In June 1973, plaintiff Mary Senesac underwent a therapeutic abortion, performed by defendant Mary Jane Gray, M.D., at the Medical Center Hospital of Vermont in Burlington. 1 During the course of the operation plaintiff’s uterus was perforated, necessitating an emergency hysterectomy.
Plaintiff filed a complaint in the Chittenden Superior Court, alleging that Dr. Gray negligently performed the abortion procedure. She also claimed that Dr. Gray failed to inform her of the risks inherent in the operation. In addition, plaintiff sought damages from defendant Associates in Obstetrics and Gynecology (Associates), of which Dr. Gray was a member, on the theory of respondeat superior.
The case was tried before a jury. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the trial court granted defendants’ motion for directed verdict as to the surgical negligence claim. Before the claim based on lack of informed consent was submitted to the jury, plaintiff was granted permission to dismiss with prejudice the action against Dr. Gray. The jury then returned a verdict in favor of defendant Associates as to the informed consent count. Plaintiff appeals, claiming error in the granting of the defendants’ motion for a directed verdict.
In passing on the propriety of the granting of a motion for a directed verdict, V.R.C.P. 50 (a), we must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, excluding any modifying evidence.
A. G. Ryan
v.
Old Fox Chemical Co.,
*313
The 'burden is on the plaintiff in a medical malpractice action to prove both that the defendant physician was negligent and that the plaintiff’s injuries were proximately caused by that negligent conduct.
Macey
v.
James,
Plaintiff does not argue, nor could she successfully, that this case falls within the exception to the rule requiring expert medical testimony. A complicated surgical procedure is at issue, which is not easily evaluated by a lay person. Plaintiff also acknowledges that she did not introduce any independent medical testimony on the standard of care “ordinarily possessed and exercised in like cases by physicians in the same general line of practice.”
2
Pepin
v.
Averill,
Assuming, without deciding, that plaintiff successfully established the appropriate standard of medical care through her examination of Dr. Gray, we nevertheless must affirm the judgment below because no expert medical testimony was produced to show that Dr. Gray departed from that standard of care. At no point during plaintiff’s determined cross-examination did Dr. Gray concede that she departed from the standard of care ordinarily exercised by the average, reasonably skillful gynecologist. Moreover, plaintiff offered no expert medical testimony of her own to show the asserted lack of requisite care and skill as is required by our decision in
Domina
v.
Pratt, supra,
We have no difficulty with the proposition that “third party expert testimony is not necessary if a defendant doctor’s own testimony establishes the standard of care
and departure from it.” Hill
v.
Squibb & Sons, E.R.,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Joseph Senesac withdrew as a party plaintiff immediately prior to jury selection.
The common law elements of a medical malpractice action have been codified with slight modification at 12 V.S.A. § 1908. The community standard of medical care has been replaced, the appropriate standard now being:
The degree of knowledge or skill possessed or the degree of care ordinarily exercised by a reasonably skillful, careful, and prudent health care professional engaged in a similar practice under the same or similar circumstances whether or not within the state of Vermont.
12 Y.S.A. § 1908(1) (emphasis added).
Plaintiff did introduce into evidence the pathologist’s report of his analysis of the uterus. However, only Dr. Gray was asked to interpret this document, and even viewing her testimony in the light most favorable to plaintiff it completely failed to support plaintiff’s claim.
