This is an action to recover damages for the alleged negligence of the defendant in allowing a tooth to fall into the plaintiff’s throat during an operation performed on January 7, 1913, for the extraction of several teeth by the defendant which was performed while the plaintiff was under an anaesthetic. The plaintiff contended that the tooth which fell into his throat ultimately lodged in his lung. There was evidence
It appeared that nine weeks after the operation the plaintiff coughed up a tooth which he produced in evidence. He testified that “his coughing was relieved immediately thereafter.”
The record recites that the plaintiff offered no dental or medical evidence, nor any further evidence to show “whether the symptoms which it appeared he had were or could have been caused by the tooth.”
The defendant’s evidence tended to show that he was a dentist of experience and skill. He also offered expert testimony to show that under the conditions attending the extraction of the plaintiff’s teeth, it was not carelessness on his part if a tooth was inhaled by the plaintiff during the operation, but was entirely consistent with due care. Four medical experts called by the defendant testified that in their opinion the plaintiff had two shocks soon after his teeth were extracted; that the symptoms from that time on were consistent with hemiplegia; and that the tooth, wherever it had lodged during the nine weeks, had nothing, to do with his condition.
1. The jury properly could not have been instructed that upon the evidence their verdict must be for the defendant. Accordingly the defendant’s first request was refused rightly. The jury were not obliged to believe the expert testimony, offered by the defendant, that to allow the tooth to fall into the plaintiff’s throat was consistent with due care, although such testimony was not contradicted. Lindenbaum v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad,
2. The defendant’s second request was that "There is no evidence justifying the jury in finding that the plaintiff’s loss of speech, weakened condition of body, partial paralysis and ina
We are of opinion that this instruction, in substance at least, should have been given. The connection between the negligent act of the defendant and the plaintiff’s condition afterwards was necessary to be established by a fair preponderance of the evidence in order that he might recover. The burden of proof rested upon the plaintiff to show by competent evidence that his condition after the negligent act of the defendant, if that was established, was the effect in part at least of such negligence. Whether such causal connection existed depended upon proof and could not be left to conjecture or speculation. Lane v. Atlantic Works,
Under the instructions of the presiding judge the jury were allowed to determine whether the physical ailments from which they found the plaintiff suffered after the operation, and his present condition, were due to the inhaling of the tooth.
We are of opinion that this instruction was wrong, and that the jury were not justified in finding that the plaintiff’s condition after
It follows that the entry must be
Exceptions sustained.
Notes
There was a trial on February 19,1915, before Dana, J., and a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $2,700. The defendant alleged exceptions.
