Cardinale Ex Rel. Cardinale v. Kemp

274 S.W. 437, 309 Mo. 241, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 799
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 1, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 437 (Cardinale Ex Rel. Cardinale v. Kemp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cardinale Ex Rel. Cardinale v. Kemp, 274 S.W. 437, 309 Mo. 241, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 799 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

*246 WOODSON, J.-

The plaintiff brought this suit by his next friend, in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, against the defendants for $30,000 damages for personal injuries caused by malpractice in performing an operation upon one of his eyes. A trial was had before the court and jury, and at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant offered a demurrer thereto, which the court gave, and thereupon the plaintiff took an involuntary nonsuit, with leave to move to set the same aside, which he accordingly did. In due course the same was presented, to the court and after due consideration the court overruled the same. Thereupon he duly appealed the cause to this court.

The defendant Dr. McElwee died before the trial was had, and his widow was duly appointed administratrix of his estate, and the suit was duly revived against her as such. The petition, after making the preliminary allegations of the cause of action, charged the sole negligent act of the defendants to consist of negligently cutting the eyeball of the plaintiff with a sharp instrument, while removing a cyst from his left eye and thereby so injured same as to cause it to shrink and to loose the sight thereof. -

The theory of the trial court was that the evidence for the plaintiff did not make out a case for the jury, and therefore it sustained the demurrer to the evidence offered by the defendants. This ruling of the court requires us to consider the substance of all of the evidence introduced, in order to see whether or not the court was correct in that ruling.

The plaintiff introduced a number of witnesses who testified substantially as folloyrs:

Augustino Cardinale, a witness for plaintiff, testified, on direct examination, that he is the father of Sam *247 Cardinale, who is four years old; that witness is an elevator operator; that he has been married four years and has three children; that he now lives and on January 8, 1920, lived, at 5202 Plover Avenue; that he first noticed a pimple or cyst on the eyelid of his hoy, Sam, when his wife sent him a picture to Fiance; that he looked at the eye of the child and he had a kind of pimple on his eye; that he first saw this in the picture that his wife sent him to France; that about six months thereafter, when he came hack, he saw Sam; that when he came home and saw Sam he had a pimple 'or cyst, on the upper left eyelid; that he went to see T)r. Kemp about the cyst or pimple on the upper left eyelid of Sam some time in January, 1920; that Dr. Kemp looked in. the child’s eye, and he said: “This pimple here would have to he removed, hut that is an easy operation on him. So he won’t lose his eye at all.” I said, “All right; if he won’t lose his eyesight and it is easy, why, if you want to do it, do it.” So he said to me, “Well, I couldn’t do it in my office; I couldn’t do it myself, either. I will take a partner with me and I came up to his office and have him operate on your kid.” So when I come in the afternoon—

“Q. Wait a moment. Who came where? A. Dr. Kemp and McElwee.
“Q. Where did they go or come to?' A. 5202 Plover Avenue.
“Q. Go ahead. A. So they came in. They said, ‘Well, we was a little late.’ I said, ‘That is all right.’ As soon as they came in I said, ‘Doctor, if you doctors understand the business, Avhy, go ahead and do the Avork. Tf you don’t, I Avon’t pay your expenses coming up here,’ and Dr. Kemp and Dir. McElwee they said they had forty thousand cases.
“Q. What was that last? A. Dr. Kemp and Dr. McElwee they told me, they said we have forty thousand cases make like that with a pimple in the eyelid.
“Q. You just said that Kemp told you that he had forty thousand of similar cases? A. Yes.
*248 “Q. And did he say that he had removed the cysts in all those casés? A. Yes, sir; he had forty thousand cases just like my kid.”

That the doctors chloroformed the child while he was asleep; that witness saw the doctors turn the child’s eyelid. I said, “What you do?” “We want to remove from the inside.” I said, “What for?” He said, “You cut him off inside. ” ,

The witness further testified:

“Mb. Williams: Q. Wait a minute. What do you mean by the eyelid up?' A. The eyelid was turned up.
“ Q. Turned up like that? A. With an instrument. I told him, ‘What you doctors doing?’ They said, ‘We are going to take the cyst from the inside.’ I says, ‘Why, you told me from the office to take it from the outside and it was easy.’ " ‘Well,’ he said, ‘from inside it won’t leave no scar.’ So I said, ‘You the doctors; you know your business.’ They said, ‘Yes.’ ”

Witness further testified that this occurred after Dr. Kemp had given the child chloroform and had him on the table; that Dir. McE'lwee had the instrument in his hand and both of them were working on the boy; that he turned the eyelid up and started to scrape from the inside; that he had an instrument in his hand at that time resembling; a pair of scissors- and a little lance; that- it looked just like a knife; that witness left the room for three or four minutes to get a towel; that when he returned with the towel heiwent inside the room where the child was being operated on; that he saw the child’s eyelid upside down and the doctors working on it;. that the doctors- told him they were operating from the inside so it- won’t leave a scar; that he was in the room while the doctors were operating to remove the cyst during all the time except when he left to get the towel; that after the operation the doctors bandaged the child’s eye with a piece of cotton and put a bandage on it; that the bandage went around his head, covering his left eyé and leaving the other open; that this was in the afternoon; that, the doctors took their coats and told the witness to *249 bring the child to the office every other day; that witness sent his wife to the office because he had to work; that after the operation the child cried; that the child slept between witness and Ms wife; that witness held one hand and his wife the other because he was afraid the bandage might be moved; that the child was restless about ten or eleven o’clock that night and was suffering pain; that he rested two or three hours and then cried again; that he saw Dir.'Kemp a week later when he took the child to his office; Dr. Kemp took the bandage off, looked in his. eye, put some medicine in it, and said, “The eye was coming fine;” that he washed.the eye and put the bandage back with a piece of cotton; that Dr. Kemp told him, “When you go home warm a little warm water and get a piece of cotton and"if you see the eye run a little, wash it out”; that he saw the doctor again two weeks after; he examined the eye again, took the bandage off, put medicine-in the eye “and he said the eye w'as all right. So it was all right, he said;” that Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 437, 309 Mo. 241, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cardinale-ex-rel-cardinale-v-kemp-mo-1925.