Brooks v. Herd

257 P. 238, 144 Wash. 173, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 723
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1927
DocketNo. 20621. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 257 P. 238 (Brooks v. Herd) 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
Brooks v. Herd, 257 P. 238, 144 Wash. 173, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 723 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

*174 Holcomb, J.

This is an action by respondent to recover from appellant, a drugless healer, damages for his reckless and negligent treatment of a venereal disease with which respondent was then suffering. Appellant was employed about September 13, 1924, upon, what respondent alleged in his complaint and testified at the trial was a contract to cure respondent for the agreed price of sixty or seventy dollars. Appellant treated respondent from the date of the employment until about January 28, 1925, when, according to the allegation and testimony of respondent, appellant pronounced respondent cured and discharged him.

Appellant was licensed to practice what is known as “mechano-theraphy” and forbidden by the statutes .relating thereto to use. or recommend pharmaceutic drugs or poisons of any kind or nature for internal use, and by his own statement knew that his right to practice was so limited.

The law relating thereto is found in §§ 10112 to 10125, inclusive, Rem. Comp. Stat. [P. C. §§ 2077-1 to 2077-17]. Section 10114, supra, provides for the form of certificate to be issued to such practitioners, and also provides that practitioners thereunder shall confine their practice to the subjects or systems represented by their certificate, each school of drugless healing to be confined to its own method of healing; and § 10123, supra, again forbids prescribing or recommending pharmaceutic drugs or poisons for internal use by any such drugless healer.

The complaint alleged, and the testimony of respondent was to the effect, that appellant did use pharmaceutic drugs, some of which were poisonous in their effect, and produced evidence to show that the pharmaceutic drugs so used were injurious to the human system and had no curative properties for the disease *175 with which respondent was suffering, namely, gonor-rhoea.

Respondent alleged that appellant did not use proper care or skill, and wrongfully, unlawfully and unskillfully administered drugs which were taken internally, under the direction of appellant, and which were ineffective and improper and without curative properties to cure the disease of which respondent was suffering; and that, after treating respondent for a period of about four months, on January 28, 1925, pronounced respondent cured and discharged him as cured; whereas, in fact, at the time of his discharge at the hands of appellant, respondent was not cured, but during the treatment given him by appellant, respondent’s disease had become aggravated and had been permitted to progress into advanced stages, which was unknown to respondent; that by reason thereof respondent was injured in his health and constitution, suffered and is suffering great pain, was and is weakened in body, and was obliged to and did expend and will continue to expend large sums of money in endeavoring to cure the disease, which was and will be for a long time increased by the unskillful and improper treatment and the conduct of appellant, to his damage in the sum of $2,500.

By answer, appellant admitted entering into the employment alleged, but put in issue the nature of the contract, the allegations of negligence and unskillfulness, and the allegations of damages to respondent; and affirmatively alleged that respondent refused to obey directions given by appellant, in that, contrary to such directions to live in a plain and frugal manner and refrain from drinking alcoholic stimulants, or exposing his body to the elements or engaging in outdoor work, he disobeyed all such instructions, and that, if there were any ill effects suffered by respondent, they *176 were the result of the disease from which he was suffering and of his own wilful disobedience to instructions, and not due to any lack of care, skill or attention, on the part of appellant.

These allegations were also put in issue by the reply of respondent.

Of the five errors claimed by appellant, it will only be necessary to particularly discuss three.

In general, the court submitted the case to the jury upon perfectly proper instructions as to the law governing the relations of physicians and patients. Under the statutes above cited, drugless healers are strictly limited, each to his own school of practice, and forbidden to invade the field of practice of any other school of drugless healing or of any regular school of healing. Otherwise, the principles * of law governing the' relations of regular physicians and surgeons and their patients govern as to drugless healers and their patients. Wilcox v. Carroll, 127 Wash. 1, 219 Pac. 34. The court in general gave the same instructions in this case as should be given in an ordinary malpractice case by a patient against a practitioner of a regular school of healing, for negligent care and treatment. The law is well settled that a physician may contract specially to cure and is liable on his contract for failure. 30 Cyc. -1573, 21 R. C. L. 391. Whether that was the contract, was a question of fact in this case.

One error claimed by appellant is in giving the following portion of an instruction:

“When the drugless healer takes charge of a case and is employed to attend a patient, his employment, as well as the relationship between said healer and patient, continues until his services are no longer needed.”

It is asserted that the plain meaning of that instruction is that once the relationship is established, it con- *177 tixmes until such time, perhaps for years, as the patient no longer needs the attention or services of the physician, or, in other words, until the patient is cured, and ignores the patent fact that the relationship can be terminated by mutual consent or by the conduct of the patient in refusing or neglecting to take such treatment as the physician may prescribe or to take any treatment.

We deem the construction given the instruction by appellant somewhat hypercritical. The instruction, of course, in itself is not very complete. Another instruction was given, however, to the effect that when a patient goes to a physician and accepts the professional skill of such physician, it is the duty of the patient to follow the advice of the physician, and if he fails to follow the advice of the physician and something untoward happens to the patient which would not have happened or was not the physician’s negligence, then the physician would not be liable; and if the plaintiff failed to follow the advice of the doctor and thereby aggravated the ailment, the jury should find for the defendant.

These instructions, taken as a whole, correctly state the law as to the respective duties of physician and patient toward each other.

The court also further instructed the jury, as would be proper in a case involving a regular school of medicine, that part of the correct treatment of a case is the careful and proper determination by the drugless healer or physician as to when the relation of physician and patient shall end, and that the relation continues until the services are no longer needed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 P. 238, 144 Wash. 173, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-herd-wash-1927.