Beech v. Hunter

14 Tenn. App. 188
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 12, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 14 Tenn. App. 188 (Beech v. Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beech v. Hunter, 14 Tenn. App. 188 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

These cases were before us on November 7th, when the judgments of the lower court were affirmed for the rea *190 sons that the bill of exceptions was not signed and authenticated by the trial judge, and not dated or marked filed by the clerk. Since then a petition for a rehearing has been filed, in which a diminution of the record was suggested and the missing parts of the record supplied, hence the petition is granted, and the suits are now before us on the assignments of errors.

As stated by us in our former opinion, these two actions were for damages for injuries to Mrs. Beech while being treated by the defendant, Dr. Hunter, a chiropractor, and - for loss of her services by her husband, B. L. Beech. They were tried by the court and a jury.

At the close of plaintiffs’ proof and again at the conclusion of all the proof defendant moved the court for directed verdicts, which motions were by the court overruled.

The jury returned verdicts for $1000 in favor of Mrs. Beech and $750 in favor of B. L. Beech. Motions for á new trial and in arrest of judgment having been overruled, defendant has appealed in error to this court and has assigned errors in both cases.

Mrs. Beech has since died and her action has been revived in the name of her administrator.

Mrs. B. L. Beech; who was fifty-nine years of age, was suffering with pains in her back. However, she was able to go about and to do all of her housework, and to work in the fields on her husband’s farm.

In the spring of 1929 two doctors at Fayetteville diagnosed her trouble as,neuritis and treated her for same. She was not benefited by their treatment.

In September, 1929, she went to Dr. F. L. Hunter, a chiropractor, for treatment. As stated by Dr. Htanter during the trial, the chiropractic method of treating diseases is by manipulation of the spinal column, “adjusting the misaligned vertebrae to resume natural coordination from the spine.” She told Dr. Hunter that Doctors Sloan and MeCown had said her trouble was neuritis and had treated her for same but their treatment had done her no good. Dr. Hunter examined her back and spinal column and found, as he says, “an impinged nerve running out over the shoulder, causing pain through the region of the shoulders and back.” He also says he found three misaligned or displaced vertebrae. Others testified that she had a knot on her spinal column. Dr. Hunter, when asked about it, did not testify that there was one, but he did not deny it, but stated that he had found the misplaced vertebrae. He gave Mrs. Beech fourteen treatments, with little effect. The treatments consisted of turning infra-red rays of light on her back, rubbing her back and adjusting the spinal column by pressure with his hands.

*191 On October 22, 1929, she went to his office for her fifteenth treatment. On that morning she did some housework, drove eight miles in an automobile, walked about the square of the town of Fayetteville and climbed the stairs to Dr. Hunter’s office for the treatment. He placed her (as was the custom) face down on a table, removed the clothing from her back, turned on the infra-red light and massaged her back. Nest he pressed with both hands upon her back bone where the vertebrae were out of line, which caused her so much pain that he had to desist. He lifted her from the table and she could not stand up. It was found that she could neither stand nor walk. From that time both lower limbs were paralyzed.

Defendant’s first four assignments of errors are to the effect that the court erred in not sustaining his motions for peremptory instructions, and there was no evidence to support the verdict.

Defendant’s defense is, first, that he did not press upon her back at that particular treatment, only turned on the light and massaged her back; second, that he was not negligent in so pressing upon her spinal column to adjust it, as he had used due diligence and all his skill in diagnosing her ease, that he had diagnosed it as neuritis and treated her in accordance with the practices of chiropractic.

On the first question, Mrs. Beech, B. L. Beech and Mrs. Baymond Beech all testified that he pressed upon her back. B. L. Beech and Mrs. Baymond Beech had accompanied Mrs. B. L. Beech and were present in the room while she was being treated. There being a conflict of evidence on this question, the matter was for the jury, and this court cannot disturb the finding of the jury.

On the question of whether he was guilty of negligence in his diagnosis and treatment of Mrs. Beech’s case, several physicians testified that Mrs. Beech had Pott’s disease, which, is easily recognized in its advanced stages, although it might not be discovered in its first stages; that it causes a “buckling” of the backbone, evidenced by knots, which finally causes a pressure on the spinal cord, resulting in paralysis. Dr. Hunter states that when she came to him for treatment she had three displaced vertebrae. Dr. Sheddan says that when called to see her after she was paralyzed he made an examination and found a knot on her back at about the middle vertebra and concluded that she had Pott’s disease and that her paralysis was caused by pressure on- the spinal column. Dr. McCown stated that if he had discovered at the time she came to him for treatment that she had three vertebrae misplaced or out of alignment, he would not have diagnosed her trouble as neuritis, but as Pott’s disease, probably.

*192 Pott’s disease is the eating away of the vertebrae, generally of tuberculous origin. Dr. Sheddan stated that the effect of Pott’s disease is to destroy the body of the vertebrae, that in this disease any pressure on the spine is to be avoided.

Dr. McCown stated that in his opinion her paralyzed condition was caused by some pressure on the spinal cord due to displacement of diseased vertebrae. Dr. Cannon stated that he considered that the manipulation of her spinal column was the exciting cause of her paralysis.

Evidently the jury believed that the vertebrae of her spinal column, weakened by the disease, were displaced by the pressure of Dr. Hunter’s hands, which caused pressure on the spinal cord, resulting in paralysis.

It appears from the evidence that Dr. Hunter did not bring into use the necessary knowledge, skill and science which his profession demands, and did not exercise reasonable care and diligence in the treatment of Mrs. Beech. Wood v. Clapp, 4 Sneed, 65.

“In the absence of sa special contract to do so, a physician or surgeon is not required to exercise extraordinary skill and care or the highest degree of skill and care possible, nor, if not a specialist, the skill and care of the specialist or expert, but is only required to possess and exercise the degree of skill and learning ordinarily possessed and exercised, under similar circumstances, by the members of his profession in good standing, and to use ordinary and reasonable care and diligence, and his best judgment, in the application of his skill to the case.” 48 C. J., 1113, sec. 101; Wood v. Clapp, 4 Sneed, 65; Alder v. Buckley, 1 Swan, 69; Young v. Dozier, 4 Tenn. App., 151.

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14 Tenn. App. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beech-v-hunter-tennctapp-1931.