Carpenter v. . Blake

75 N.Y. 12, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 823
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 12, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 75 N.Y. 12 (Carpenter v. . Blake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carpenter v. . Blake, 75 N.Y. 12, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 823 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The rules which relate to the liability of a surgeon for negligence or want of skill while engaged in the discharge of the duties of his profession arc correctly laid down in the opinion of the General Term in accordance with the views expressed by Allen, J., when tins case was heard upon a former appeal in this court. These rules do not demand that in order to sustain an action against a surgeon for malpractice that there should be proof of gross culpability upon the part of the surgeon, but place him in the same position and subject him to the same degree of liability as attaches to persons who are engaged in the performance of *16 services which require skill and care, and who are held responsible for a failure to exercise proper care and who are negligent in the discharge of the duty imposed upon them. These principles being well established it is not important to examine in detail the reported cases bearing upon the question or to reconsider the grounds upon which they are based.

It is urged by the defendant’s counsel that the court were in error in refusing to dismiss the plaintiff’s complaint and that whatever rule of liability may be held to apply the evidence fails to establish any right to recover against the defendant. The position taken rests upon the assumptiot that there is no evidence whatever to uphold the finding ol the jury; cither that the defendant did not possess the requisite skill to reduce the dislocation or that there was any neglect or want of proper care in the performance of the act. It becomes therefore material to inquire whether there was any testimony whatever to sustain the verdict and it matters not whether there was a want of the requisite skill or an omission to exercise a proper degree of care ; for in either contingency the same result must follow and the defendant would be liable for the injury caused and actually sustained by the plaintiff.

The defendant’s counsel claims that the dislocation Avas properly reduced, and that the elbow joint of the left arm which had been displaced, remained in its place so long as defendant attended the plaintiff, and until another surgeon Avas called. There is evidence Avhich shoAved that the process which the defendant adopted in reducing the dislocation as stated by him, Avas the proper one, and it was approved of and sustained by the testimony of several surgeons and physicians. But such evidence is not Avithout contradiction and there is a dispute in the testimony as to Avhether the plaintiff’s arm Avas sot at all, and even if it was, whether the proper course Avas pursued in reducing the dislocation. As to the setting of the arm the defendant testifies that he did reduce the dislocation. This is denied by the plaintiff, and *17 if the plaintiff’s testimony is to be credited, the injured limb did not present the usual symptoms attending the placing of the dislocated bones in their proper position. On the contrary, there was every indication of a continued displacement from the twenty-eighth of June, until the second effort made to reduce the dislocation in the month of September following, and after that time a'permanent injury to the arm from which the plaintiff has never recovered.

According to the plaintiff’s testimony, she did not discover that the bones were restored to their place by the ordinary manifestation of the noise made when such an occurrence takes place or by being relieved from pain. She also testifies to the fact that after the operation had been performed there was a protuberance at the elbow joint which never disappeared. She is supported by the evidence of Leach who testifies that after the defendant had left his patient, on the very evening that he attended the plaintiff to reduce the dislocation, he saw the plaintiff’s arm and discovered a prominence back of the elbow in the nature of a projection very much as it was at the timé of the trial. According to all the testimony in the case this was a certain indication that the elbow still remained dislocated and had never been put in its proper place, and the evidence tends strongly to show that this prominence remained and continued unreduced from the time it was first discovered. It is no sufficient answer to this evidence to say, that Leach was not to be believed, or that his testimony was probably false, or that he may have made a mistake. If or can it be urged we think that his testimony should be entirely disregarded upon this appeal, because he was not on friendly terms with the defendant, or that the fact that it was not observed by others present, until a later day, or because Drs. Blake and Endress’ testimony is in conflict with the evidence of Leach, that therefore Leach’s evidence should not be considered. The question as to Leach’s credibility as well as the other matters to which we have referred, were for the jury and it does not rest within the province of this court to determine *18 where the evidence is contradictory to the extent disclosed by the record before us, that certain portions of the testimony should be ignored. The strong fact that the limb was useless afterwards to the plaintiff, with proof of the circumstances already considered, presented evidence for the jury to determine certainly Avhether there Ava's a failure to perform successfully, not an uncommon operation in surgery by reason of negligence or a Avant of skill, and Avhich might Avell be regarded, if the plaintiff’s testimony Avas to be believed, as fastening a liability upon the defendant.

Another- fact should be taken into consideration and that is, the manner in which the defendant performed the service required of him. The defendant swears that AA'hen he -set the arm, he extended, flexed, and rotated it, AArhcro he set the joint, to ascertain whether the bones Avcrc in the right place, and that he Avas satisfied that they were. The plaintiff denies that this Avas done. It is not questioned but this was the proper and correct treatment for such a case, and although it is quito' probable that the defendant Avas in a better condition to know and to remember what he did than the plaintiff, who Avas nervous and afflicted with pain, yet it was for the jury to say Avhcre the truth lay, in reference to this branch of the case. To contend that the testimony of the attending surgeons is entirely controlling is to ignore well-settled principles, Avhich are applicable to trials of issues of fact before a jury. It Avas also controverted upon the trial, whether the arm after it Avas set Avas placed at a right angle as was claimed and the necessary means resorted to for the purpose of keeping it in that position, and it is urged that the defendant Avas negligent in having omitted to give it such support as Avas essential for that purpose; The arm Avas placed upon a pilloAV and assuming as was testified, by the defendant’s witnesses, that the position was entirely right, and that the witnesses for the defendant are entirely reliable, the question arises whether prudence and ordinary skill did not demand that some means should have been taken to keep it there. • *19 It was dangerous to straighten the arm, or to move it out of its place, and yet it was left without anything to keep it in place and subject to the risk of being' displaced by the excitement of a nervous woman, afflicted with pain and suffering, and liable in her anguish to change the position of her arm.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.Y. 12, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-blake-ny-1878.