Brant v. Sweet Clinic

8 P.2d 972, 167 Wash. 166, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 594
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1932
DocketNo. 23469. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 8 P.2d 972 (Brant v. Sweet Clinic) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brant v. Sweet Clinic, 8 P.2d 972, 167 Wash. 166, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 594 (Wash. 1932).

Opinion

Millard, J.

This action was instituted by Albert Brant and Lorraine Brant, a marital community, to recover against a practicing physician and surgeon and a medical clinic corporation for alleged malpractice in removing a growth or cyst from the throat of plaintiff wife. Plaintiffs alleged that the surgeon

*167 “. . . wholly failed to follow the established practice and to conform to the proper standards as practiced by his school of surgery in similar localities in performing said operation, and the said defendants, while associated together under their employment by the plaintiffs, and in disregard of their duties in the premises in attempting to remove said growth or branchial cyst, carelessly, negligently and unsldllfully cut and severed the facial nerve on the left side of the face of the plaintiff, Lorraine Brant; that it was wholly unnecessary, improper and contrary to the established medical and surgical practice in the vicinity where said surgical operation was performed, to sever said nerve in order to successfully remove said growth or branchial cyst, and because of said severance she has completely lost the use of said nerve on the left side of her face . . that the distorted condition of her face and mouth caused by said unskillful operation is a permanent condition. . . . ”

The cause was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict against the defendants. From the judgment entered upon the verdict, motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and for a new trial having been overruled, the defendants appealed.

Appellants contend that there is no evidence that the facial nerve of the respondent wife “was cut and severed, and if it were cut and severed,” there is no proof of negligence, as other causes existed for the paralysis. It is argued that appellant surgeon was not operating in that portion of the tract in which the facial nerve is located.

The mere fact that a bad result may follow an operation is not of itself evidence of negligence. Brear v. Sweet, 155 Wash. 474, 284 Pac. 803.

The rule in malpractice actions is that

“. . . a surgeon is not liable merely because of a bad result. Peterson v. Wells, 41 Wash. 693, 84 Pac. 608. And that he is not responsive in damages in a malpractice suit, if the treatment which he employs is *168 that which is recognized and approved by those reasonably skilled in his profession, practicing in the same neighborhood and in the same line of practice, and if he administers that treatment with a degree of skill and diligence as such practitioners ordinarily exercise in like cases, [Citing cases.].
“We also recognize that it is not a question of fact for the jury, but the court will determine that there is nothing upon which the jury may pass where reputable physicians and surgeons of equal skill and learning disagree in their opinion as to what the proper treatment should have been, and that the jury will not be allowed to accept one theory to the exclusion of the other. It is enough if the treatment actually employed had the approval of at least a respectable minority of the medical profession and is recognized by such as a proper method.” Howatt v. Cartwright, 128 Wash. 343, 222 Pac. 496.

The Sweet Clinic is a corporation engaged in Lewis county in the business of surgery for profit. Pursuant to recommendation of Dr. Sweet, head surgeon of the clinic, and another surgeon also in the employ of the clinic, respondent wife was operated upon between 11:55 a. m. and 1:20 p. m., October 30, 1929, by Dr. Sweet for the removal of a growth or cyst from the left side”of her neck. Anaesthetizing the tract affected, Drs. Barr and Sweet removed the growth. When, at eight o’clock that evening, Mr. Brant visited his wife at the clinic, he discovered that her face was distorted. He testified he immediately inquired of Dr. Sweet the cause of the distortion, but the surgeon would not inform him. Mr. Brant testified:

‘ ‘ Q. When did you first see her at the hospital after the operation? A. That evening about a quarter after eight. Q. Just tell the jury what her appearance was at that time? A. Well, her face was just like it is now when I seen her that evening only it had a bunch of bandages over it, over her face. Q. Was there any distortion to her face? A. Well, her eye was out of *169 shape and her face was dropped down like it is now and her month; and she could only wrinkle up her forehead half way. Q. Did you make mention of that fact to anyone at that time ? A. No. I didn’t. Q. Did you see Dr. Sweet that evening? A. Yes, I went right down and seen him. Q. Did you discuss the matter with him at that time? A. Well, I asked him what caused it; he wouldn’t tell me and I asked him if her face would ever come back to normal and he said, no, it never would. He didn’t have no time to speak to me; he was called out of the room just at that time and he said there are very few cases of that kind; he said he had one case out at Rochester, a similar case like that; and he couldn’t speak to me much more, he avoided me.”

Mrs. Brant did not learn until the evening of the following day, when she was so informed by her husband, that her face was distorted and appeared to be paralyzed. The following day, November 1st, Mrs. Brant returned to her home. She returned to the hospital a number of times thereafter for electrical'treatments. In April, 1930, Mrs. Brant consulted another surgeon concerning her condition. That surgeon performed another operation upon Mrs. Brant (in the same tract of the operation performed by Dr. Sweet) after a week or ten days’ treatment of, and draining of pus from, the place where the cyst had been removed. That surgeon testified that Mrs. Brant was suffering from complete paralysis of one side of her face; that he dissected down through the old scar tissue of the first operation into the parotid gland, where he found a severed end of a nerve; that

“I followed this scar tissue down into the parotid gland. Q. The scar tissue was where with reference to the incision which had been previously made by Dr. Sweet? A. Well, it was almost directly under the incision. Q. And was there any scar tissue on down deeper which had not been produced by that incision ? *170 A. Deeper in the glands you mean? Q. Yes. A. I didn’t see any. Q. Well, if there had been you would have seen it, wouldn’t you? A. I guess so. Q. Now, doctor, did you see this facial nerve when you made that second incision? A. I thought I found the facial nerve there; I found a nerve. Q. What condition was that nerve in? A. This nerve was in the scar tissue and was separated probably by an inch, the ends of it. Q. The ends separated by an inch; could you tell whether that nerve had been cut or not, doctor? A. Well, it was in two; I don’t know how it got in two. Mr. Hunter : May I ask a question. What nerve are you referring to, doctor? The Witness: I was referring to what I thought was the seventh or facial nerve, the expression of the face. Mr. Cook : Q. Doctor, assuming that the facial nerve of Mrs. Brant was severed, would it produce the paralysis which she has at this time? A. Yes.”

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Bluebook (online)
8 P.2d 972, 167 Wash. 166, 1932 Wash. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brant-v-sweet-clinic-wash-1932.