4 A.2d 581 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1938
Argued October 26, 1938. Appellants, husband and wife, brought an action in trespass against Dr. David A. Hyman and Dr. Dennis H. Simmerman to recover the damages suffered by them respectively because of the alleged negligent professional treatment which the defendants, who are practicing dentists, separately gave the wife plaintiff.
Verdicts were rendered in favor of the husband for $650 and the wife for $1350, and against the defendants in the amount of $1000 each. *526
The court entered judgments non obstante veredicto in favor of the defendants. Plaintiffs appealed, the husband's appeal being to No. 172 October Term, 1938, and the wife's to No. 192.
The matter was apparently not raised in the court below, but since these are appeals from the entry of judgments non obstante veredicto under the Act of April 22, 1905, P.L. 286, and it is therein made our duty to "review the action of the court below, and enter such judgment as shall be warranted by the evidence," we feel obliged to say that there was no warrant whatever for bringing a single action against these two defendants. The plaintiff's statement and the evidence in the case establish that there was no concert of action by the defendants and no community of fault or joint negligence on their part. Each of them maintained a separate dental office in the City of Philadelphia, and practiced his profession without any assistance and cooperation from, or association with, the other. Dr. Simmerman was not consulted professionally by Mrs. McCartney until from six to thirteen days after Dr. Hyman had finished his professional work upon her mouth, and the alleged negligence of each of them related to separate and distinct acts of commission or omission. There was no more right to sue them as joint defendants in one action than there would be to sue in one action two defendants who were alleged to have negligently injured the plaintiff wife in separate automobile accidents occurring six or thirteen days apart. See Roberts v. Pitt Publishing Co.,
Apart from this, however, we are of opinion that the action of the court below in entering judgment non obstante veredicto in favor of each defendant should be affirmed. In passing upon disputed matters of fact, we, of course, accept the version most favorable to the plaintiffs, since the verdicts were in their favor.
The difficulty with the plaintiffs' case was that the *528 evidence on the trial failed to establish the averments in the statement.
There was no proof of carelessness or negligence in the extraction of the tooth, which caused it to break. Teeth may break, while being extracted, without any carelessness or negligence on the part of the dentist. This tooth had broken before it was extracted. The failure of the defendant Hyman to take out the whole root or to discover the presence of part of the root in her jaw, especially after she came back and complained of the pain she was suffering, might be held negligence, but there is no evidence in the case that the infection which resulted in the osteomyelitis of the jaw which caused Mrs. McCartney the pain, disability and expense for which she sought to recover damages in this action, was caused by or resulted from the piece or fragment of root which Dr. Hyman left in her jaw (Wohlert v. Seibert,
It was admitted by plaintiffs that on August 3, after showing Dr. Hyman that a part of the root had been left in her jaw, he had paid Mrs. McCartney $12, the amount of the bill she had obtained that day from Dr. Simmerman for extraction of the root.
On June 14 or June 21, 1935, — depending on whether the testimony of Mrs. McCartney or Dr. Simmerman is accepted —, at the suggestion of Dr. Greenway, a physician and surgeon, the wife plaintiff consulted Dr. Simmerman, a specialist in dental surgery, who had no professional connection whatever with Dr. Hyman. By an examination and X-ray photograph Dr. Simmerman found that a piece of the root of the tooth which had been extracted by Dr. Hyman had been left in her jaw. Her mouth was then inflamed, infected and swollen and he advised her that he could not remove the fragment of root until the inflammation had subsided. Accordingly he delayed doing so until June 25, 1935, when he extracted it. During the interval, he and his assistants treated her jaw and mouth, and continued to do so until September 2, 1935, in the course of which treatment another tooth, which appeared to be infected, was extracted on August 14, 1935. On September 8, 1935, she consulted a physician, Dr. Stroup, who, in association *530 with Dr. Jackson, another dentist selected by him, treated her for the osteomyelitis until sometime in March, 1936, when Dr. Stroup himself had to go to the hospital because of illness, and she consulted other physicians. By their direction, she was sent to the Temple University Hospital, where she was operated upon on June 6, 1936 and June 20, 1936.
The negligence charged against Dr. Simmerman was (1) extracting the piece of root too soon, that is before the infection or inflammation had sufficiently subsided; and (2) treating the osteomyelitis which developed in her jaws without sending her to a physician, and without making proper progress in arresting the condition.
Here again, the proof failed to support the claim.
(1) There was no proof that the piece of root was extracted too soon. The testimony was that the root was not taken out until it was proper to do so. No one testified otherwise.
(2) The evidence in the case failed to show any negligence on the part of Dr. Simmerman and his associates. His duty or obligation was to employ such reasonable skill and diligence as is ordinarily exercised in his profession: McCandless v. McWha,
Dr. Simmerman was a specialist in the extraction of teeth and in oral surgery and was competent to treat infections in the mouth and osteomyelitis of the jaw *531
bone without the advice of a physician. It is true that all dentists, just as all physicians, are required to take a general course and to pass an examination covering all branches; but in practice, some specialize as experts in certain branches, just as there are surgeons and other specialists in the medical profession, and Dr. Simmerman specialized in oral surgery, and the testimony was overwhelming that a dental surgeon was equipped and prepared to treat mouth infections and osteomyelitis of the jaw without the assistance or advice of a physician, and that it was the common practice in the dental profession to do so. SeeRemley v. Plummer,
There was no witness for the plaintiffs who testified that Dr. Simmerman's treatment of Mrs. McCartney's mouth and jaw was improper or not in accord with the recognized treatment used in the dental and medical profession. Indeed the subsequent treatment she received from Dr. Stroup and Dr. Jackson and the other physicians who followed them did not differ materially from what Dr. Simmerman had been doing. Dr. Stroup testified that the proper treatment of Mrs. McCartney's mouth, when he first saw her, consisted in treating the infection of the mouth and waiting for the sequestrum to develop to a point where surgery, by way of removal of the sequestrum, was indicated; and that heat applications or short wave treatments were used only to get the sequestrum to form as quickly as possible; that osteomyelitis spreads of its own accord; "it just goes right ahead when it is once started"; and that the time when the sequestrum is in condition to be operated on must be left to the individual judgment of the person in charge of the case. Dr. Stroup was not a surgeon and did not feel qualified to perform such an operation himself, and the plaintiff's jaw was not in condition to be operated on until the following June. Compare this *532 with Dr. Simmerman's testimony as to the treatment indicated, and which he gave — "Osteomyelitis of the jaw bone is treated by a very slow treatment . . . . . . the treatment is open drainage and irrigation and the proper taking care of this condition every so often (p. 200a); the sequestrum is the dead part of the bone. . . . . . The short wave is only one theory. . . . . . I advised heat." The only fault that Dr. Stroup could find with Dr. Simmerman's treatment was that a physician could have prescribed an opiate to dull the pain and make the patient more comfortable. He admitted that he was not familiar with dentistry nor competent to testify as to proper or recognized dental practice, but admitted that, in his opinion, a dentist was competent to treat infections of the mouth following extraction of teeth.
The evidence fails to show anything done by Dr. Simmerman in the treatment of this case which was contrary to the usual and recognized treatment for mouth infection and osteomyelitis of the jaw bone, at the stage in which the infection and osteomyelitis of the plaintiff were when she left him, and on the other hand the testimony in the case was greatly preponderant that his treatment was in accord with the usual and recognized dental practice. See Remley v. Plummer, supra; Barnard v. Schell,
In this case there was no evidence of negligence such as was proved in Wible v. Shor,
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgments are affirmed. *533