Cade v. Mid-City Hospital Corp.

45 Cal. App. 3d 589, 119 Cal. Rptr. 571, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1711
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 1975
DocketCiv. 43100
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 45 Cal. App. 3d 589 (Cade v. Mid-City Hospital Corp.) 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
Cade v. Mid-City Hospital Corp., 45 Cal. App. 3d 589, 119 Cal. Rptr. 571, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1711 (Cal. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

*591 Opinion

JEFFERSON, J.

Plaintiffs Alfree Cade, Antoinette Houston and, by Alfree - Cade, their guardian ad litem, minors Norwood, Michael, Mitchell and Majda Cade, filed a complaint for damages for the alleged wrongful death of Myrtle Cade, Alfree’s wife and the mother of the other five named plaintiffs, against defendants Mid-City Hospital, a corporation; the County of Los Angeles; 1 Bassett H. L. Brown, M.D., and Newton Woodard, M.D.; Lincoln R. Best, M.D.; and Does I through X. Later Charles E. Weinstein, M.D. and David Fiske, M.D. were served as Does I and II, respectively. The complaint alleged the negligence of Mid-City Hospital and of Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center, and also alleged negligence resulting from the malpractice of medicine by the defendant doctors as the proximate cause of Mrs. Cade’s death.

Trial was by jury. The jury returned a verdict exonerating all of the defendants. Plaintiffs appeal the judgment, which we affirm. Our factual recital includes, as it must, the evidence most favorable to the defendants, the prevailing parties in the trial court. (6 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (2d ed. 1971) Appeal, §§ 248, 249, pp. 4240-4241.)

In 1969, Myrtle Cade was 43 years of age, and employed as a clerical worker by defendánt Mid-City Hospital, 2 a small private institution located in south central Los Angeles. There she became acquainted with defendant Dr. Woodard, a surgeon on the hospital staff, who was engaged in both the practice of surgery and the general practice of medicine in partnership with defendant Dr. Brown, at a clinic next to the hospital.

In July of that year, Mrs. Cade started to feel badly, complaining of a runny nose, a cough and persistent high temperature. She sought treatment from Dr. Woodard, who prescribed certain medication which caused nausea but resulted in the abatement of some of her symptoms. However, the high temperature remained. Because of the “fuo” (fever of undetermined origin), Dr. Woodard sent Mrs. Cade to the radiology department at Mid-City Hospital on August 5, 1969, for a chest X-ray. This department was operated by defendant Dr. Weinstein on an independent contractor basis with the hospital. The radiologist super *592 vised the taking of one lateral X-ray and two post-anterior X-rays; the second “p-a” was taken because he was dissatisfied with the quality of the first one. These X-rays, viewed in relation to a previous X-ray of Mrs. Cade’s chest taken in January 1969, revealed no significant changes or abnormalities.

The fever persisted, and on August 9, 1969, Dr. Woodard had Mrs. Cade admitted to Mid-City in order to conduct a series of diagnostic tests to identify the cause. On the day of admission, Dr. Brown, who sometimes attended to the partnership’s hospital patients, ordered by telephone a number of such tests, including blood, urine and sputum tests. On August 11, Dr. Woodard ordered a lung scan, a procedure often utilized to detect the presence of disease in the lungs. The lung scan, taken on August 12, showed nothing, nor were the other routine tests definitive.

Witness Curtis Antoine, an X-ray technician, supervised by the radiologist on duty, Dr. Edward Glazier, in the radiology department, testified that when he performed the lung scan on August 11 he asked Mrs. Cade to submit to an X-ray, as it was established policy to take an accompanying film if one had not been made within a 24-hour period. Mrs. Cade refused, stating that she had just had an X-ray. Antoine communicated the patient’s refusal to Dr. Glazier, who noted it on Mrs. Cade’s X-ray film jacket and, following established policy, he told Antoine to be certain to tell Mrs. Cade’s ward nurse, so that the attending physicians would learn of the refusal. Antoine testified that he did in fact communicate this information to nurse Jackson. The medical records of the hospital did not show any entry concerning this refusal on Mrs. Cade’s chart.

On August 12, Dr. Woodard arranged a consultation with defendánt, Dr. Best, a specialist in internal medicine. Dr. Best examined Mrs. Cade, and reviewed her medical records; he recorded his consultation notes but made no firm diagnosis; he advised, among other things, that another chest X-ray be taken. Since it appeared to him that some of the patient’s symptoms were consistent with hepatitis, Dr. Best suggested that the attending physicians consider a liver biopsy. (Expert testimony at trial established that a liver biopsy is not an inconsequential surgical procedure; it is contra-indicated if the patient demonstrates any problem with the blood, i.e., bleeding or clotting, because the danger of hemorrhage is present.)

*593 Dr. Best’s notes also reflect that he had been informed of the patient’s refusal to have a chest X-ray, and he stated therein that he had encouraged her to allow one to be taken the following day, August 13. Since Dr. Woodard reviewed Dr. Best’s notes, he was aware of the refusal problem.

The X-ray ordered by Dr. Best was never taken, and the reason for this omission was explored at trial in somewhat confusing testimony. The ordinary procedure employed at Mid-City for carrying out a doctor’s order for a chest X-ray was that ward personnel prepared a requisition slip and sent it to the radiology department. Head nurse Ladoceour, on duty during the time in question, testified at trial that notations on the patient’s chart established that the slip was prepared according to Best’s order, but no slip was ever found either in Mrs. Cade’s chart or at the department of radiology, nor was there any notation on any record that the radiology department ever received the requisition. Neither Dr. Glazier, the radiologist on duty, nor his employer, Dr. Weinstein, had any knowledge of the Best X-ray order. Witness Antoine, however, testified further at trial that in response to the second X-ray order he again attempted to bring Mrs. Cade to Radiology for an X-ray, and that again she refused the procedure. The daily nursing notes on Mrs. Cade contained no mention of either refusal, but they did reflect that Mrs. Cade was, on occasion, refusing other items of routine nursing care.

On August 13 Dr. Brown, unaware that Dr. Woodard had called Dr. Best in to consult, arranged a consultation by Dr. Fiske, also a specialist in internal medicine. Dr. Fiske saw Mrs. Cade on the 13th, reviewed her records, recommended a chest X-ray and an “EKG,” i.e., electrocardiogram. Dr. Fiske became aware that another specialist had already seen the patient, and indicated that he would not proceed further with the case unless called upon to do so.

By August 16, Dr. Best, who had seen Mrs. Cade regularly since called in to consult, had reviewed tests measuring her liver function, and had arrived at the conclusion that the patient had hepatitis. By this time Mrs. Cade was evidencing obvious signs of jaundice, indicative of hepatitis. Dr. Best wrote his notes, and then went on vacation.

There is little evidence concerning what steps were taken by attending physicians Woodard and Brown between August 16 and the 23d to treat the diagnosed condition of hepatitis.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Cal. App. 3d 589, 119 Cal. Rptr. 571, 1975 Cal. App. LEXIS 1711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cade-v-mid-city-hospital-corp-calctapp-1975.