148 Iowa 264 | Iowa | 1910
An abdominal operation for the removal of a cyst or tumor was performed by Dr. Schooler on plaintiff January 16, 1905. Dr. Smith was then Schooler’s partner and attended the patient until the 19th, when Schooler, who had been temporarily absent, resumed charge and attended the patient until her return to Blue Earth, Minn., Eeb. 23, 1905. The wound had not entirely healed, and, upon her arrival there, Dr. Schmidt dressed it. On the 21th he made an examination, and, according to his testimony, found a piece of surgeon’s gauze about sixteen inches square in the abdominal cavity, and, after enlarging the opening, removed it. Though the wound then healed, plaintiff continued to be weak and suffered from melancholia for some time, and in April, 1906, was operated on by Dr. Schmitt for hernia. Recovery for damages is sought for that, as is alleged, defendants were negligent in
2. Same:impeaching evidence. II. In rebuttal of the statement of Schooler that he had previously performed two operations and that she had a gonorrheal affection, the plaintiff testified that in so far as she knew she never had had any disease of that kind or any symptom thereof. On , cross-examination, she was asked whether she was examined on that subject at all on the second trial. An objection as not proper cross-examination was sustained. Q. “You gave no testimony at that second trial that you did not have gonorrheal affection even after Dr. Schooler testified that you did?” This was objected to as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, and not proper cross-examination. The objection was sustained, the court adding, “as not proper in this case at this time. We are trying this case now and not what was done at some other time and no testimony of this character will be admitted.”
V. That portion of the eighth instruction following is criticised:
As we understand counsel, the criticism is that the jury was not told the facts upon which expert opinion is founded must be fully proven. But no hypothetical questions were put.
Dr. Schooler testified that two gauze pads were left in the patient, and Dr. Smith, that he removed these pieces three days later. It was the habit of Dr. Schooler to knot