189 A.D. 827 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1919
The plaintiff has recovered a verdict against the defendant for alleged malpractice. The defendant is a dentist. The facts, so far as necessary for the determination of this appeal, and taking the view of them most favorable to the plaintiff, are as follows:
It seems to me that this case necessarily involves a holding that if a person has a tooth extracted and thereafter his mouth is sore or he is ill, the dentist is responsible. This is not the law. The court correctly charged the jury: “ The defendant was not a guarantor of his work, or the result that would follow; he is not an insurer as to the result. * * * In other words, in this case, he was required to use the ordinary care of such
Applying that rule, what facts are there upon which to base a finding of the defendant’s liability? The defendant extracted the plaintiff’s tooth, but there is not a hint or claim that it was not necessary. He administered gas and had some difficulty in doing so. The plaintiff desired it and there is no proof that it was improper to do so, that too much was administered or that it could have been done by any better method. Her mouth bled, but this is usual, ordinary and unavoidable. The cavity looked large to the plaintiff. Again this was the usual and ordinary result. No one else having special knowledge upon the subject confirmed her opinion. She had difficulty in talking. Two teeth had been removed —■ one natural tooth and an artificial tooth attached to it. This difficulty was disagreeable, natural and temporary. Small pieces of the alveolar process, commonly called bone, came out. Again, however, there is an absolute dearth of testimony that this was the result of any lack of skill or anything more than frequently happens. The plaintiff claimed, at the time of the trial, that her gum was so shrunken at the place of this extraction as to necessitate her having artificial teeth of an unusually large size. The only purpose of this that I can think of was to give the jury the impression that too much alveolar process was removed by this extraction. Of this there is no testimony. The testimony on the contrary is to the effect that such alveolar process as remains in the vicinity of an extraction is absorbed and disappears. This is also a fact of common and general knowledge. Plaintiff claims her lips were cut and bleeding. When plaintiff struggled so that even with the help of a nurse defendant was unable to administer gas and was only able to do so with the added assistance of plaintiff’s husband, this result cannot be attrib
I am not unmindful of the fact that in some cases the lack of skill or want of care is so obvious that expert testimony is unnecessary. (Evans v. Roberts, 172 Iowa, 653; 154 N. W. Rep. 923.) This, however, is not such a case, and the counsel for the respondent in his brief fails to point out anything which the defendant did or omitted to do that indicated absence of skill or lack of care. He merely refers to results and claims that from these a want of care may be inferred. But these, as previously stated, are not of such a character as to warrant that inference without the aid of medical testimony.
The judgment and order should be reversed and the complaint dismissed, with costs.
, Jenks, P. J., Rich, Putnam and Blackmar, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and complaint unanimously dismissed, with costs.