130 S.E. 481 | W. Va. | 1925
From an order of the circuit court of Mercer county setting aside a verdict for the plaintiff and awarding defendant a new trial, the plaintiff prosecutes this writ of error.
On April 5, 1923, plaintiff, W. A. Vaughan, a coal miner, by reason of a fall of slate and coal, sustained an injury to *292 his right foot — two bones near the first and second joint of the second and third toes being broken. On April 7th he was taken to Memorial Hospital, defendant, for treatment, under whose care he remained until discharged some weeks later. During said period of treatment his foot and ankle were encased first in a wire cast, then a plaster of paris cast. The latter was worn until it became loose, by reason of the swelling in the injured member having subsided, when a second plaster of paris cast was made. These casts, according to plaintiff, did not extend out beyond the broken parts of the foot. After discharge from treatment, plaintiff's foot became swollen, accompanied by severe pain. He consulted a doctor at Matoka, who made an X-ray examination, disclosing the fact that the bones were not knitted. He later came to Charleston, where the bones were removed.
The first ground of defense urged by the counsel for the defendant hospital is that it is not responsible for any default on the part of the physicians Todd and Rixey, they being independent agents; that, if this defense fails, there was no negligence in the diagnosis and treatment of the plaintiff's injury by said physicians.
A hospital incorporated and conducted for private gain, for the benefit of its stockholders, is liable in damages to its patients for negligence or misconduct of its officers and employees. Jenkins v. Charleston General Hospital TrainingSchool,
It is settled law in this state in this class of cases that a physician or surgeon is bound to bestow such reasonable and ordinary care, skill and diligence as physicians and surgeons in the same general line of practice ordinarily have and exercise in like cases, time and locality being taken into consideration; and that a physician is bound to exercise the average degree of skill possessed by the profession in such locality. This holding is in accord with the great weight of authority elsewhere. We think it may be said to be the generally accepted doctrine that a physician is not required to exercise the highest degree of care or skill and, diligence possible, in the treatment of an injury, or disease, unless he has by special contract agreed to do so. In the absence of *294
such special contract, he is only required to exercise such reasonable and ordinary skill and diligence as are ordinarily possessed and exercised by the average of the members of the profession in good standing, in similar localities and in the same general line of practice, regard being had to the state of medical science at the time. Dye v. Corbin,
Instructions numbers two and three of the plaintiff and number one of the court, embodied the foregoing principles of law, and were properly given to the jury as the law of the case. Instruction number four offered by the plaintiff was properly refused. It would have told the jury in effect that the physician was responsible for an error of judgment, without qualification, in the treatment of the plaintiff. The law is that if he possesses ordinary skill and exercises ordinary care in applying it, he is not responsible for mistake of judgment, unless such error of judgment is so gross as to be inconsistent with that degree of skill which it is the duty of a physician to possess. Dye v. Corbin, supra; Wurdemann v. Barnes,
The plaintiff maintains that the improper and negligent treatment consisted in the physician failing to place the paris cast on the foot so as to reach the broken parts and give rest and support to them; that as a result the broken bones were not placed and held in apposition the one to the other; that the muscles, ligaments, and tendons were not properly placed, so that they could adhere to their proper places by natural processes, thereby causing the foot to become diseased, and pus to accumulate and remain in the region of such diseased part; and that thereby the bones of the part became deteriorated and broken down, so that it became and was necessary to remove them. The result was a permanently weak, diseased and crippled foot.
The defendant contends that when the patient was received in its care that his foot was much swollen and that there were two open wounds on the foot, one between the great toe and the one next to it, and the other between the little toe and the one next to it; that both wounds were infected and exuding serum and pus; that after the infection was abated by the treatment the paris cast was placed on the foot, and the end left open so that the infected places could be watched and dressed; that the broken bones were properly set; and that the diseased bones were the result of their non-use — a disease known in medical science as osteoporosis.
The conclusion reached by the court as to the disposition of the case makes it unnecessary to detail at length the evidence offered in support of each of these diverse contentions. At the trial the plaintiff relied almost entirely upon the result which he claimed followed the treatment — that, by reason of the broken bones not being properly set, the bones at the point of the injury decayed and produced pus. Upon this question the evidence was conflicting. The plaintiff, Dr. Carr and the X-ray taken by the physician at Matoka tended to sustain this theory. The bones taken from the foot were introduced. The court properly refused to permit them to go in evidence to the jury for lack of being properly identified. Dr. Walker who took them from the foot was not *296
introduced as a witness, nor was his deposition taken. His absence was not accounted for. He unquestionably possessed peculiar knowledge concerning facts vitally essential to the plaintiff's case; the condition of the bones when removed, what caused the condition, and whether there was pus present. It is a well known principle of law that where a witness has the opportunity and power of knowing the truth on an issue the failure to call him by one upon whom the burden rests to sustain such issue, raises the presumption that if present his evidence would have been to his detriment. Coal Co. v. MiningCo.,
Affirmed.