The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
The instructions given were correct. Indeed, the propriety of most of them is not controverted. A plaintiff, in a suit against a physician for malpractice, must prove "that the defendant assumed the character and undertook to act as a physician, without the education, knowledge and skill which entitled him to act in that capacity ; that is, he must show that he had not reasonable or ordinary skill; or, he is bound to prove, in the same way, that having such knowledge and skill, he neglected to apply them with such care and diligence, as, in his judgment, properly exercised, the case must have appeared to require; in other words, that he neglected the proper treatment from inattention and carelessness. Leighton v. Sargent,
Exceptions overruled.
