Butler v. . Lupton

6 S.E.2d 523, 216 N.C. 653
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 3, 1940
StatusPublished

This text of 6 S.E.2d 523 (Butler v. . Lupton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butler v. . Lupton, 6 S.E.2d 523, 216 N.C. 653 (N.C. 1940).

Opinion

This is a suit brought in behalf of the infant plaintiff to recover damages for a personal injury alleged to have been caused by the negligence and malpractice of the defendant, a practicing physician, while under his care as a patient. Under proper pleadings, and taken in the most favorable light to the plaintiff, the evidence tends to show that plaintiff, then twelve years of age and in the sixth grade, sustained a simple fracture of both bones of the right leg, some distance below the knee, caused by a log of timber falling upon it. The skin was not broken. She was carried to Dr. Lupton's Hospital in Burlington and there placed under his care. An X-ray picture was taken to the leg, at which time, in the language of the witness, "it was not hurting me much." The doctor bandaged it and put her to bed. We quote:

"Saturday night he took me in the X-ray room and set the big bone in my leg. It was not hurting me and was not swollen. He did not do anything on Sunday and my leg was not swollen or hurting me. About one-thirty on Monday afternoon he put a thin bandage on my leg and put a plaster cast from above my knee to where the break occurred, and there left an open space, and below the break put a cast on down on my foot. My leg was not swollen then. He did not do anything to my leg on Tuesday. On Wednesday afternoon about five o'clock he put a brace consisting of two iron rods down the side and two iron rings and then he had something to make it tight. He worked the screws with a wrench to tighten them. My leg was not paining me until he tightened them screws and it was not swollen. He kept coming back and tightening them. I was hurting so bad I kept crying and he would not do anything, just kept on tightening them — he did not say anything. That night he took me in the X-ray room and looked at my leg and tightened the screws some more. My leg kept hurting and swelling — I cried, but not out loud, the nurses were holding me, and gave me little pills. He took the brace off and filled in the empty space with plaster cast. I slept all next morning and saw Dr. Lupton when I awoke late that *Page 655 afternoon between four and five o'clock. When I woke I could feel no pain at all. I looked at my toes and they were swollen and black spotted. Dr. Lupton came in and took me home about six o'clock. My leg began hurting about seven o'clock that night. It was swelled and the cast was hurting me. We sent for Dr. Lupton and he came about nine o'clock. He split the cast from the top down a little over the break. He did not do anything to the cast on my foot below the break. My toes were swelled and black spotted. On Friday Dr. Lupton came about five o'clock. My leg was hurting me where the cast had not been split. I was not crying much. I had no feeling in it — my toes were swelled and black spotted then. He did not do anything to my leg but look at it. We sent for him again that night, as I was suffering. He came about nine o'clock and removed all the cast from my leg. My foot was swelled and black spotted. Mrs. Hughes and Mrs. Crabtree and mother were in the room. The top of my foot was black and swelled. My leg that was broken was twice the size of my other leg. Right below my knee were blisters where these scars are now. I had never had any injury to my right leg before.

"That night blisters began forming on the heel and toe of my foot where the black spots were after the cast was removed. They were forming on Saturday and Dr. Lupton saw them and he told mother that he thought that was the natural thing for my foot to be like. The blisters burst the next day and when they burst the meat started eating off. Dr. Lupton saw me Sunday, and the blisters had burst. I was in bed with my leg on a pillow and an electric light over it. I had no feeling in my leg and it was hot. I stayed there in bed until Dr. Lupton took me back to his hospital to treat me — some time in December near Christmas. My foot was resting on a pillow and every night a violet ray lamp was put over my foot. The heel of my foot came off while I was there in his hospital. I was brought home again some time in February, 1937. The front of my foot was better. Dr. Lupton would come and dress it. One day he came and put it on the floor and mashed it. He said he thought maybe it would straighten it up, it was stiff. It started bleeding and abscesses started. This happened after I had been home a little over a month. In March I went back to Dr. Lupton's hospital and stayed there eleven weeks. My foot was in bad condition, the sores were getting worse. No other doctor saw me while I was there in the hospital. I went to Duke Hospital then. Dr. Lupton went and was there when some bones were taken from my foot. I stayed there ten days. A cast was put on my leg and I went back every month to have the cast changed. My foot was operated on at Duke Hospital twice. Dr. Lupton was present both times. My foot did not heal then. My foot was normal before the iron brace and traction was put on it, *Page 656 and no difference in size from my left foot. I do not have much feeling in it now."

This evidence was corroborated by Mrs. L. T. Jones, her mother by an earlier marriage, as follows:

Francis Butler is my daughter by my first husband. On October 23, 1936, she broke her leg. We had some sills — 8' x 8' and 16 feet long three feet high in the back yard. She had been seesawing on this end of the long and one end fell 16 inches, the end did not fall off, and the corner hit her leg and broke it. She called me and was sitting on the ground, the log was up against her, and I just lifted it off and took her to Dr. Lupton's office. I went back Saturday morning at nine-thirty o'clock and Dr. Lupton said it was broken. There was just a little blue place on her right leg. There was no break or cut on the skin or bruise on the foot, either the heel or top of the foot. I stayed with her until nine-thirty that night and she was not complaining of any pain that day. He had the leg bandaged, but the toes and foot looked natural. I went back Sunday and stayed all afternoon and she was not complaining of any pain. I went back again Monday afternoon and Dr. Lupton told me he had set the big bone but the little bone was off just a little bit. Francis did not seem to be suffering any pain more than kind of nervous. I did not see the cast put on this day. I went back on Tuesday afternoon and she did not complain of any pain Tuesday. I went back Wednesday afternoon and Dr. Lupton told me he was putting an iron brace on her leg. It was two iron rings, one went here below the break and one above the break. He put two iron rods, one on each side, and two screws on each end and had a pair of pliers. This was around five o'clock, and when I left at six o'clock he was beginning to turn these little taps (screws) and she was beginning to suffer and cry out before I left — asked me not to leave — and he told me to go on, that he thought he would bring her home at nine o'clock, but did not bring her until the next day at five o'clock p.m. She had not complained of any pain before he began to apply this extension or brace on her leg. I did not go back on Thursday as I was waiting every minute for him to bring her home.

"When Dr. Lupton brought her next day she was half asleep. I tried to talk to her, but she did not talk normally. She could not see well enough to tell who the children were that came in to see her. Dr. Lupton said he thought she would be all right, to go ahead and play the radio or anything. He said to keep something hot on her leg. The braces were not on her leg when he brought her home and the cast had been filled in between the other two casts at the break. He gave me a prescription for some medicine to make her sleep. She did not sleep any Thursday night at all.

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Bluebook (online)
6 S.E.2d 523, 216 N.C. 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-lupton-nc-1940.