Bowles v. Bourdon

213 S.W.2d 713, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1444
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 22, 1948
DocketNo. 11999.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 213 S.W.2d 713 (Bowles v. Bourdon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowles v. Bourdon, 213 S.W.2d 713, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1444 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.

This is a malpractice suit brought against Lynn L . Bourdon, a physician of Houston, and against a Houston hospital, by Harry L. Bowles, a minor, acting by his father and next friend, and the minor’s said father, as well as his mother, joined in the suit as plaintiffs in their own right. At the conclusion of plaintiffs’ evidence, the court instructed a verdict for the defendants in response to the defendants’ motions therefor. The plaintiffs appealed from such action of the court so far as the physician was concerned but not as against the hospital.

The allegations of the plaintiffs’ petition were in substance: That the defendant negligently bound the left arm of the minor (which had been fractured immediately above the elbow) so tight as to stop the circulation and thus brought about a total paralysis of the arm known as a Volk-mann’s contracture. Further, that some four hours after the fracture had been reduced and the arm set, the defendant was notified of the various symptoms which indicated the inception of said contracture, but that he negligently failed to examine the arm or to give instructions to loosen the bandage. Further, that defendant negligently failed to recognize or 'treat the con-tracture between July 16, 1941 when he reduced the fracture and bound the arm and August 21, 1941, when defendant called in a specialist.

The ground for granting the directed verdict, stated by the court, was “for the reason that plaintiffs had not supported their allegations with proper or sufficient expert testimony showing negligence on the part of the defendant Bourdon, and had failed to show that the defendant’s negligence, if any, was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s étjwy and damage(Emphasis supplied.)

Plaintiffs predicate their appeal upon six points. The first four of which complain of the court’s action in directing a verdict for the defendant physician. Points S and 6 complain of the court’s refusal to permit two certain physicians to testify. Plaintiffs’ points 1 and 2 assert that there was evidence, expert and otherwise, to go to the jury on the issues of whether the defendant was guilty of malpractice which proximately caused the damages sued for. Points 3 and 4 complaint of the directed verdict because, plaintiffs assert, that the expert testimony of the two physicians and the admission of the defendant himself made out a case to go to the jury on defendant’s action of negligence proximately causing the paralysis of the minor plaintiff’s arm. Plaintiffs’ Sth point complained that the court erred in refusing to allow Dr. Bloom and Dr. Lerner to testify in answer to a hypothetical question of what defendant should have done upon being advised of the symptoms indicating Volkmann’s contracture on the night of July 16, 1941. Plaintiffs’ 6th point is to the effect that the court erred in refusing to allow Dr. Lerner, a general practitioner, to testify what was accepted as good medical practice followed in the treatment of such cases by practitioners of ordinary skill and ability in Houston and to testify to what, in Dr. Lerner’s opinion, caused a contracture and paralysis of the minor plaintiff’s left arm.

We must overrule plaintiffs’ aforesaid points 1 to 4 inclusive for we have concluded that plaintiffs’ evidence, if taken as true, and considered in the light most favorable to them, was insufficient to support a conclusion by a jury that the treatment by the defendant of the fractured arm was the proximate cause of paralysis of the minor plaintiff’s arm. In a malpractice suit the plaintiff is met with the legal presumption that a physician has discharged his full duty “ ‘and to defeat this presumption the law exacts affirmative proof of breach of duty coupled with a affirmative proof that such breath of duty resulted in injury.’ ” (Emphasis supplied.) Kaster v. Woodson, Tex.Civ.App., 123 S.W.2d 981, 982, 983; Floyd v. Michie, Tex.Civ.App., 11 S.W.2d 657; Kootsey v. Lewis, Tex.Civ.App., 126 S.W.2d 512, 513.

A physician’s legal liability is measured by the fact that he “merely engages *715 that he has that reasonable degree of learning and skill which is possessed by others of his profession in the same locality, or by the ‘average physician under the same or similar circumstances/ and that he will exercise that skill and learning with reasonable care and diligence. In other words, exercising a high degree of care is not required of an attending physician; all that can be expected is the use of ordinary care, skill and diligence. Although required to exercise his best judgment in the circumstances, and to look for natural and probable results, if he has exercised ordinary care and diligence he is not responsible for a mistake in judgment nor for the occurence of unexpected results which reasonably could not have been anticipated.” 33 Tex.Jur. 338, 339.

Such being the standard of skill and care required of a physician, it follows that jurors, in the exercise of their mere lay knowledge, cannot determine whether a physician has complied with the standard referred to. As stated in Faster v. Wood-son, supra, “The courts and juries are not supposed to be conversant with what is peculiar with the science and practice of the profession of medicine and surgery. Such has been the law in all civilized nations since in his Politics, Aristotle wrote: ‘As a physician ought to be judged by the physicians, so ought man to be judged by their peers.’ ” In Kootsey v. Lewis, supra, at page 513 of 126 S.W.2d, it was said: “it is incumbent upon Lewis (the plaintiff in a malpractice suit) in order to recover from Dr. Kootsey in addition to showing the treatment given by Dr. Kootsey was negligence, to show by expert evidence that such negligence was a proximate cause of Ms in-fury — in a word, that the negligent manner of treatment caused the infection which necessitated the amputation of the hand.” (Citing authorities.) (Emphasis supplied.)

Bearing the above stated rules in mind, it will be seen when we come to examine plaintiffs’ evidence in this case, that the same was sufficient to have gone to the jury on the issue of whether or not the defendant was guilty of negligence but 'was not sufficient to go to the jury on the issue of whether said negligence was the proximate cause of the paralysis. This, because there was medical or expert testimony from which it could have been inferred by the jury that the defendant was guilty of negligence (indeed, as will hereafter be seen this could have been inferred from the defends ant’s own testimony) but there was no medical or expert testimony from which it could be legitimately inferred by a jury that the same was the proximate cause of the paralysis of the arm. Without such evidence the issue of proximate cause was not raised for the jury. The pertinent and controlling evidence stated most strongly in favor of plaintiffs was as follows:

On the afternoon of July 16, 1941, when Harry Bowles was four years old and while he was playing piggy-back with his sister, who was about a year older, he fell about a distance of 2 feet and fractured his left arm just above the elbow. His mother took him to the hospital where she was referred to defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W.2d 713, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowles-v-bourdon-texapp-1948.