The Benzschawels note in their brief that while this case was on appeal this court in
Shier v. Freed
*213
man
(1973),
Benzschawels argue this case is governed by
Olson v. Augsberger
(1962),
However, in the present case we do not find the issue of the locality rule was properly raised in the trial court. We would not be adverse to extending the benefit of the abrogation of the locality rule in the instant case if the question had been properly raised and preserved. No place in the record do we find the Benzschawels objecting to the locality instruction or asking for instructions of a national standard. After the court had instructed the *214 jury, the trial judge inquired whether counsel for either side wanted to object to or call the attention of the court to anything about the instruction as given. Benzschawels said they did not. From the record, apparently the first time the Benzschawels made any objection to the locality instruction was by way of motions after verdict. This objection comes too late.
We have no doubt the facts of this case could have called for the application of a national standard of care, but the negligence alleged, if proved, would seem to us from the evidence to have been a violation of the national and the local standard of medical care. The issue was not the standard so much as whether Dr. Stoll performed the alleged acts in his surgery.
Benzschawels argue they should be granted a new trial in the interests of justice on three grounds: The jury was confused; three times they reported they were deadlocked; and Dr. Reiser, original codefendant, obtained a nonsuit on the ground he had no knowledge of the actual surgery done by Dr. Stoll and therefore could not be held negligent for failure to object to negligent surgery and then demonstrated he had complete knowledge of surgery because as an eyewitness he testified Dr. Stoll did not commit the acts of negligence alleged by the plaintiffs. Furthermore, a Dr. McCormick was presented on behalf of Dr. Stoll as an expert and testified approximately a full day with the use of charts, drawings and pictures. After the testimony he admitted he was not an expert in the fields in which he was giving an opinion. A jury is not confused because it is temporarily deadlocked. A general practitioner may not know whether a duct should or should not be cut in a surgical operation but as an eyewitness will know if it were cut. Whether Dr. McCormick was or was not an expert was for the court to decide upon proper objection. The test of granting a new trial in the interests of justice is whether this court is convinced that
*215
there was a probable miscarriage of justice. In viewing the case as a whole, this court must be convinced to a reasonable certitude that if there were a new trial it would probably effect a different result.
Lock v. State
(1966),
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
