60 Ind. App. 656 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1916
Appellant suffered a compound fracture of the bones of the right forearm and appellees, physicians and surgeons, were employed to reduce the fracture. In this suit appellant seeks to recover damages which he claims he has suffered in consequence of appellees’ failure to exercise a reasonable degree of care and skill in their treatment of him. The record discloses that after the complaint was filed and before the filing of the separate answers by each defendant, separate motions to require plaintiff to make his complaint more definite and certain were overruled. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, the trial court sustained defendants’ motion for a peremptory instruction in their favor, a verdict was returned accordingly and judgment for defendants entered thereon. The correctness of this action of the trial court is the only question presented for our consideration. Or, as appellant, has expressed it, the question is “whether an inference of
The only evidence produced at the trial was that introduced by appellant, and consists of the testimony of himself and his wife and two skiagraphs of the injured arm taken several weeks after the accident by another physician and surgeon. A narrative statement of the testimony, portions of which we have taken from the briefs, is as follows: Appellant was injured by being run over by a wagon, was carried into a- house close by. Doctor Miller was called; he, together with other persons, extended and pulled on the arm using “a whole lot of force”. “After they got it together they bandaged it up.” The doctor then stated it was all right. The splints used by him were made from pieces of a soap box, padded with cotton, one of them was placed on the front of the arm, the other on the back thereof, and then bandages were wrapped around the splints. Appellant was then moved to his home, his arm continued to hurt but “there was no swelling”. He called Doctor Miller again, the same day, because of his suffering, and he informed appellant he could not do more, “he would have to stand his suffering”. At the request of both appellant and his wife, Doctor Miller brought a specialist, Doctor Kolmer, who after examining his body generally, moved the fingers of the injured man up and down and said, “the fingers are all right and the arm is set all right”. This visit was on Friday, the same day of the injury. The Tuesday following Doctor Kolmer came again with Doctor Miller, they removed the bandages and splints, extended the arm, manipulated the fractured bones and reset the arm. They worked on it fifteen minutes, Miller at the elbow and Kolmer at the hand and they pulled it and
Note. — Reported in 111 N. E. 313. As to amount of care required of a physieianor surgeon, see 93 Am. St. 657. On tlie degree of care