64 Ind. 89 | Ind. | 1878
The following is the complaint of the appellee against the appellant:
The second paragraph of the complaint is not essentially different from the first.
A demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint, for the alleged want of sufficient facts, was overruled, and exceptions to the ruling reserved.
Answer ; issue ; trial; verdict for appellee ; judgment'; appeal.
The questions presented to this court arise upon the rulings on the demurrers to the complaint, upon giving certain instructions, and the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict.
In the case of Roll v. The City of Indianapolis, 52 Ind. 547, wherein the city was charged with the wrongful establishment of an insufficient sewer and certain catch-basins, and improperly turning certain drainage into them, whereby the plaintiff was injured in his property, it was held that no such averment was necessary, the court, in the course of the opinion, remarking, that:—
“ In cases of trespass, and where the wrong complained of is committed by some positive, affirmative act, the negation of fault or negligence on the part of the plaintiff is not necessary.”
In the ease before us, the complaint avers, that defendant, being a physician and surgeon, undertook, for a reward or hire, to perform certain duties in the line of his profession; that he performed them in an improper way, as well as neglected to perform them as he ought to have done.
In such a case, we do not think the negation of negligence on the part of the plaintiff is necessary. Indeed, the undertaking, though sounding in tort, is founded in contract — to do a certain thing upon a consideration — and the breaches are alleged.
In the approved forms, we find no trace of such an averment ; 1 Abbott’s Forms, 361,362 ; 2 Chitty Pleading, 16th Am. ed., 607 ; nor in any of the cases of malpractice, against surgeons, decided by this court; Long v. Morrison, 14 Ind.
The complaint, in our opinion, is good.
The appellant has pointed out no objections to the instructions, and we see none.
There is no such defect or weakness in the evidence as will authorize us — being an appellate court — to disturb the verdict.
The judgment is affirmed, at the costs of the appellant.
Petition, for a rehearing overruled.