42 S.E.2d 616 | N.C. | 1947
Civil action to recover damages for alleged malpractice.
The defendant is a physician at Fairmont, N.C. where he operates a hospital known as Weinstein's Clinic.
On the afternoon of 5 October, 1945, Kelly Gray, an infant two and one-half years old, got hold of a bottle of aspirin tablets and ate about a dozen of them. Several hours thereafter, he became quite sick and began vomiting. His parents immediately carried him to the Weinstein Clinic, arriving there about 10:00 p.m. A nurse was on duty. She said: "I will take the child in and call the doctor." She called the defendant and acquainted him with the situation. Following his instructions, the nurse gave the child an enema and put him to bed. She told the parents the doctor said he would come right on down. The same assurance was repeated a little after midnight. The parents remained at the hospital throughout the night. The doctor did not arrive until 9 o'clock the next morning.
By 7 o'clock, approximately two hours before the doctor arrived, the child stopped crying, seemed to be out of pain, got off the bed, moved about unassisted, and took a drink of water.
The defendant, upon his arrival, came to the room where the child was, picked him up from the bed, carried him out, and said he was going to pump out his stomach. While out with the doctor, the child's screams could be heard all over the clinic. In about ten minutes the defendant brought the child back, laid him on the bed, and left the room. The child's face looked bloated, he was gasping for breath, and blood was running from the corners of his mouth. He died in about twenty minutes. Immediately thereafter the defendant came into the room, bent over the child's body, and, turning away, remarked: "Poor little fellow, he couldn't take it."
The plaintiff offered from the defendant's answer the allegation "that the said child died from the effects of the aspirin tablets."
From judgment of nonsuit, entered at the close of plaintiff's evidence, he appeals, assigning error. *465
The question for decision is whether the evidence suffices to carry the case to the jury. We think so. Love v. Zimmerman,
It is true there is no allegation of incompetency on the part of the defendant to practice his profession. It is alleged, however, that in the plaintiff's case (1) the defendant omitted to use reasonable care and diligence in the practice of his art, and (2) that he failed to exercise his best judgment in the treatment of the case. Either allegation, if supported by competent evidence, would require a jury finding. Nash v.Royster,
The plaintiff says that, with knowledge of the child's condition, the defendant failed to exercise due care in waiting more than ten hours before seeing the patient; and further that he omitted to exercise an enlightened judgment in pumping out his stomach without first ascertaining whether "he could take it." Long v. Austin,
The defendant, on the other hand, without presently taking issue with the facts as detailed by plaintiff's witnesses, seeks to uphold the judgment on the ground that there is no evidence of any improper treatment or that what was done departed from the methods of approved practice in general use. Mitchem v. James,
We agree with the plaintiff that whether the defendant proceeded with due and ordinary care, under the circumstances and conditions shown by the record, was a question of fact for the jury. Covington v. James,
The absence of expert medical testimony, disapproving the treatment or lack of it, is not perforce fatal to the case. There are many known and obvious facts in the realm of common knowledge which speak for themselves, sometimes even louder than witnesses, expert or otherwise.
The case as made survives the demurrer.
Reversed. *466