1 Colo. App. 237 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1891
.This is an action for malpractice in
To this complaint defendant, Burnham, filed his answer, admitting that he was a practicing physician, and that he •was called to attend upon and administer medicines to the plaintiff, but denies generally each and every other material allegation contained in the complaint.
Upon the issue thus presented by the pleadings a trial •was had, and resulted in a verdict in the sum of $5,000 for plaintiff. Thereafter the usual motion for new trial was interposed and overruled, and judgment entered upon the verdict. To reverse this judgment defendant prosecutes this appeal.
Twenty-eight errors are assigned for, reversing the judgment and allowing a new trial. They are directed to the action of the court in permitting evidence to be given over the objections of defendant, and in refusing to give instructions asked by the defendant, as well as to the instructions given.
It will be well to observe, in the first place, that by this .complaint there is no allegation that the defendant, Burnham-, was not a physician properly educated, and qualified, and that the claim for damages is that the injuries resulted from his negligence and unskilful treatment.' . Mueh; testimony was taken on the part of the plaintiff which in effect established that, after a brief treatment of the plaintiff by the defendant, Burnham, he was discharged, and a period of thirty-six hours intervened before another physician was called in. At the time the second physician was called and examined the organ .he hesitated about undertaking the case, and finally concluded that he would not without additional assistance. Additional assistance being provided, it was deemed the proper thing to slit the prepuce. This was on Wednesday, and not until the Saturday or' Sunday following were the physicians satisfied that gangrene had set in. Being so satisfied, they de
It may be well at this time to comment upon the nature of the contract between plaintiff and defendant. “ The law requires and implies, as a part of the contract, that when a physician undertakes professional charge of a patient he will use reasonable and ordinary care and diligence in the treatment of the case. The law further implies that he agrees to use his best skill and judgment at all times in deciding upon the nature of the disease, and the best mode of treatment, and the management generally of the patient. The essence of the contract is that he is to do his best, to yield to the use and service of his patient his best knowledge, skill, and judgment, with faithful attention by day and night, as reasonably required. There are some things, however, that the law does not imply or require. He is not responsible for want of success in his treatment, unless it is proved to result from want of ordinary care or ordinary skill or judgment. He is not a warranter of a cure, unless he makes a special contract to that effect. If he is shown to possess the qualifications stated in the first proposition to authorize and justify him in offering his service as a physician, then if he exercises his best skill and judgment, with care and careful observation of the case, he is not responsible for an honest mistake of the nature of the disease, or as to the best mode of treatment, when there was reasonable ground for doubt or uncertainty.”
The above is a quotation from the case of Patten v. Wig-
“ Where there is a difference of opinion among practical and skilful surgeons as to the practice to be pursued in a certain class of cases, a surgeon may exercise his own best judgment, and employ such treatment as experience has shown him to be best,- and a mere error of judgment as to that would not, under the law, make him liable in damages for an injury resulting to his patient.” Vanhooser v. Berghoff, 90 Mo. 488. This being so, it becomes necessary to refer briefly to the testimony of some of the witnesses.
Dr. Burnham himself testifies that he was called upon to attend the plaintiff, and found him in a high fever; that he complained of more or less pain through his chest, of looseness of the bowels, and that subsequently, after prescribing for those ailments, his attention was called to the plaintiff’s penis ; that he examined the organ, and found it in a filthy condition, both in appearance and in odor, and that he prescribed at the time for a local trouble ; that he asked the plaintiff how long it had been troubling him, and the plaint-replied, “ Several days.” Defendant further asked him how it became poisoned—“Have you had connection with an impure woman, or been abusing yourself ? ” That he could not give an intelligent reply to questions. After further reference to the condition of the organ, he concluded that possibly there might be an ulceration, and, getting as much information from the young mair as he could, he prescribed
Resuming consideration of the complaint: It states that the unskilfulness and neglect of the defendant “ was, instead of slitting up the prepuce or foreskin to the corona, and using other appliances and remedies, as is the reasonable, usual, and ordinary method adopted by the profession in such cases, that he wrongfully, negligently, and unskilfully applied and directed to be applied and kept on the penis of this plaintiff a flaxseed meal poultice, which application, under the circumstances and in the condition of plaintiff’s malady, aggravated said malady, and accelerated said condition of gangrene.” There is not an atom of testimony in the entire record that satisfactorily establishes this part of the complaint, that the application of the flaxseed meal poultice accelerated the gangrene. There is no proof that at the time Dr. Burnham had the patient in charge and was treating his particular malady gangrene had set in, although Dr. Burnham honestly admitted that he was fearful that such was the condition. But in this connection, and considering the above paragraph of the complaint, attention is called to the testimony of Dr. Rothwell, who testifies that, after cutting or slitting, he dressed it antiseptically, wrapped it in cotton to keep it warm, and directed the plaintiff to use gentle friction, and used friction himself, as far as he could, to restore circulation. “I did not poultice, because I thought it had been poulticed sufficient already, and perhaps another poultice would make the parts soggy instead of aiding circulation.” Dr. Craig, another witness on the part of the plaintiff, testified that “if I treated the constriction from the increasing inflammation, I should liberate the gland by incising the contracted foreskin, and use antiseptics to prevent the parts decomposing.” He says: “ Frequently they complete the case by circumcision. Circumcision, or incision, in a healthy person, is not a dangerous procedure.” He further says that subsequently it was found necessary to amputate the mem-1
Dr. Darnell, another witness for the plaintiff, testified as an expert, but his testimony in no way seems to bear upon the'issue as presented by the pleadings.
Dr. C. N. Hart, who testified on behalf of the defendant, and was present in court, and heard the testimony of Dr. Burnham, indicated that his treatment would be altogether different from that of any of the physicians, and even of Dr. Burnham. Dr. N. K. Morris rather supports the treatment of Dr. Burnham. Dr: Joseph E. Kinley also bears testimony in favor of defendant’s treatment. Dr. J. W. Huffaker tesr tifiéd'that it would not be good practice to'slit up the prepuce in'a state of inflammation. Dr. William L. Brett supports the treatment of Dr. Burnham. All of the witnesses called on behalf of the defendant had submitted to them questions involving the condition of the organ at the time Dr. Burnham was first called and during his treatment.
With these observations and review of the testimony, we come now to the consideration of the instructions, and I shall not take them up in the order as presented by the assignment of errors, nor do I think it necessary to consider all the errors assigned.
The first instruction to which attention is called is as follows : “ If you find from the evidence that this defendant, in the treatment of the plaintiff, omitted the ordinary or established mode of treatment, and pursued one that has proven
There is no proof that satisfactorily shows that circumcis
Instruction No. 15 is in the following language : “ If the jury find from the evidence that, through the negligence of the defendant, gangrene attacked the plaintiff, and necessi- ■> tated the amputation of the organ, or if you find that gangrene had set in upon the first visit of the defendant, yet he neglected to take the proper and ordinary measures to prevent its progress, and thus necessitated amputation, or greater amputation than would otherwise have been necessary, he is liable in damages.”
This instruction is error, because it assumes that at the time Dr. Burnham was calied, and during the time he was in attendance, gangrene had set in. There is not, from the beginning to the end of this entire record, any testimony satisfactorily establishing that fact, and it was a conclusion
Instruction No. 21, it strikes me, is decidedly objectionable: “ It is important to the interests of society that the profession entrusted with the preservation of the health and lives of the community should be held to a strict rule of accountability.” It occurs to me that this is going outside of thfe record; that it is referring to matters which should not have been called to the attention of a jury, and thereby influencing their judgment against the defendant. Society had no direct or indirect interest in the result of the jury’s deliberations. It was purely a question between the plaintiff and the defendant, under the contract of patient and physician,—a question of whether or not defendant was skilful and diligent and faithful in his treatment of the plaintiff during the time he was permitted to attend him. Why, then, should the interest of society be called in to support the charge made in the complaint? We will admit that the declaration of the court is a true one,—that society is interested, and that the profession entrusted with the preservation of the health and lives of the community should be held to a strict rule of accountability. But what is that rule? That rule, as laid down in the books and by every authority that I have been able to discover, is that the law does not require the highest degree of skill in physicians and surgeons, but that they undertake to bring to their aid the ordinary care and skill of those engaged in the profession, and to treat their patients with
ordinary care and skill, and to the best of their judgment. Carpenter v. Blake, 75 N. Y. 12; Craig v. Chambers, 17 Ohio 253; Vanhooser v. Berghoff, 90 Mo. 487; Pettigrew v. Lewis, supra.
Instruction No. 22 is in the following language : “ That if writers on the treatment of phimosis or practical surgeons prescribe a mode of treatment, it is incumbent on surgeons called on to treat such ailment to conform to the system of treatment thus established, and if they depart from it they do so at their peril.”
Other errors are assigned upon the charge of the court as given to the jury, but we are inclined to think they are without foundation. For the errors pointed out the judgment must be reversed, and a new trial granted.
Reversed.