What occurred
to him was identical to what happened in the Karen Ann Quinlan case, which had
originally prompted his decision. In sum, the evidence clearly and
convincingly shows that Brother Fox did not want to be
[***36] maintained in a
vegetative coma by use of a respirator.
II
In the Storar case, of course, we do not have any proof of that nature. John
Storar was never competent at any time in his life. He was always totally
incapable of understanding or making a reasoned decision about medical
treatment. Thus it is unrealistic to attempt to determine whether he would
want to continue potentially life prolonging treatment if he were competent.
As one of the experts testified at the hearing, that would be similar to asking
whether
[**73]
"if it snowed all summer would it then be winter?" Mentally John Storar was an infant and that is the only realistic way to
assess his rights in this litigation (see Bryn,
op. cit., p 24, n 107). Thus this
case bears only superficial similarities to Eichner and the determination must
proceed from different principles.
A parent or guardian has a right to consent to medical treatment on behalf of
an infant (Public Health Law,
§ 2504, subd 2). The parent, however, may not deprive a child of lifesaving
treatment, however well intentioned
(Matter of Sampson, 29 NY2d 900;
Matter of Vasko, 238 App Div 128;
Matter of Santos v Goldstein
[***37] , 16 AD2d 755, mot for lv to app dsmd
12 NY2d 642; cf.
Matter of Hofbauer, 47 NY2d 648).
Even when the parents' decision to decline
[*381] necessary treatment is based on constitutional grounds, such as religious
beliefs, it must yield to the State's interests, as
parens patriae, in protecting the health and welfare of the child
(Matter of Sampson, supra;
Jehovah's Witnesses v King County Hosp. Unit, 390 U.S. 598,
affg
278 F Supp 488;
People ex rel. Wallace v Labrenz, 411 Ill 618, cert den
344 U.S. 824; Power of Public Authorities to Order Medical Care for A Child Over Objection
of Parent or Guardian, Ann.,
30 ALR 2d 1138; cf.
Prince v Massachusetts, 321 U.S. 158). Of course it is not for the courts to determine the most
"effective" treatment when the parents have chosen among reasonable alternatives
(Matter of Hofbauer, 47 NY2d 648,
supra). But the courts may not permit a parent to
deny a child all treatment for a condition which threatens his life (compare
Custody of A Minor, 375 Mass 733, with
Matter of Hofbauer, supra, p 656). The case of a child who may bleed to death because of the parents' refusal to
authorize a blood transfusion presents
[***38] the classic
example
(Jehovah's Witnesses v King County Hosp., supra;
Matter of Sampson, supra).
In the Storar case there is the additional complication of two threats to his
life. There was cancer of the bladder which was incurable and would in all
probability claim his life. There was also the related loss of blood which
posed the risk of an earlier death, but which, at least at the
time of the hearing, could be replaced by transfusions. Thus, as one of the
experts noted, the transfusions were analogous to food -- they would not cure
the cancer, but they could eliminate the risk of death from another treatable
cause. Of course, John Storar did not like them, as might be expected of one
with an infant's mentality. But the evidence convincingly shows that the
transfusions did not involve excessive pain n7 and that without them his mental
and physical abilities would not be maintained at the usual level. With the
transfusions on the other hand, he was essentially the same as he was before
except of course he had a fatal illness which would ultimately claim his life.
Thus,
[*382] on the record, we have concluded that the application for permission to
continue the transfusions
[***39] should have been
granted. Although we understand and respect his mother's despair, as we
respect the beliefs of those who oppose transfusions on religious grounds, a
court should not in the circumstances of this case allow an incompetent patient
to bleed to death because someone, even someone as
close as a parent or sibling, feels that this is best for one with an
incurable
disease.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n7 Whether the presence or absence of excessive pain would be determinative
with respect to the continuation of a life sustaining measure need not be
reached under the facts of this case.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
In conclusion we note that it has been suggested by the District Attorney in
the Eichner case that these applications do not present
a justifiable controversy; that they call for innovations in the law, both
substantive and procedural, which should be left to the Legislature, subject
only to review
[**74] by the courts for compliance with constitutional requirements (see, also,
Matter of President & Directors of Georgetown Coll
[***40] ., 3 F2d 1000, 1010, 1015 [Burger, J.,
dissenting]; Sharpe
& Hargest, Lifesaving Treatment for Unwilling Patients,
36 Fordham L Rev 695; Note,
77 Harv L Rev 1539). We, of course, cannot alter statutory responsibility but we can declare the
rights and obligations of the parties under existing law. In fact the
District Attorney does not contend that the courts can never rule upon the
legality of such activities but suggests that the courts should wait for the
parties to act before considering whether there is any civil or criminal
liability. However, responsible parties who wish to comply with the law, in
cases where the legal consequences of the contemplated action is uncertain,
need not act at their peril
(New York Public Interest Research Group v Carey, 42 NY2d 527, 530). Nor is it inappropriate for those charged with the care of incompetent persons
to apply to the courts for a ruling on the propriety of conduct which might
seriously affect their charges.
We emphasize, however, that any such procedure is
optional. Neither the common law nor existing statutes require persons
generally to seek prior court assessment of conduct which may subject them to
civil and criminal liability.
[***41] If it is desirable to enlarge the role of the courts in cases involving
discontinuance of life sustaining treatment
[*383] for incompetents by establishing, as the Appellate
Division suggested in the Eichner case, a mandatory procedure of successive
approvals by physicians, hospital personnel, relatives and the courts, the
change should come from the Legislature.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, without
costs, in the Storar case and modified, without costs, in the Eichner case
by deleting everything but the authorization to the petitioner to discontinue
use of the respirator.
DISSENTBY: JONES (In Part); FUCHSBERG
DISSENT: Jones, J. (dissenting in part). I agree, and for the reasons stated by the
majority, that these two cases should be addressed on their merits,
notwithstanding that the deaths of the two patients have rendered moot the
specific legal issues tendered. Similarly, I agree with the conclusion reached
by the majority in Matter of
Eichner. I find the address of the majority in Matter of Storar, however,
inadequate to what 1 conceive to be the jurisprudential responsibility of our
court in this case; I also differ with the result they
[***42] reach.
I.
I do not question that Judge Wachtler's opinion constitutes an accurate and
clear statement of the highest common factors on which all members of the
court are in agreement. In the normal case, if such an exposition were
sufficient to dispose of the particular appeal, I would be reluctant to add a
separate writing which would serve only to reflect an individual preference as
to analysis or expression. These are not run-of-the-mill cases, however; they
pose issues for judicial resolution in a
field of the most far-reaching and solemn implications concerning which we do
not yet have the benefit of any legislative enactment in New York or the
guidance of any extensive body of decisional law. At the same time, while
there is compelling reason to believe that the problems of the nature presented
in these two cases have been of significant incidence in our
society for many years, only relatively recently have they been identified for
judicial attention. There are, however,
[*384] abundant manifestations of both the breadth and depth of interest and concern
on the part of the medical profession, theologians, ethicists, moralists,
sociologists and criminologists, as
[***43] well as of the public at large. n1 In this
[**75] circumstance I am persuaded that we have a
special responsibility to express our views with respect to judicial
participation in the resolution of individual cases, even if to do so results
in unveiling differences in points of view among us or reveals doubt as to the
extent of the authority or role of our courts in such cases. Either may
provide the initiative for or underscore the desirability of
legislative address and action.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n1 (See, e.g., Kutner, Euthanasia: Due Process For Death with Dignity; The
Living Will,
54 Ind LJ 201; Ufford, Brain Death/Termination of Heroic Efforts to Save Life -- Who
Decides?,
19 Washburn LJ 225; Note, Informed Consent and the
Dying Patient,
83 Yale LJ 1632; Survey, Euthanasia: Criminal, Tort, Constitutional and Legislative
Considerations,
48 Notre Dame Lawyer 1202; Fletcher, Ethics and Euthanasia, 73 Am J Nursing 670; Williamson, Prolongation
of Life or Prolonging the Act of Dying?,
202 JAMA 162; 3
Houts, Courtroom Medicine,
§ 1.06, p 1-53; Pope Pius XII, Prolongation of Life, 4 AM Q Papel Doctrine 393;
Burt, Taking Care of Strangers: The Rule of Law in Doctor-Patient Relations.)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***44]
The generic issue presented is not of broad
scope. We all recognize the right of a competent adult to make decisions with
respect to his own medical or surgical care even if the consequence of the
particular decision be to hasten death. The question before us is whether, and
under what circumstances, a surrogate decision can be made on behalf of the
patient when he is incompetent to make it himself, where he has been diagnosed
as incurably
ill, and where the decision relates to the withholding or withdrawal of
extraordinary life support medical procedures. The question poses the problem
of judicial involvement in passive euthanasia (sometimes called
"dysthanasia") -- the deliberate withholding or withdrawal of available clinical means for
the prolongation of the life of a patient for whom there is little or no
hope of recovery or survival. n2 Treating as the subject does with irreversible
decisions affecting life and death, we approach, and even may be thought by
some
[*385] to trespass on, the domain of Providence. Few areas of judicial activity
present such awesome questions or demand greater judicial wisdom and restraint.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n2 Because
"euthanasia" can have
two meanings, to avoid any possible misunderstanding I explicitly disclaim any
intention, expressly or by implication, to invite consideration of
"active" euthanasia -- the deliberate use of a life shortening agent for the
termination of life.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***45]
I identify two aspects of the problem so fundamental as to call for
exposition by this court, neither of which receives express attention in the
writing of the majority. The first is explicit acknowledgment that the problem
is one which the judicial system is unsuited and ill-equipped to solve and
which should not usually be made the subject of judicial attention. The lapse
of time necessarily consumed in appellate review before there
can be a final judicial determination will almost always be unacceptable and
makes recourse to judicial proceedings impractical. The methodology and the
techniques of our classic adversary system are not best suited to the
resolution of the issues presented. The courts can claim no particular
competence to reach the difficult ultimate decision,
depending as it necessarily must not only on medical data, but on theological
tenets and perceptions of human values which defy classification and
calibration.
There is reliable information that for many years physicians and members of
patients' families, often in consultation with religious counselors, have in
actuality been making decisions to withhold or to
withdraw life support procedures from incurably
[***46] ill patients incapable of making the critical decisions for themselves. n3
While, of
[**76]
course,
[*386] there can be no categorical assurance that there have been no erroneous
decisions thus reached, or even that in isolated instances death has not been
unjustifiably hastened for unacceptable motives, at the
same time there is no empirical evidence that either society or its individual
members have suffered significantly in consequence of the absence of active
judicial oversight. There is no indication that the medical profession whose
members are most closely aware of current practices senses the need for or
desires judicial intervention.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n3 (Levisohn, Voluntary Mercy Deaths, 8 J For Med 57, 68 [Levisohn conducted a
survey of the Chicago Medical Convention which revealed that 61% of the
physicians present believed that euthanasia was being practiced by members of
the profession]; Euthanasia Questions Stir New Debate, Med World
News, Sept. 14, 1973, p 75 [87% of respondents to a poll of the Association of
American Physicians reported they approved of passive euthanasia]; see, also,
e.g., Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine [9th ed], pp 6-7; Survey,
Euthanasia: Criminal, Tort, Constitutional and Legislative Considerations,
48 Notre Dame Lawyer 1202, 1213; Wilkes, When Do We Have The Right To Die?,
Life, Jan. 14, 1972, p 48; Medical Ethics: The Right To Survival, Hearings Before
The Subcommittee On Health Of The Committee On Labor
& Public Welfare, 93 Cong, 2d Sess 9 [1979].)
Luis Kutner, Chief
Justice of the World Court of Human Rights, has recently written that doctors'
attitudes toward euthanasia have changed:
"Suprisingly, in a survey reported in mid-1974, 79% of physicians responding
expressed some belief in the right of the patient to have a say about his
death. The subject of death has also become an
important part of medical school curriculum, whereas in the past there was a
tendency to neglect it in other than a strictly clinical sense. Moreover, at
its annual conference, the austere American Medical Association formally
adopted the following policy statement: 'The cessation of the employment of
extraordinary means to prolong the life of the
body where there is irrefutable evidence that biological death is imminent is
the decision of the patient and-or his immediate family * * *'. This provided
doctors with a sanction for what many had actually been doing for some time,
since the practice of turning off machines, for example, to allow death to come
to a patient whom only the machine is keeping
alive is a fairly common practice for hospitals. As a matter of fact, doctors
at the Yale University School of Medicine willingly acknowledged that they had
quietly allowed 43 severely deformed infants to die by withholding treatment
after the parents agreed there was little chance for 'meaningful life.' The
doctors disclosed this in hopes of breaking down 'a major social taboo.'" (Kutner, Euthanasia: Due Process For Death With Dignity; The Living Will,
54 Ind LJ 201, 223.)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***47]
For all the foregoing reasons I would explicitly affirm the proposition that
judicial approval is
not required for discontinuance of life support procedures in situations such
as those now before us and that neither civil nor criminal liability attaches
simply by reason of the absence of a court order of authorization.
As to the second aspect, I nevertheless recognize that there will be occasions
in which the courts will have thrust on them
cases such as the two now before us. It is not difficult to anticipate
instances in which for one or more of a variety of reasons a member of the
patient's family or a close friend might desire to seek formal judicial
approval of a proposal to withhold or to withdraw a particular extraordinary
life support procedure. I would therefore explicitly affirm the authority of
our courts, in proper cases and in proceedings appropriately instituted, to
grant authorization
[*387] for withholding or withdrawal of extraordinary life support medical
procedures, notwithstanding the absence of evidence of an anticipatory
expression of the attitude or wishes of the particular patient (as was present
and the
critical factor in the Eichner case).
Thus I
[***48] would have hoped that our court in the appeals now before us, would expressly
have recognized the availability of, but not the necessity for, judicial
approval of surrogate decisions in cases such as these. The fact that there is
no such recognition serves to underscore the high desirability, here and
elsewhere expressed, of legislative
attention and action.
Similarly, to the extent that an impelling reason for continuing to entertain
cases which have become individually moot is to identify and discuss
controlling principles and to set standards and provide guidance, not only for
the lower courts which can be expected to confront similar cases, but also (and
of greater practical significance) to the
medical care providers who nearly daily are confronted with individual
instances in which consideration is being given to withdrawal of life support
procedures, our writings in these cases must fall short of what surely would
have been desirable had it been possible to reach a broader consensus. Other
than indicating an unreadiness to approve the detailed procedures
laid down by the Appellate Division in Matter of Eichner the court will have
provided little if any procedural guidance
[***49] either to the lower courts in our State -- for instance, as to who has
standing to bring such proceedings and
what must be shown to warrant judicial authorization for the relief sought --
or to the medical care providers as to
how or whether they may properly and safely proceed in the absence of express
judicial authorization. I would much have preferred writings that would have
provided more constructive direction both for the courts, to
[**77] which will surely be presented, and perhaps in increasing volume, applications
of the character now before us, and for hospitals and physicians, on whom the
burden of responsibility for daily decisions so often falls. Absent such
enabling consensus however, I perceive no useful purpose to be served by one
member of the court presuming
[*388] to express his views on what are procedural matters (as distinguished from the
expression which I have felt compelled to make on two substantive issues).
II.
With
respect to the disposition of the appeals in these two cases: as stated, I
would concur in result in Matter of Eichner; in Storar I would modify the order
of the Appellate Division to the extent of dismissing the petition
[***50] of Charles S. Soper as Acting Director of the Newark Developmental Center,
and, as so modified, affirm. The dismissal would be
premised on lack of standing of the hospital (or its director on behalf of the
hospital) as a medical care provider to have instituted the proceeding seeking
judicial authorization to continue blood transfusions against the wishes of
Dorothy Storar, the patient's mother, guardian and committee. Medical care
providers have at best only a tangential interest
in the outcome of the litigation and can have no legitimate individual stake in
the institution (or continuation) or the discontinuance of the medical
procedure. n4 Cases may arise in which it is appropriate to name the provider
as a party defendant for the purpose of giving practical effect to the court's
decision. In matters such as these it has been the practice
in the past to recognize the standing of a public or quasi-public official to
institute judicial proceedings (e.g., see cases cited majority opn, pp
380-381). Until today, however, this court has never recognized the standing
of a medical care provider to seek authorization to continue medical care
against the wishes of the patient or one who
[***51] stands in his stead. Additionally I am apprehensive that to accord standing
to medical care providers to seek authorization for continuation of
extraordinary life support procedures in cases such as this might foster a
perception that obtaining judicial approval should be the normal expectation
(rather than
a procedure to be resorted to only in extraordinary circumstances) and thus
[*389] lead to an increase in the institution of such proceedings, in some instances
as anticipatory defensive strategy with respect to possible future claims for
malpractice. Nor would I know what significance, if any, to ascribe to the
circumstance that extraordinary medical procedures in particular now often
involve a very heavy economic cost which might, at least in some instances,
have a bearing on the provider's incentive to institute or continue such care
(as well, on the other side of the equation, as possibly to lead dependent
family members to oppose expensive treatment). I would, however, recognize the
standing of a member of the family such as John
Storar's mother, or a close friend as in Eichner, to institute a judicial
proceeding for authorization to withhold or to withdraw life support
[***52] measures.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n4 Nothing in article 33 of the Mental Hygiene Law or in the administrative
regulations of the commissioner
(14 NYCRR 27.9 [c]) (assuming the power of the commissioner by promulgation of regulation to
confer standing) conferred standing on the acting director of the developmental
center to institute the present proceeding.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
As to the merits in Storar, I find no sufficient ground, as a matter of law, to
reverse the determination made by
Supreme Court, now affirmed at the Appellate Division, and I perceive no other
predicate on which the court can disturb the order of the Appellate Division;
it cannot consider the matter
de novo or make new determinations of fact except where the evidence in the record is
so overwhelming as to require a particular determination as
a matter of law.
While there was evidence, to which the majority refers, that the
discontinuation of blood transfusions would have
"eventually" led to John Storar's death (and inferentially perhaps before death would
otherwise
[***53] have
[**78] been caused by his cancer of the bladder), no finding was made as to what
extension of life would attend the continuation of transfusions. Supreme Court
made the
ambiguous finding, undisturbed by the Appellate Division, that
"Storar has a life expectancy of from two to six months regardless of whether
the blood transfusions are continued or not". n5 Similarly,
[*390] although evidence was introduced that following transfusions Storar had more
energy and was able to resume most of his usual, limited activities, the courts
below made no finding that continued transfusions would improve the quality of
his life or, if so, in what respects or to what extent. In the absence of
factual determintations with respect to these matters (and in my view the
evidence in the record is not sufficient to justify this court's now supplying
such findings as a matter of law), I
cannot conclude as a matter of law that the courts below erred in authorizing
discontinuance of the blood transfusions in the light of the factual
determinations which the courts did make, to wit:
That John had cancer of the bladder which was both inoperable and incurable,
with a life expectancy of from
[***54] two to six months; that one who has cancer of the bladder
suffers severe pain and the need for medication increases as the cancer
spreads; that John had been in frequent pain and as his pain had increased his
need for medication had also increased;
That the blood transfusions were painful although not excessively so; that
because of John's apprehension and manifest dislike of the procedure the nurse
had been giving him a shot approximately
one hour before the transfusion; that he submitted to the blood transfusions
reluctantly and because of the force that compelled him to submit; that
recently he had had to be physically restrained and to have his arm tied down
to prevent him from pulling out the needle used for the transfusion; that in
contrast to his behavior prior to the commencement of the transfusions, he
thereafter ventured outside his room infrequently; that he had
appeared to be progressively more uncomfortable during the procedures; that as
a result of the transfusions there was frequent clotting in his urine which
made urination more painful; that the blood contributed to increased
[*391] levels of sensitivity to the pain he was experiencing and contributed to his
[***55] discomfort;
That the transfusions did not serve to reduce John's pain or to make him more
comfortable; that the
blood forced on him did not serve a curative purpose or offer a reasonable hope
of benefit;
That if the transfusions were stopped John would suffer no additional pain, his
discomfort would not increase, and indeed cessation might serve to make him
less aware of the physical sensations he was experiencing and even lead to a
subsiding of the bleeding from his bladder lesions;
That in the circumstances the blood transfusions were extraordinary treatments;
That because of his lifelong profound mental retardation John was incompetent
to refuse or consent to the continuation of the blood transfusions or to make a
reasoned choice as to his own wishes or best interests;
That his mother over his lifetime had come to know and sense his
wants and needs and was acutely sensitive to his best interests; that she had
provided more love, personal care, and affection for John than any other person
or institution, and was
[**79] closer to feeling what John was feeling than anyone else; that his best
interests were of crucial importance to her;
That in his mother's opinion
[***56] it would have been in John's best interests to discontinue the
transfusions, and she believed that he would wish to have them stopped.
No one suggests that there is not sufficient evidence in this record to support
each of these factual findings.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
n5 Indeed, in one perspective this case might be said to fall in a
classification quite distinct from that in
Eichner, namely, one concerning the
authority of the courts to authorize a surrogate determination on behalf of an
incompetent adult who is incurably ill, but lacks capacity to make such a
determination himself, to discontinue an extraordinary life support medical
procedure which is not necessarily prolonging his life, i.e., a decision
relating to the quality but not the duration of
life of a patient facing inescapably accelerated death. The courts below, and
now the majority in our court, however, have analogized this case to that of
Eichner, posing the question of extending ("at best * * * only a short extension of life", as the Appellate Division stated it [78 AD2d 1013]) the life of an incurably ill patient.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -End Footnotes- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
[***57]
I would hold that the courts below had power to authorize the withdrawal of
extraordinary life support measures and that, in the circumstances of this
case, there was no error of law when the courts below exercised that power to
grant Mrs. Storar's cross application to discontinue blood transfusions for her
son, John.
Fuchsberg,
J. (dissenting). Brother Fox and John Storar having each passed away, whether,
had each one lived, it would have been more appropriate to prolong his
[*392] life, hasten his death, or neither, is now moot. In this posture, two of my
colleagues, incanting the need for judicial restraint, nevertheless have chosen
to plunge into what in the
end must be recognized for no more than an academic legal debate. In my view,
that is a mistake. Far better would it be if we accepted the conclusion nature
has wrought and left the cases where they were.
I do not question the power of courts to decide such questions. In open cases,
when there is disagreement among those in whom
reside the practical and primary responsibility to make such agonizing moral
choices, when the disputants reach an impasse, the judiciary, the arm of our
society trained to decide controversies
[***58] between persons or between persons and the State, cannot shirk its obligation.
But the cases before us now are already irrevocably concluded.
True, on rare occasions, we
entertain causes that are abstract. But, never ones so deeply affected by so
many nonlegal disciplines -- theology, philosophy, sociology, psychology,
biology, to name but a few. For the ultimate and forbidding issues are no less
than the right to live or, if you will, the right to die (see, e.g., Veatch,
Death,
Dying and the Biological Revolution [Yale U Press]; Downing, Euthanasia and the
Right to Die [Peter Own Limited, Lond]; Sefer Chasidism [Frankfurt ed, No.
315-318]; and see, generally, authorities cited in ns 1, 3 of Judge Jones'
dissenting-in-part opn on this
appeal).
It also goes without saying that the unavoidably complex interplay of the
principles emanating from these competing specialities has grown with abounding
medical and technological changes. These have dramatically enlarged the
potential for prolonging the process of dying, painracked though it may be.
Consequently, it can come as no surprise that decisions on this subject -- and
today there is no
dearth of them (e.g.,
Matter of
[***59]
Quinlan, 70 NJ 10;
Superintendent of Belchertown State School v Saikewicz, 373 Mass 728;
Matter of Eichner [Fox], 73 AD2d 431 [Mollen, P. J.]) -- all were handed down to meet the demands of ongoing
controversies.
[*393] In this extraordinarily sensitive area of litigation,
each new case is bound to present its own peculiar circumstances. Judicial
freedom to react to its factual refinements, if need be quickly and, to a
considerable degree, on a largely
ad hoc basis, is essential. Given the precedential strictures of
stare decisis (see, e.g.,
Thornton v Roosevelt Hosp., 47 NY2d 780), to lay down law, then, is needlessly to tie our hands against the time when we
are confronted by an appeal we have to decide. To reach out to do so
prematurely is not to adjudicate, but legislate. Worse, I respectfully
suggest, it is unwise to undercut a great strength of the common-law process,
the evolution of law
step by step as it moves from case to case.
I, therefore would dismiss each case for mootness.
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