Angulo v. Hallar

112 A. 179, 137 Md. 227
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 5, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 112 A. 179 (Angulo v. Hallar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angulo v. Hallar, 112 A. 179, 137 Md. 227 (Md. 1920).

Opinion

Pattison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City, recovered by the appellee, Jennie Hallar, against the appellant, Dr. Juan J. Angulo (a dentist), for the alleged negligence and unskilfulness of his *228 servant, or employee, in the extraction of the roots of a tooth of the appellee.

The record discloses that the plaintiff, in November or December, 1917, had Dr. McCann, a dentist of Baltimore City, extract one of her teeth, In April, 1918, trouble developed in the locality from which the tooth had been drawn, and she suffered much pain therefrom, which she endured for a month or more, when on Sunday, the 4th day of May, 1918, she went to the office of Dr. Angulo, the defendant, to have him extract the roots which Dr. McCann had failed to take out in the extraction of the tooth by him. Upon entering the office of the defendant she asked for Dr. Anguto, but was told by one, who was afterwards learned to be Dr. Sandtler, that Dr. Angulo was not in, and he said to her, “What can I do for you ?” to which the plaintiff replied, “I have the tooth-ache and I think I have got some roots. I had the tooth drawn and I think there is some roots there left.” She was then asked why she had not gone to Dr. McCann, the one who had extracted her tooth, and she said “I did not like to go down to him because he did not take the roots out in the first place, and he knew he left them there.” Dr. .Angulo, she said, had some years before drawn some teeth for her and they had given her no- trouble, for which reason she had determined to have him, Dr. Angulo, extract the roots, which she thought were causing the pain from which she was suffering.

Dr. ¡Sandtler then told her, as she says, “to sit down in the chair,” which she did; that first he was inclined to the belief that the roots were not there, but upon further examination discovered them and proceeded to remove them. When he had concluded, he said to her “all right, now you can get up.” “So, I got up. I do not know how I got up> and I went over to the sink and washed my mouth out and I said 'Doctor, I do not believe I can go home.’ He said, 'I will fix you up,’ and he gave me aspirin tablets, and he said 'you take one of these.’ So I took one at his office and I went home.” When *229 she got home, her mouth was still bleeding and hurting her. It continued to bleed until 4 or 5 o’clock of the afternoon of that day, when her jaw began to swell and the pa,in grew worse. To alleviate the trouble, she used salt water, as she had been told to do. by Dr. Sandtler, but the swelling continued and on the next day she called in Dr. France., her family physician, who came to her home about 10 o'clock in the morning of that. day. At that time her mouth was not bleeding but, as she says1, the swelling “was getting worse all the timo” and she could not open her mouth. D'r. France looked in her mouth and gave her some medicine to relieve the pain. On the next day, Dr. France again called to see her. He felt her pulse and told her to keep -on taking the medicine ho had prescribed on the previous day. About the third day after her visit to Dr. Angulo’s office, she called him (Dr. Angulo) over the ’phone and told him of her trouble. In response thereto, he called to see her about 4 o’clock of the afternoon of that day, when he asked her “what have you been doing, who has been treating you ?” She told him Dr. France, and he said, “you should have come to me,” for she had been told by Dr. .Sandtler that if she were troubled with her mouth after her return home, she should, at once, come back to the office for treatment; to which she replied, “well, I was not able to come to you, and I did not know what to do, I was so bad off that I called for the family physician.” Dr. Angulo then returned to his office and got his syringei with which he syringed her mouth, and on the. next day he again went to her homo and again syringed her mouth. On this last visit, he told her there was a possibility of hemorrhages resulting; from the condition of her mouth and, to avoid that result, he told her she should do no work. But she. said she had to do it, as she had no one else to do it for her. She testified that the treatment of Dr. Angulo, at the times re^ ferred to, neither reduced the pain or the swelling. In her testimony, the plaintiff stated that Dr. France, after his visit on the 8th of May, did not again call upon her until sent for *230 on the Sunday following to relieve her of a hemorrhage with which she was then suffering.

Upon seeing the plaintiff, Dr. France decided to take her to the hospital, and this was done on the afternoon of that day. Thereafter the plaintiff underwent two operations. The subsequent condition of the plaintiff, as well as the character and effect of the operations, both of which were performed by Dr. France, is fully stated in the testimony of Dr. France, so we think it unnecessary to further prolong this opinion with what was said by the plaintiff in relation thereto.

Dr. France, when offered as a witness by the plaintiff, testified that about noon on the 5th day of May, 19 IS, he, at the request of the plaintiff, called at her home, and from existing indications^ he found the plaintiff “had hemorrhages of her inferior dental artery,” and her face much swollen. He was told of the fact that she had been to' the office of the defendant, and had the rootsi of a tooth extracted. An examination of her mouth disclosed necrosis of the bone or, as he expressed it, a rotting of the bone, and as the result of it, not only had the muscles and the gums around the bone become involved, but pus was exuding from the wound and she, at the time, was running some temperature. He, at that time, curetted the bone, washed out the cavity and packed it with gauze, and endeavored t& promote some drainage. On his next visit, the following day, he removed, as he says, quite a fragment .of the jaw bone. He áttended her daily thereafter but, as he expressed it, “the field was progressive and increased in the face of his efforts to stay it.” 'So, on the 18th or 19th day of May, the plaintiff was carried to the hospital and there, as the Doctor says, “under general an-aesthetics, I curetted the jaw and endeavored to relieve the condition through an opening and scraped all the necrotic, or soft granular bone out.” The condition, however, continued to progress and a few days later he agiain operated, at which time he extracted two of her teeth, one upon each side of the *231 cavity from which the roots had been taken, and again curetted the bone, this time making “an incision along the line of the jaw and going in from the outside.” In this last operation, ho removed all the surrounding bone that was involved by such necrotic process and again packed it and put her to bed. She then made an uninterrupted recovery.

The plaintiff in her testimony spoke of the cutting away of a large part of her jaw bone, the removal of which took with it two of her teeth. Dr. Uranee, when upon the stand, was asked, “when they talk about a jaw: bone being cut away, all that was done was the curetting of the bone, the bone that was affected by this soft or granulated portion of the jaw which had decayed?” Ans. “Yes.” “The jaw bones, themselves, are there, aren’t they?” Ans. “Absolutely.” “Both of them, are there ?” Ans.

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Bluebook (online)
112 A. 179, 137 Md. 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angulo-v-hallar-md-1920.