Cassingham v. Berry

1915 OK 409, 150 P. 139, 67 Okla. 134, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1258
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 1, 1915
Docket4067
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1915 OK 409 (Cassingham v. Berry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cassingham v. Berry, 1915 OK 409, 150 P. 139, 67 Okla. 134, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1258 (Okla. 1915).

Opinions

Opinion by

BRETT, C.

This action was brought by the plaintiffs in error against the defendant in error, a physician and surgeon, to recover damages for malpractice, which is alleged to have resulted in the death of the moth.er of the plaintiffs in error:

Parties to-this action will be referred to in this opinion as plaintiffs and defendant, as they appeared in the lower court.

The alleged facts upon which the plaintiffs seek to recover, briefly stated, are that Dr. Milroy was treating the plaintiffs’ mother, Mrs. Ella Jane Cassingham, as physician and'decided that the removal of her ovaries was necessary to her recovery, and recommended the defendant as a competent and skillful surgeon; that defendant was employed to perform this operation, and did so in connection with Drs. Joe. Milroy, Fred Milroy, and Miss Mahaney, a trained nurse; that after the operation Mrs. Cassingham, who will for convenience hereafter be referred to as the deceased, did not improve as she should; the wound did not heal, she suffered great pain, and the attention of the -defendant was called to this condition, but he did nothing to relieve it, except to give *135 •opiates to deaden the pain; that the wound did not heal, but kept open in the form of a discharging sinus, and deceased continued to get worse, until several, months later, when she was moved to a hospital in Kansas City, Mo., where an operation was performed, and two gauze sponges were found in the abdominal cavity in a decayed condition. The plaintiffs allege that these sponges caused the death of their mother, and were negligently left there by the defendant. The defendant flies a general denial, admits performing the operation, denies that he was negligent;'and alleges that he exercised all the skill and care he possessed, and employed all the science within his knowledge; that he had the assistance of Drs. Milroy and a trained nurse, who was not employed by him, but was employed by the husband of deceased, or some one acting in his behalf; that the operation was a difficult one; that it was necessary that he should keep his mind concentrated upon the surgical part thereof; and he repeatedly admonished the nurse to keep accurate count of the sponges inserted into the cavity; that this was her duty, and that he impressed upon her the importance of seeing that they were all removed, and after the operation, and before the cavity was closed, he asked the nurse if she had counted the sponges, and if all had been taken out, and she assured him she had counted them, and that they had all been taken ,out; that he relied upon her statement, believed it to 'be true, and now believes it was true and correct, and that all the sponges had been removed before the cavity was closed. The plaintiffs reply by general denial. The cause was tried to a jury, and verdict and judgment was for defendant, and the plaintiffs have perfected their appeal to this court.

There are three assignments of error relied rrpon, and argued by the plaintiffs in their brief.

The first is misconduct of the attorney for the defendant. The matter relied on as misconduct and argued in the 'brief is the offer, toy the attorney for defendant, in the presence of the jury, to prove by certain witnesses matters derogatory to the character of the deceased. This offer was objected to by the plaintiffs on the ground that. “it is incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and is not such a defense as can be proven under the issues as drawn in- this case,” and the court promptly sustained this objection. It does not appear from the record that counsel for plaintiffs asked that the offer be made in the absence of the jury, and that the court refused this request, or that he excepted to the offer on the ground that it was prejudicial, but only objected on the ground of incompetency, which was promptly sustained. We are referred By counsel for plaintiffs to a number of cases, in which reversals were had on the gr.ojtn'd of misconduct' of the prevailing counsel. But in all these cases that we have examined exceptions, were taken at. the time."to the misconduct, and the record properly preserved. This was not -done in .this case, and where it is not done, we-think the rule is‘correctly stated in Gorham v. Sioux City Stockyards Co., 118 Iowa, 749, 92 N. W. 698, in which the Supreme Court,of Iowa “says:

“When counsel are guilty of misconduct in arguing a case to the jury, whether in the presence of the judge or in his absence, there ought to be- at least an attempt made to correct the error at the time, and, when this is not done, we will not, in a civil case, disturb the ruling of the court on a motion for new trial based thereon, unless prejudice clearly appears. Allen v. Railway Co., 106 Iowa, 602, 76 N. W. 848.”

The appellate court of Missouri holds to the same effect in Spengler v. St. L. Transit Co., 108 Mo. App. 329, 83 S. W. 312, in which the court uses the following language:

“As the course to be taken toy a trial court when statements of an attorney in his argument to the jury are objected to is largely one of discretion, and as we can only put the trial court in the wrong when its discretion is abused, it is necessary* to direct that court’s attention to the language complained of so distinctly that it may rule on it, and either rebuke the speaker, or not, as it sees proper- It is necessary, too, to take an exception to the ruling if an- adverse one is made, or to the failure to interfere if the court says nothing. An assignment of error, based on improper argument, cannot be maintained unless an exception to the court’s action is preserved, or perchance unless there was no opportunity 'to save it, and w-e fail to see how such a contingency as that could happen. State v. Pagels, 92 Mo. 300, 4 S. W. 931; State v. Dusenberry, 112 Mo. 277, 20 S. W. 461,”

We have long ’been of the opinion that courts frequently overestimate the influence of the conduct of attorneys upon the jury, and concur in the statement of Judge Caldwell, in Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Curb et al., 66 Fed. 519, 13 C. C. A. 587, that:

“The assumption of the courts that jurors are so w-ea-k, ignorant, and inexperienced as to fall an easy prey to the arts of the unscrupulous counsel is a grave error. They are as little liable to be played upon by false logic and misrepresentations of *136 the evidence as the judge on the bench. There is no occasion ‘for a refining machine at their elbow’ to sift the false from the true in the evidence or to detect chicanery, falsehood, or fallacy in the argument of counsel. The jurors are quite as able to protect themselves from such influences on the facts of the case a^ the court is on1 the law, and every ruling which proceeds upon the idea that juries are destitute of common sense, unacquainted with the affairs of the world, and ignorant of the arts and methods of lawyers is unsupported by fact or experience. * * * A verdict ought not to be set aside because the winning party did not have an ideal lawyer to argue his cause, or on the false assumption that the jury was destitute of common sense, and had such slight knowledge of the methods of lawyers as to fall an easy prey to their fallacious or false suggestions. But, however this may be, the trial judge, who hears and sees all that occurs at the trial, is in a much better position than the appellate court to determine whether he should interfere because of alleged improper acts or remarks of counsel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 409, 150 P. 139, 67 Okla. 134, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 1258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cassingham-v-berry-okla-1915.