24 Wash. 648 | Wash. | 1901
The opinion of the court was. delivered by
The respondent brought this action against the appellant, who is a physician and surgeon, to recover for injuries alleged, to have been caused him by the appellant’s negligent treatment of an injury from which he was suffering. The undisputed evidence shows that the respondent met with an accident .early in July, 1896,. which a Dr-.Francis, .who was employed by respondent to attend him, .pronounced a fracture of the tibia of the left leg; that Dr. Francis treated the injured limb as for
The court charged' the jury that under the issues as made by the pleadings there could be no recovery on the part of the respondent unless the jury should find from the evidence that the respondent’s leg was in fact broken. The appellant urges that this instruction, whether right or wrong, became the law of the case, which the jury were bound to obey, and that the overwhelming weight of the evidence was-to the effect that the leg had not been broken. We are asked to reverse the case and grant a new trial on this ground. On this question it may be that the weight of the professional testimony was to the effect that there had heen no fracture of the bones of the injured limh, but the evidence was contradictory. There was substantial testimony the other way, sufficient of itself to support the verdict of the jury. In such a case, as we have repeatedly held, it is not within the province of this court to overrule the verdict, but it must stand, even though we may believe that the weight of the testimony is against it. Pronger v. Old National Bank, 20 Wash. 618 (56 Pac. 391), and cases there cited.
In the progress of the trial one Dr. Kibbe was examined as a witness, and was permitted, over the appellant’s objection, to exhibit to the jury an X-ray negative taken by himself of the respondent’s injured limb, and to testify that, in his opinion, based upon his examination made in
The record shows the following:
“Q. Will you just define that external capsular ligament ?
A. The external capsular ligament extends from the rough surface of the outer part of the condyle of the femur and this ridge which you see (indicating on identification 1) around the upper part of the tibia. The ligament extends all around.
The Court: It seems to me every doctor has located that in a different place. I would like to see, in a surgical work, just where that ligament is; and I think the jury would like to see. I do not want to introduce surgical works myself, if counsel do not want them, but I would like to have an exact description of this.
Q. Since that point has been made prominent, I will ask you, doctor, to state now whether that capsular ligament there surrounds the entire knee?
„A. Surrounds the entire knee joint; yes, sir.” (Then follows a minute description by the witness of the location and the uses of the capsular ligament.)
This remark of the judge is objected to as being a comment on the facts, and as being thus within the prohibition of § 16, art. 4, of the state constitution. While the judge’s language might have been more happy, the remark, it seems to us, was nothing more than an expression of his inability to understand, from the description given by the medical witnesses, the exact location of the particular ligament inquired of, and his fear that the jury were being no better enlightened. His object was simply to call the attention of counsel to the difficulty felt by him, and to enable them to make the matter clear. Such an observation is not a comment on the facts. But even if we mistake in this, it cannot be that every remark that the judge may make during the progress of the trial touching the evidence is such a comment as will work a reversal, no mat
The court gave to the jury the following instruction:
“If you find, under the evidence, that the plaintiff is entitled to recover, it will be your duty to assess the amount of damages which, in your judgment, he should recover under the evidence in the case. In estimating this amount you may take into consideration the loss of time occasioned by the immediate effect of the injury complained. of. You may further take into consideration the physical and mental suffering occasioned by the injury. In addition you may consider the occupation of the plaintiff, and his abilitv to earn money; and he will be entitled to recover for any permanent reduction in his power ,to earn money by reason of his injuries. The amounts of these several elements of damages, if any you find, are entirely within your province, having due regard to the obligation of your oath and the duty of reasonable action on your part under that oath. You will, however, bear in mind, gentlemen, that, whatever you may find ‘ on the question of damages, you can give no damages for any loss of time or pain or suffering of the plaintiff prior to the time the plaintiff was attended by the defendant, if you find he was so attended. The damages, if any you find, cannot, in all, exceed the sum of seven thousand dollars.”
It is urged against this that it is not sufficiently explicit; that, while it may be a correct statement of the law, it was liable to be misunderstood by the jury; that the phrase “injuries complained of” is broad enough to include all of the injuries received by the respondent, — not only those caused by the act of the appellant, but the original injury, for which the appellant is not responsible.
It is said that the court did not, in his instructions, submit to the jury the appellant’s theory of the case, — that is, did not direct their attention to the fact that the appellant contended that he had never undertaken to treat the injured limb, — and the refusal to give a requested instruction to that effect is assigned as error. On this point the court instructed the jury that, in order for the respondent to recover, they must be satisfied by a preponderance of the evidence that the respondent’s leg was in fact broken, and that the appellant, acting as a physician and surgeon, unskillfully and negligently treated the broken leg; and further on gave the following:
. “The court instructs you that the fact that a physician responds to a call for his professional services does not necessarily constitute an employment, unless some act is done or advice given by the physician which indicates an intention on his part to enter upon the employment. He may absolutely refuse this employment, if he sees fit. But when any act is done, or advice given, that may reasonably be construed 'into indicating an active entering upon the employment, then the liability of the physician attaches, and he may be held responsible for his negligence or lack of skill, as you are elsewhere herein instructed.”
These instructions, we think, sufficiently covered the point.
At the hearing of a motion for a new trial, the trial
The judgment is affirmed.
Reavis, C. J., and Dunbar and Anders, JJ., concur.