Cazzell v. Schofield

8 S.W.2d 580, 319 Mo. 1169, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 795
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 18, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 8 S.W.2d 580 (Cazzell v. Schofield) 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
Cazzell v. Schofield, 8 S.W.2d 580, 319 Mo. 1169, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 795 (Mo. 1928).

Opinions

This is an action by plaintiff to recover damages for personal injuries, bodily suffering and illness, charged to have resulted from the alleged malpractice of defendant, who is a physician. The venue of the action was changed to the Circuit Court of Cooper County, where the cause was tried before a jury, resulting in a unanimous verdict for plaintiff, assessing her damages in the sum of $10,000. The action was originally instituted against four defendants, all physicians, but, at the conclusion of plaintiff's evidence-in-chief, the trial court instructed the jury to find for all of the defendants except the present appellant, whereupon the plaintiff made an involuntary dismissal as to all of the defendants, except Dr. Schofield. The defendant Schofield was allowed an appeal to this court from the adverse judgment against him nisi.

The petition of plaintiff was amended by interlineation at the commencement of the trial, and, as so amended, charges that "during the month of September, 1921, she, being pregnant, sought medical care and attention of the defendant, Dr. L.J. Schofield; that the said defendant, L.J. Schofield, accepted her as a patient and commenced treating plaintiff, giving her medical attention in the said month of September, 1921, . . .; that thereafter, and up until the month of January, 1922, the said defendants did treat and render medical attention to this plaintiff, for the purpose of enabling her to a proper delivery of her said unborn child; that plaintiff's physical condition, under the treatment and care of said physicians, gradually grew worse, and in the month of January, 1922, after defendant L.J. Schofield had negligently failed to treat or attend upon plaintiff, though duly called, the plaintiff called into consultation other physicians and surgeons, and she was advised by said other physicians and surgeons that she was carrying a dead fetus; that at the time plaintiff was so advised by said other physicians and surgeons, and for several months prior thereto, plaintiff suffered great physical pain and torture; that while under the treatment and care of the defendants, and during the time defendants should have skilfully cared for plaintiff, her system became poisoned by auto-intoxication and her body and limbs suffered a toxic paralysis as a result of said auto-intoxication, due to carrying said dead fetus in her womb, or the putrefying membranes thereof, when, by the exercise of ordinary care and skill, said womb should have been emptied by surgical operation; that prior to the calling in of other physicians, plaintiff *Page 1175 and her husband both suggested to the defendants that they were of the opinion that the plaintiff was carrying a dead fetus; but said defendants carelessly and negligently treated, administered, cared for and advised plaintiff on the hypothesis that said fetus was not dead; that immediately upon calling other physicians and surgeons said physicians advised that an operation was necessary to save plaintiff's life, and thereupon she was reduced to a state of unconsciousness and operated upon by said last physicians and surgeons and the said fetus was removed from her womb, dead and in a decayed condition; that from the state of decay of said fetus at the time of its removal from the plaintiff's womb, the same had been dead and decaying for a period of several weeks; that as a result of the carelessness and negligence of the defendant aforesaid, plaintiff was rendered permanently sick, sore, lame, and weak, and has sustained a lasting nervous shock to her entire system; that as a result of carrying said dead fetus in her womb, plaintiff suffered from auto-intoxication and became paralyzed from toxic poison through her body and limbs, and she is unable to use said body and limbs and has lost her power of locomotion; that plaintiff's body at times becomes greatly swollen, tender and sore, and plaintiff has been compelled to remain in a state of helplessness in bed for many months, as a direct result of the complaints above referred to, all of which resulted directly from the carelessness and negligence of the defendants, in their improper care, treatment and attention of this plaintiff; that the plaintiff has lost and will in the future lose much of her natural rest and sleep; that she has become an invalid and will so continue to be an invalid the remainder of her life." The petition prays judgment in the sum of $20,000. The answer is a general denial of the allegations of the petition.

Plaintiff, at the time of the trial, was twenty-nine years of age and had been married about five years. Shortly after their marriage plaintiff and her husband removed from Kansas City to a farm near Centerview, Missouri, where they resided until plaintiff's illness in October, 1921. The evidence tends to show that plaintiff performed the usual household duties, including the laundry work, and attended to the care and raising of the poultry on the farm. Plaintiff is a graduate of the Warrensburg State Teachers' College, and for two years after her graduation she was a teacher in a public school, during which time she was absent only one day from her school duties. During the period of the late war, in order to release her father, a rural mail carrier, for farm work, she assumed, for a period of ninety days, her father's duties in daily carrying the mail, driving a team when the roads were muddy and driving an automobile when the roads were dry. So far as the record discloses, plaintiff had suffered no serious illness since she was ten or twelve years of age, *Page 1176 at which time she had some trouble with her eyes and received treatment therefor in Kansas City for some months from an eye specialist. Some time after the eye trouble, plaintiff was afflicted with partial deafness, which deafness apparently has continued. Defendant had been the physician of plaintiff, and of her family, during all of plaintiff's lifetime, having attended plaintiff's mother at the time of plaintiff's birth. In March or April, 1921, plaintiff consulted defendant, and received treatments from him, for a stomach or abdominal ailment, suspected at the time as being appendicitis, to which treatments defendant says plaintiff "responded moderately well, but not completely."

Plaintiff's last menstruation, prior to her illness which gave rise to the present action, occurred about August 19, 1921. In the early part of September, 1921, plaintiff developed a nausea, which increased in intensity to such an extent that she was removed from the farm where she resided with her husband to her mother's home in town early in October, 1921, and defendant was then called to treat and to attend plaintiff. Defendant diagnosed plaintiff's illness as being pernicious nausea due to pregnancy, and advised that plaintiff be kept in bed. Plaintiff's nausea did not abate, but apparently grew worse, reaching a stage where plaintiff could scarcely retain food or nutriment of any kind. At times, according to plaintiff's testimony, the nausea was so severe that she vomited clots of blood, and she subsisted principally upon a diet of Mellin's Food, being unable to retain cow's milk. Plaintiff gradually became weaker and lost weight because of her inability to retain nourishment and because of the frequent and violent paroxysms of nausea. In the latter part of November, 1921, plaintiff complained of a numbness in her feet and of a tingling sensation in her toes and fingers, and she experienced considerable disturbance and difficulty in urinating, being unable to urinate at all without being lifted from the bed and placed in a sitting posture.

On or about November 23, 1921, defendant brought three other physicians, as consultants, to plaintiff's bedside, apparently upon his own volition.

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.W.2d 580, 319 Mo. 1169, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cazzell-v-schofield-mo-1928.