Mrs. Sarah Pilgrim brought this suit in Fulton County, for damages for malpractice of medicine, against Dr. J. W. Landham, a resident of Fulton County, and Dr. R. E. Hamilton, a resident of Douglas County. The case was nonsuited as to Land-ham; and thereafter was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction as to the defendant Hamilton. To these rulings the plaintiff excepted.
The plaintiff testified that after her family physician, Dr. Hamilton, had examined her at Douglasville, Georgia, and diagnosed her case as a tumor and not pregnancy, although she told him she thought it was the latter, he brought her to Atlanta to- Dr. Land-ham, an x-ray specialist. “When we got to Dr. Landham’s office he said I had better lie down and rest a while; so they carried me into the rest-room, and I laid down and rested until Dr. Hamilton came. I rested until Dr. Hamilton and Dr. Landham came in. Dr. Landham and Dr. Hamilton came in, but my husband was not there; he was in the sitting room. Dr. Landham walked in there and saw me, and Dr. Hamilton introduced him to me. He said, ‘Dr. Hamilton tells me you have a tumor.’ I said, ‘Yes, that is what he said.’ I was lying on my back, and he came in and put his hand on my stomach, and felt it; and I said, ‘D.o you reckon I am really pregnant?’ He said, ‘It seems to be like Dr. Hamilton says. It is too low down to be pregnancy.’ He put his hand on my abdomen, right here, and felt right here [indicating]. That part of my abdomen was distended; you could tell from my stomach that there was something wrong. I said, ‘Are you going to take an x-ray of me?’ and Dr. Landham said, ‘No, it would not show *453 up.’ They carried me in then, that same day; they said they had decided to give me a treatment. I didn’t know what kind of a treatment they were going to give me, but they carried me in and gave me this x-ray treatment. I said, ‘Are you sure it is all right to give me this treatment?’ and they said, ‘Yes,’.and they turned me on my side and on my back, and gave me the treatment.” She further testified: “I talked to Dr. Landham about giving me an x-ray examination, but he said it wasn’t necessary.” The 'plaintiff’s husband testified that Dr. Landham told him that “the x-ray would not show up a tumor.”
Relatively to a diagnosis by a doctor for discovering the nature of an ailment, the general rule of law is that a patient is entitled to a thorough and careful examination, such as the condition of the patient and the attending circumstances will permit, with such diligence and method of diagnosis for discovering the nature of the ailment as are usually approved and practiced under similar circumstances by members of his profession in good standing. Fortner
v.
Koch (Mich.),
This is not one of those cases where the question of negligence was one that could be determined without resort to expert testimony, because facts, although connected with medicine, were so well known as not to require expert testimony to place them before the jury; it is not one of those matters which jurors must be credited with knowing by reason of common knowledge (Whitson
v.
Hillis,
Judgment affirmed.
