— Defendant is a physician and plaintiff was his patient. She charged malpractice and recovered judgment in the trial court for thirty-five hundred dollars.
The petition alleges that plaintiff was suffering from some “malady” and that she engaged defendant to treat her. That defendant pronounced her trouble to be “the hardening of the right lobe of the liver and proposed to treat her by means of what is generally known as an X-ray machine.” That defendant “unskillfully, rashly, unprofessionally, negligently and ignorantly commenced treating her with the X-ray.” That in so doing the “right side of the abdomen for a space of more than one foot in diameter was blistered and became raw and sore,” etc. The petition then, among other things, sets forth the serious and distressing consequences following such treatment.
Defendant was a witness in his own behalf and on cross-examination plaintiff’s counsel was permitted to ask him, over the objection of his counsel, the following question: “Doctor, I will ask you if on or about that date (the time when plaintiff’s condition became serious) you didn’t take out what is called ‘Doctor’s Protective Insurance’ to guard you against damages that might accrue from this or any other suit for malprac
The subject has been before the courts and similar questions have been condemned. [Cosselmon v. Dunfee,
Defendant wras asked, over defendant’s objection, on cross-examination, if he had not conveyed property. As asked, the question was improper. But it would be permissible to ask him on cross-examination if he had conveyed his property to avoid the payment of damages he may have considered he had incurred.
Some of the instructions given for plaintiff are subject to criticism. It is difficult to say either' from the language of the petition or instructions whether plaintiff intended to charge that the X-ray treatment -was not a proper treatment for plaintiff’s ailment, even though skillfully and carefully applied, or that, though a proper treatment, it was negligently and unskillfully applied, or whether both these charges were intended. The petition should be made 'definite and clear. And in this connection it would be wrell to omit anything subjecting it to the charge of being argumentative. It is not necessary tó state therein what other physicians had told plaintiff; or that defendant “took a trip westor that “she believes he (another doctor) saved her from almost immediate death.”
The first instruction submits among other things whether X-ray treatment “was in accordance with the ordinary and established practice of the medical profession for the treatment of the disease from which plaintiff was suffering.” The proper submission of that question as raised by the petition is whether an ordinarily skillful and prudent physician would have adopted that treatment in the circumstances which confronted him when he applied it.
Of the instructions asked by defendant, two were refused which informed the jury that defendant as a
On the subject of direction to the jury in'cases of this character it may be stated to be the law that a physician is not to be held for honest error of judgment. He is only required to give his patient his diligent attention and best thought and in prescribing, administering or applying treatment, to use that care, skill and prudence that an ordinarily capable doctor would use in the same or like situation and condition or circumstances. [Wheeler v. Bowles,
The foregoing covers the points made by defendant in his “brief and authorities,” and results in reversing the judgment .and remanding the cause. All concur.
