| Wis. | Apr 11, 1916

Roseoterry, J.

The defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and assigns as error the refusal of the trial court to grant such motion and bases his argument in support thereof upon two propositions:

(1) There is no evidence of any want of ordinary care and skill on the part of the defendant in the diagnosis and treatment of the deceased child.

(2) There is no proof that the failure to administer antitoxin, concededly the proper treatment, was the cause of the child’s death.

There was no substantial variation in the testimony of the physicians as to the symptoms of diphtheria and that the treatment thereof when its presence is established requires the administration of antitoxin. Summarizing the testimony of the physicians, the following appear to be the usual and ordinary symptoms of diphtheria: It may develop four or five days before death; it sometimes develops within twelve hours of death, and death sometimes occurs at a considerable interval of time after the patient has apparently recovered. It usually commences with a sore throat, general lassitude or tired feeling, rise of temperature, although fever is sometimes absent, and a swelling of the involved parts, although in some cases the swelling is very slight. It is ordinarily located in the mucous membrane of the throat, sometimes in the nose, sometimes in the larynx, and sometimes all three places are involved. A white membrane is usually formed over the involved area within twenty-four to forty-eight hours, depending on the activity of the disease. In making a diagnosis of a suspected case of tonsillar diphtheria, the physician would make an ordinary examination under the eye by looking into the throat and observing its condition, and if there was a membrane he would then make or cause to be made a bacteriological or miscroscopical examination of the contents of the throat. The membrane is the danger signal, the characteristic symptom, but is sometimes present in other diseases, not*93ably follicular tonsillitis, and in order to determine whether or not a patient is suffering from diphtheria a bacteriological or microscopical examination should be made, which will determine the character of the disease. In some cases a physician having and exercising the highest degree of skill might still err in his diagnosis. As soon as the diagnosis of diphtheria is made, the use of antitoxin 'should be resorted to, it being injected under the skin, and the involved area is treated-locally by the use of antiseptics.

It appears from the evidence that if antitoxin is administered promptly, that is, within twelve to twenty-four hours from the time the patient comes down with the disease, ninety-six to ninety-seven cases out of one hundred recover; that if it is administered later during the progress of the disease the results are uncertain; that in cases of diphtheria where antitoxin is not administered, from fifty to sixty out of one hundred recover. No physician can say with a reasonable degree of certainty that the use of antitoxin will produce recovery in any given case; it might work out in une case and not work out in another. So that it cannot be said in any given case that a recovery would have been certain had antitoxin been used.

The physicians agreed that it was not usual and customary practice to have a bacteriological or microscopical examination made except in cases where a membrane developed, and no physician was able to say, upon the testimony in this case as to the symptoms of the deceased child, that the defendant should have suspected the presence of diphtheria, there being no complaint as to sore throat, although she had a sore throat, no complaint as to backache, - tiredness, and no membrane present, and no temperature.

The case was submitted to the jury apparently upon the theory .that, it being an admitted fact that the child died of diphtheria and it being established that a 'bacteriological or microscopical examination of the contents of the throat will *94determine the presence or absence of the disease in a given case, and it appearing that the defendant bad not caused such examination to be made, the jury might say whether or not he had exercised ordinary care in his endeavor to discover the child’s ailment. This wholly ignores the standard of care and skill which the defendant was obliged to exercise. The law upon this question is plain and elementary and has been many times declared by this court:

“The general rule of law is that a physician or surgeon, or one who holds himself out as such, whether duly licensed or not, when he accepts an employment to treat a patient professionally, must exercise such reasonable care and skill in that behalf as is usually possessed and exercised by physicians or surgeons in good standing, of the same system or school of practice, in the vicinity or locality of his practice, having due regard to the advanced state of medical or surgical science at the time. This rule is elementary. It has its foundation in most persuasive considerations of public policy. Its purpose is to protect the health and lives of the public, particularly of the weak or credulous, the ignorant or unwary, from the unskilfulness or negligence of medical practitioners, by holding such practitioners liable to respond in damages for the results of their unskilfulness or negligence.” Nelson v. Harrington, 12 Wis. 591" court="Wis." date_filed="1860-06-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/graves-v-state-6598261?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6598261">12 Wis. 591, 597, 40 N.W. 228" court="Wis." date_filed="1888-11-08" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/nelson-v-harrington-8182972?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="8182972">40 N. W. 228; affirmed, Wurdemann v. Barnes, 92 Wis. 206" court="Wis." date_filed="1896-01-28" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/wurdemann-v-barnes-8185074?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="8185074">92 Wis. 206, 66 N. W. 111; Marchand v. Bellin, 158 Wis. 184" court="Wis." date_filed="1914-10-06" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/marchand-v-bellin-8191460?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="8191460">158 Wis. 184, 147 N. W. 1033.

It appeared without dispute that it is not usual or customary for physicians to cause bacteriological or miscroscopical examinations of the contents of the throat to be made except in cases where a membrane is present. There is not a particle of evidence to show that there was at any time any membrane present in the throat of the deceased child, and, it appearing without dispute that some cases baffle the most skilful diagnosticians, the case at bar may have been such a case, in which event the defendant cannot be held liable for his failure to make a correct diagnosis and consequent failure to properly treat the patient. The law does not require impos*95■sibilities, or even tbe exercise of tbe very highest degree of skill or tbe utmost care, but only such reasonable care and skill as is usually possessed by physicians of tbe same school in tbe locality. The presence of tbe membrane not being established, there is no evidence in this case upon which the jury could base a verdict finding that defendant did not exercise ordinary care.

The jury found that the failure of the defendant to exercise ordinary care was the proximate cause of the death of the child. We have carefully examined all the evidence in the case, and there is no evidence which shows or tends to show that the exercise of ordinary care and skill by the defendant in this case wotdd have prevented the child’s death. The medical testimony shows conclusively that the result where antitoxin is not administered in the early stages of diphtheria is uncertain, and that no one can say in a given case what the result would be if antitoxin were administered. It appears without dispute that the defendant made a careful and thorough examination of the child more than twenty-four hours after her illness began, in which he was assisted by another physician, and that in order to make the examination thorough and complete the chi] d was given an anesthetic and the cavity of the throat thoroughly explored and that at that time there was no membrane present, and according to the evidence a microscopic or bacteriological examination was not indicated. It is further undisputed that the defendant examined the child on Tuesday evening, the night before her death, and at that time there was no membrane present in the throat. The physicians further agreed that, in the absence of a membrane or other symptoms pointing directly to the presence of the disease, antitoxin should not be administered. The other symptoms were not present in this ease. The verdict of the jury to the effect that the failure of the defendant to exercise ordinary care and skill resulted in the-death of the child is a mere conjecture and has no founda*96tion, substantial or otherwise, in the evidence. “Verdicts cannot rest in mere conjecture.” Samulski v. Menasha P. Co. 147 Wis. 285, 133 N. W. 142. It follows that the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict should have been granted by the civil court.

By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court, is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to the circuit court to enter judgment for the defendant dismissing the plaintiffs complaint on the merits.

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