151 Iowa 710 | Iowa | 1911
The allegations in the counterclaim of negligence submitted to the jury were that plaintiff in effecting the delivery of defendant’s wife during child labor, negligently used defective instruments; that in the negligent and unskillful use of the instruments he lacerated and wounded defendant’s wife; that he afterwards treated such
Now in the present case the complaint of the instruction is not on behalf of the party complaining of the malpractice, but on the part of the physician charged with such malpractice; and how it can be said that he is possibly prejudiced, in view of the fact that the vicinity was a small country town, and that the testimony relied upon as against him was principally the testimony of physicians practicing in larger places, we are unable to understand. One physician of the vicinity did testify; but there is nothing in his testimony from which it could be inferred or surmised that the standard of practice. in that vicinity was higher than in similar localities; and, unless the jury might have been led to exact of plaintiff a higher standard of skill and care than required in similar localities, then plaintiff could not possibly have been prejudiced by the instruction. As supporting the view that such an instruction as above quoted, though erroneous, may be nonprejudicial in a case where the physican is appealing from a judgment against him, see Dunbauld v. Thompson, 109 Iowa, 199.
In Ferrell v. Ellis, 129 Iowa, 614, an instruction on this general subject was held erroneous and prejudicial in its nature, not because it referred to the vicinity rather than similar localities, but because it contained no limitation whatever .and required the physician who appealed to possess the reasonable degree of skill and learning ordinarily 'exercised by members of the profession without regard to locality, and the court there calls attention to the fact that, although the locality in which the physician practiced was a mere country village too small to find place in the
If the instruction now complained of might be erroneous under some circumstances, it was certainly not prejudicial, as affirmatively appears from the record.
Finding no error in the record which could have been ' prejudicial to the appellant, the judgment is affirmed.