Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court:
The circuit court of Winnebago County permitted the plaintiff, Robert J. Dolan, and the defendant, Dr. M. A. Galluzzo, to take an interlocutory appeal from an order in limine. The appellate court affirmed (
The plaintiff brought a malpractice action against the defendant, a licensed podiatrist (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1973, ch. 91, par. 73 et seq.), for an allegedly negligent osteotomy (surgical cutting of a bone) performed on his left foot in 1974. The plaintiff also alleged the defendant failed to obtain his informed consent because the defendant had not indicated the possible complications of the osteotomy. Upon learning of the plaintiff’s intention of having orthopеdic surgeons testify and aware of significant disagreement between them and podiatrists, the defendant moved in limine to exclude all testimony by physicians and surgeons. The circuit court, after denying the first motion in limine and acting upon the second, ordered the plaintiff not to present “the testimony of any physician and surgeon for the purpose of proving” the standard of care a podiatrist owes a patient, or for the purpose of demonstrating that the failure of the defendant to inform the plaintiff “of the reasonable [szc] foreseeable risks of the procedure *** was or was not consistent with the standard of care owed by a podiatrist to a patient.”
The circuit court’s two certified issues, concerning the standard of care and informed consent, can be reduced to the basic issue of whether or not a plaintiff may establish the standard of care a podiatrist owes a patient by offering the testimony of a physician or surgeon, or another expert other than a podiatrist. The appellate court and the parties correctly characterize this narrow issue as a case of first impression in Illinois.
Because the State has “long recognized podiatrists as a separate and distinct profession of healers who are severely limited in their practice and whose educational requirements are substantially different than those of physicians,” and because “the treatments utilized by the pоdiatric profession *** are substantially different from those utilized by physicians and orthopedic surgeons” (a view in which the plaintiff and defendant concur), the appellate court concluded the “defendant has the right to have his competence judged by the standards of his own distinct profession and not by those of any other.” (
In mediсal malpractice suits, the plaintiff must establish the standard of care through expert testimony. (Walski v. Tiesenga (1978),
“A school of medicine relates to the system of diagnosis and treatment. While the law recognizes that there are different schools of medicine, it does not favor, or give exclusive recognition to, any particular school or system of medicine, as against the others. When a patient selects a practitioner of a recognized school of treatment he adopts the kind of treatment common to that school, or, as otherwise stated, he is presumed to elect that the treatment shall be according to the system or school of medicine to which such practitioner belongs.”
See also Joost, Schools of Medicine, Medical Malpractice in Illinois, 44 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 115 (1967), and Comment, Medical Malpractice — Expert Tеstimony, 60 Nw. U.L. Rev. 834, 839-42 (1966).
The rationale of the general rule restricting expert testimony regarding the standard of care owed by a practitioner of a certain school of medicine is that “there are different schools of medicine with varying tenets and practices, and that inequities would be occasioned by testing the care and skill of a practitioner of one school of medicine by the opinion of a practitioner of another school” (
Illinois statutes (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1973, ch. 91, par. 1 et seq., and Ill. Rev. Stat. 1977, ch. Ill, par. 3401 et seq.) provide for the regulation of practitioners of medicine and surgery, physical therapy, nursing, pharmacy, dental surgery, podiatry, optometry, etc. This is a clear expression by the legislature of public policy to recognize and regulate various schools of medicine. The various acts regulating the health professions (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1973, ch. 91; Ill. Rev. Stat. 1977, ch. 111) provide for different training, and regulate the treatment each profession may offer. (Also, the Medical Practice Act provides that this “Act shall not apply to dentists, pharmacists, optometrists, or other persons lawfully carrying on their particular profession ***.” (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1973, ch. 91, par. 16v; Ill. Rev. Stat. 1977, ch. 111, par. 4474. See Sutton v. Cook (1969),
The plaintiff maintains, on the basis of Darling v. Charleston Community Memorial Hospital (1965),
We therefore hold that, in order to testify as an expert on the standard of care in a given school of medicine, the witness must be licensed therein. Once the fact of such license has been established, it lies within the sound discretion of the trial court to determine if the witness is qualified to testify as an expert regarding the standard of care. (People v. Park (1978),
Since the trial court order was overbroad, it and the judgment of the appellate court affirming it are vacated, and the cause is remanded to the circuit court of Winnebago County for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Vacated and remanded.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I believe that the majority confuses the existence of various schools of medicine that have differing notions as to the origin and treatment of disease with the simple fact that the legislature has provided for the regulation of the various medical professions and occuрations. An illustration of this confusion is the majority’s statement that the legislature, by providing for the regulation of physical therapy, nursing, optometry and other medical activities, was expressing a public policy “to recognize and regulate various schools of medicine.” This is of course wrong. The majority then concludes, and mistakenly, I consider, that in order to qualify as an expert witness one must have a license in the profession or occupation where the standard of care is in question. The holding of the license is held to be the touchstone of expert qualifications. No matter how well qualified through education, training and experience the prospective witness may be, the trial court has no discretion tо allow expert testimony unless the witness is the holder of a license.
The holding here is that one would be unable to testify concerning podiatric standards of care without possessing a license in podiatry. Thus even a professor in a schоol of podiatry who did not happen also to be licensed to practice podiatry would not be able to testify as to the standards of care required of a podiatrist. Under the holding a physician would be unable to testify to nursing standards of care even though nurses operated under his supervision or to testify to standards for midwives, and this because the physician was not licensed as a nurse or a midwife.
The circumstances in Walker v. Bangs (1979),
I believe that the requiring of a license in the field where the standards of care are under examination is to apply a purely mechanical and formalistic rule. I would adhere to the generally accepted rule that whether a witness is qualified by special skill, knowledge and experience as an expert witness is within the sound discretion of the trial judge and that this exercise of discretion is reviewable only for abuse. Evanston Best Co. v. Goodman (1938),
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GOLDENHERSH joins in this dissent.
