Bishop v. Shurly

211 N.W. 75, 237 Mich. 76, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 911
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1926
DocketDocket No. 9.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 211 N.W. 75 (Bishop v. Shurly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bishop v. Shurly, 211 N.W. 75, 237 Mich. 76, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 911 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Sharpe, J.

On August 18,1922, the plaintiff interviewed the defendant at his hospital in Detroit concerning the removal of the tonsils of her son Frederick, then 19 years of age. She testified:

“When Dr. Shurly came in, I told him that my son’s tonsils are affected and I would like to have them removed. He said all right and now we will have to. ask about the anesthetic, whether a local or a general. He said the local is cocaine and the general is ether. I told him I had been advised by the family physician, Dr. Douglas, who is now dead, never to use cocaine on myself or my family, not even for a tooth. Dr. Shurly said that he would give him ether. I asked *80 the doctor whether I should bring him in and have him examined today, but he said not to, but to bring him in the next morning between eight and nine and he would operate on him; also to give him a good big dose of salts, and nothing to eat in the morning.”

Mrs. Martha Bums, an undergraduate nurse, was with plaintiff. She testified:

“He asked whether she wanted him to use a local or general anesthetic, cocaine or ether, and Mrs. Bischoff told him she didn’t want him to use cocaine under any circumstances, that her family physician told her not to use cocaine; Dr. Shurly said he*would use ether, and asked how the boy was. Mrs. Bischoff told him he was in good condition every way. He told her not to give him supper that same night and a dose of salts and no breakfast the following morning, and we followed just those instructions.”

The next morning Frederick went to the hospital, accompanied by Mrs. Burns. His pulse and temperature were taken, and he was prepared for an ether anesthetic. He was then taken in the elevator to the operating room. Dr. Claude B. Gaines, an assistant to the defendant, and instructed by him to administer the anesthetic to Frederick, called by plaintiff for cross-examination under the statute, testified that he examined his pulse and heart and found them to be normal; that he prepared him for the operation “by giving him a local injection of procaine * * * in the back of the throat, where the muscular fibre comes down,” consisting of “two drachms or two teaspoonfuls of the solution, the strength of which is about one-half of one per cent,” by means of a needle with a curve in it, long enough to reach through the mouth to the tonsils. He further testified:

“Just as I was going to give the second injection, I discovered that the patient had collapsed, so we immediately quit and did not proceed with the second injection. The patient became limp and leaned forward.”

*81 The defendant was sent for, stimulants administered, and artificial respiration resorted to for about 40 minutes. A pulmotor was then used. He died about 10 minutes thereafter. The plaintiff had been sent for, and arrived before his death.

It is her claim that the contract she made with the defendant provided that a general, and not a local, anesthetic should be used in the operation, and that it was breached by defendant, and as administratrix of her son’s estate she brings this action to recover the damages the estate sustained by reason of his suffering and death. The case was submitted to the jury, who found for the defendant. Plaintiff reviews the judgment entered by writ of error.

The Contract. The defendant testified that Frederick was with the plaintiff when she first called upon him, and that he then examined him and found a diseased condition of the tonsils, and further:

“I remember distinctly having a conversation in regard to anesthesia. I may possibly have promised not to give this boy cocaine, and God knows I never gave him any. I may have promised to give him ether if it were possible to do so. * * * I cannot remember that I did, but I might have promised not to have given cocaine, because we never use cocaine in the throat by injection.”

Error is assigned upon the following extract from the charge:

_ “What then specifically is it necessary that the plaintiff prove by this preponderance of evidence, to warrant you to return a verdict in her favor? There are four separate elements each of which it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to establish to your satisfaction by a fair preponderance of the evidence to justify you in returning a verdict in her behalf. What are these four elements? First, it must be established that a contract was entered into between the mother of the deceased and Dr. Shurly, by which it was agreed that a general, and not a local anesthetic wasi to be ad *82 ministered, and that cocaine was not to be used. Second, it must be established'by a fair preponderance of the evidence that cocaine was used. Third, it must be established that the use of cocaine upon the deceased caused his death, that the administration of cocaine was the real cause of the death. And fourth, thé plaintiff must establish damages to which she is entitled.

“The proof of these four separate elements is essential by a fair preponderance of the evidence to warrant a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. If any one of these four elements has not been established, your verdict should pass in favor of the defendant.”

We find no error in this instruction. The burden was on plaintiff to satisfy the jury that her son died from the effects of the injection. Her counsel urge that the contract provided for the use of the general anesthetic, and that it was- breached by the use of the injection, but, if this injection was not the proximate cause of the death of the deceased, its use will not support plaintiff’s claim for damages for such breach. Plaintiff testified that when she arrived at the hospital she asked the defendant what was the matter with her son—

“and he said not to get nervous nor to worry, that his assistant had given him an injection of cocaine and he had collapsed, but his heart is strong, and the pulmotor is working on him, and he said he was going to save him. I told him that I had told him before not to give him cocaine but to give him ether, and he said he forgot to tell his assistant not to give him cocaine.”

We are impressed that on the claim as set forth in the declaration and the record as made the burden was on plaintiff to prove that cocaine had been administered.

Dr. Gaines’ Testimony. As before stated, Dr. Gaines, an assistant of defendant, was called for cross-examination by the plaintiff, and testified that he had *83 administered a local anesthetic (procaine) to deceased. It is plaintiff’s, claim that by doing so the contract was breached. On examination by defendant’s counsel, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
211 N.W. 75, 237 Mich. 76, 1926 Mich. LEXIS 911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bishop-v-shurly-mich-1926.