190 Mo. App. 48 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
This is a suit for damages accrued on account of personal injuries received through the alleged negligence of defendant. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.
Defendant is a dentist, practicing his profession in the city, of St. Louis, and plaintiff was treated by him as his patient. ■ The evidence tends to prove that plaintiff called on defendant about the middle of December, 1910, for the purpose of having him treat her teeth. Defendant examined her teeth and went about the matter of killing the nerve in one before filling it. She returned on several different days to his office and he administered treatment toward killing the nerve and took the nerve out. On December 2, plaintiff says defendant told her that three of her teeth had .moved forward and it would be necessary to push them back. Thereupon he took an instrument with a couple of prongs and placed it between those teeth — that is, the first molar and the one in front — and wedged them back and put some cotton in between them. Plaintiff says that defendant pushed the three back teeth backwards for as much as one-eighth of an inch or more all at one sitting and placed cotton between. Thereafter, on Monday, the 26th, plaintiff returned to defendant’s office and he inserted gutta-percha between the teeth, and inserted gutta-percha between the teeth a second time on December 27, in order to hold them thus separated, until, on the 29th of December, enough separation was established between the teeth to squirt a stream of water through. Thereupon defendant placed the same or a similar apparatus between the teeth for the purpose of keeping the first molar tooth from moving forward, and then filled the first molar so as to prevent them from returning to the natural position. As a result of this treatment and while she was yet undergoing it, plaintiff says she began to suffer from a nervous affliction in the lower jaw which entailed not only great pain but a disfigurement upon her. It
Plaintiff put on several expert witnesses, all of whom answered the same hypothetical question, to the effect that such treatment was improper. So much of the hypothetical question as is necessary to consider here is as follows:
“Q. Doctor, suppose ... on the 24th day of December, 1910, he [Dr. Wolff] placed an apparatus between her first molar tooth and the tooth immediately in front of it, moved them an eighth of an inch or more, and thereupon placed cotton between them from Saturday, December 24, to Monday, December 26, 1910, to keep them apart; that on December 26, 1910, he took the cotton out and placed gutta-percha between them to keep and hold them apart, and from the time he moved her tooth with said apparatus, her tooth pained her intensely and her jaw commenced to twitch and her teeth were out of line, and that on the 27th day of December, 1910, he put in more gutta-percha between her teeth; and on the 29th day of December, 1910, he had enough separation between her first molar tooth and the other tooth immediately adjoining it in front thereof to squirt a stream of water through that; he then placed the same or a similar apparatus between her teeth for the purpose of keeping the first molar tooth from moving forward; he then filled the first molar tooth so that the teeth could not return to their natural position; . . . from your experience as a dentist, can you give me your opinion whether Dr. Wolff treated and operated upon her teeth properly?”
This, the experts answer, was improper treatment and probably occasioned the nervous trouble complained of.
It is to be noted that the hypothetical question reckons with the state of facts detailed by .plaintiff,
On .the part of defendant the evidence is, that he separated plaintiff’s teeth in the ordinary manner, but only slightly, so as to insert two thicknesses of rubber dam, and that such rubber dam is very thin — scarcely thicker than paper. Defendant positively asserts that he did not separate the teeth unduly and that the separation was so slight he could not even estimate it except to say that it was an infinitesimal portion of an inch. All of the experts — both for plaintiff and defendant — testifying to the same effect,- that the treatment as described by defendant was entirely proper in every respect and such as is employed by a competent, skillful dentist in-every case of the kind. Then, too, a number of witnesses, including defendant, say that plaintiff was suffering from the nervous twitching mentioned before defendant treated her at all.
From what has been said, it appears that the negligent treatment, if any, consists, not in the mere separation of plaintiff’s teeth, but rather in separating them as much as an eighth of an inch or more at one treatment and holding them in the position so separated for several days. Indeed, such is the evidence, pointed and direct, given by plaintiff’s witnesses. For instance, Dr. Baer, plaintiff’s principal witness, on whom she relies to show the treatment administered by defendant was careless and unskillful, criticised it only as too strenuous, in' that the separation of the teeth was too rapidly done and the extent of the separation too great and the holding of the teeth in such position after separation continued too long. Concerning this matter, in answer to a question pro
But though such is the issue on the evidence tending to show the careless and unskillful conduct of defendant, it was not submitted to the jury by the instructions given. Plaintiff’s first and principal instruction which submits the negligence, if any, shown in the evidence and relied upon for a recovery is as follows:
“The court instructs the jury that if you believe and find from the evidence that the defendant on or about and between December 23, 1910’, and January 14, 1911, in filling and treating the plaintiff’s teeth,, carelessly and unskillfully forced and held her teeth, apart and out of their proper position, and the jury further believe and find from the evidence that the-defendant failed to exercise such care and skill as is-used usually by reasonably skillful members of his profession in the city of St. Louis under the same or similar circumstances in so doing, and the jury believe- and find that the plaintiff was injured by reason of the-failure of the defendant to exercise such care and skill, then you will find for the plaintiff.”
Here, there was no evidence whatever authorizing the submission of the case to the jury on the theory of the instruction above given, for the failure of duty shown is the rapid separation of the teeth for the amount of space specified and holding them there for such a length of time. It is this the experts said was improper. When all of the instructions, given in the case are read together, it appears that none of them sub
Plaintiff relies upon the case of Wheeler v. Bowles, 163 Mo. 398, 63 S. W. 675. But upon a careful scrutiny of the opinion in that case it is to be observed that the specific act of negligence developed at the trial was there submitted to the jury by the instructions. There plaintiff suffered the dislocation of a shoulder and the evidence was that defendant did not recognize the dislocation, but treated the patient instead, as the result of an erroneous diagnosis, for a sprain, and allowed her to recover without reducing the dislocation. By the instruction the jury were required to find that defendant carelessly and unsldllfully treated the patient so that “said dislocation was not set, placed or reduced,” and this was the specific act of negligence charged and proved.
Defendant argues that plaintiff’s story is so unreasonable in itself as to be opposed to physical facts and, therefore, we should reverse the judgment outright, but we regard the question concerning this matter as one for the jury.
For the error in the instructions in failing to submit to the jury the negligent treatment which the evidence tended to prove, the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered.