Black v. Caruso

187 Cal. App. 2d 195, 9 Cal. Rptr. 634, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 1372
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 8, 1960
DocketCiv. 18804
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 187 Cal. App. 2d 195 (Black v. Caruso) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Black v. Caruso, 187 Cal. App. 2d 195, 9 Cal. Rptr. 634, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 1372 (Cal. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinions

DUNIWAY, J.

Plaintiffs appeal from an adverse judgment, entered upon a jury verdict in a wrongful death action. The charge is malpractice. Defendant Wise is a doctor; defendant Caruso is the owner and operator of an ambulance service. Appellants contend that the evidence does not support the verdict, that the court erred in giving and refusing certain instructions, and that it also erred in making certain statements when the jury requested a rereading of certain instructions in the course of its deliberations. We find no error.

1. The evidence supports the verdict.

After the filing of the appeal, appellants’ counsel sought, by motion in this court, to be allowed to produce additional evidence based upon a newspaper account of a report by the California Medical Association in which certain statements were said to have been made about this ease. We denied the motion. Nevertheless, both in his reply brief and in oral argument, counsel relied upon this 1 ‘ evidence. ” It is not before us.

Confining ourselves to the record, we find that it shows the following: Appellants’ decedent was in an automobile accident near the town of Pittsburg. Responding to a call from the sheriff's office, the Caruso ambulance picked [198]*198him up and took him to the emergency room of the Pittsburg Community Hospital. Decedent was “semiconscious,” and had alcohol on his breath. He needed no first aid during the trip.

Dr. Wise is a general practitioner on the hospital staff, and on the evening in question was on call for emergencies. He got to the hospital within a few minutes after the ambulance arrived. The nurse had applied a pressure bandage to a wound on decedent’s head. He examined the wound and applied another pressure bandage, being unable to suture the wound because of decedent’s movements. The bleeding was satisfactorily taken care of; suturing could be done later. The doctor suspected a head injury and gave no anaesthetic because of the danger of doing so in such cases. By manual bone crepitation he concluded that there was probably no skull fracture. (The autopsy disclosed none.) The pulse, taken manually, was good and strong. Decedent’s eyes showed dilated and divergent pupils, indicating a head injury or concussion or alcohol. No X-rays were taken, the doctor’s experience being that the neurosurgeon would want to direct the taking of X-rays. It was, in his opinion, important to get decedent to such a specialist, although decedent showed no signs of being in immediate danger.

Decedent carried a “Blue Cross” card, and was entitled to treatment in the Pittsburg hospital, including treatment by a neurosurgeon. However, it was Dr. Wise’s experience that it would take a minimum of about two hours and sometimes as much as four hours to get a staff neurosurgeon. Decedent also had a “Kaiser” card entitling him to the same treatment at the Kaiser hospital in Walnut Creek. Dr. Wise believed that there was a neurosurgeon more quickly available there. He concluded that decedent should get into the care of a neurosurgeon as promptly as possible, and ordered the decedent taken to the Kaiser hospital in the same ambulance. He gave no instructions as to treatment to the ambulance men, having confidence in them from prior experience. He did not phone the hospital or decedent’s home, or have anyone else do so, because he had confidence in the set-up at Walnut Creek, and relied on it.

Dr. Wise did not think the patient was in danger of death. He did not anticipate any permanent or serious injury. A head injury such as decedent had does not require immediate surgery. Pie did think decedent had a head injury, coming from a rather severe blow. Decedent was not in shock; he was [199]*199actively pushing the doctor away when he was being examined and treated. While in the emergency room he vomited, but afterward his bronchial tree was clear, as was evidenced by his talking and swearing at the doctor. After he vomited he cleared up remarkably well, and was much brighter, which is “the usual thing we find when we treat people under liquor and they vomit.” The body showed only minor bruises and skin lacerations. No knee kick or toe reflex tests were made, because they are very difficult to do on a struggling patient. The decedent showed no need of blood, and none was given. There was no sign of excessive intracranial pressure. The doctor expected that the trip could be made to Walnut Creek without any further difficulty. Nothing indicated the need of any particular instructions to the ambulance driver.

The doctor testified that for an emergency diagnosis, his was quite adequate. He would not move a patient if he seemed in any immediate danger, or if moving would worsen his condition. Brain injuries transport well, and almost always relatively safely.

Dr. Wise himself and four other doctors all testified in substance that what he did was in accord with standard practice in the community in the treatment of an emergency by a general practitioner, and met the standard of care required by law.

When decedent was placed in the ambulance, he was quiet, pale and appeared to be asleep, or going to sleep, as if he had had a sedative. He appeared to remain in this condition during the 20 minutes’ trip to Walnut Creek, but was found to be dead on arrival there.

Appellants’ counsel has marshalled evidence favorable to his clients in his brief, but he nowhere points out wherein the evidence does not support the verdict. In view of the testimony of the doctors, we think that there is nothing in his argument, and that the verdict is clearly supported. In the case of defendant Caruso, there appears to us to be no evidence that would support a verdict against him, and appellant points to none. In the case of Dr. Wise, the record of a long trial is remarkably lacking in any testimony indicating that anything that he did, or any omission on his part, was actually a cause of death. One of the specialists, a neurosurgeon, testified that in his opinion decedent would have died irrespective of the treatment given him by Dr. Wise. The cause of death was cerebral contusions, leading to pulmonary edema — a congestion of the lungs. In layman’s lan[200]*200guage, death resulted from a head injury. Five doctors so testified.

In holding the evidence sufficient, as we must in this ease, the jury and not this court being the fact-finding body, we do not wish to be understood as approving what was done by the defendant doctor. To us, as laymen, the handling of decedent is shocking, even though it may not have caused the death in this particular case. Nothing was done to determine whether in fact a neurosurgeon might be promptly available at the Pittsburg hospital, where the decedent was entitled to such treatment. Nothing was done, before he was shipped off, unattended by any qualified nurse or doctor, and with no instructions to the ambulance crew, to determine whether a neurosurgeon was any more readily available at Walnut Creek. In fact, a neurosurgeon was not so available there. The hospital there was not alerted. No attempt was made to communicate with decedent’s wife. But because, under the evidence, the jury could, and presumably did, find either that Dr. Wise was not negligent, or, if he was, that the negligence did not cause death, we cannot hold that the verdict is unsupported.

2. The court’s instructions were not erroneous.

Appellants criticize three instructions. As to the first,1

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Related

Rainer v. Community Memorial Hospital
18 Cal. App. 3d 240 (California Court of Appeal, 1971)
Ragusano v. Civic Center Hospital Foundation
199 Cal. App. 2d 586 (California Court of Appeal, 1962)
Black v. Caruso
187 Cal. App. 2d 195 (California Court of Appeal, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 Cal. App. 2d 195, 9 Cal. Rptr. 634, 1960 Cal. App. LEXIS 1372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-v-caruso-calctapp-1960.