Cooper v. National Motor Bearing Co.

288 P.2d 581, 136 Cal. App. 2d 229, 51 A.L.R. 2d 963, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1471
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 17, 1955
DocketCiv. 16465
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 288 P.2d 581 (Cooper v. National Motor Bearing Co.) 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
Cooper v. National Motor Bearing Co., 288 P.2d 581, 136 Cal. App. 2d 229, 51 A.L.R. 2d 963, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1471 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

KAUFMAN, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff after jury verdict in a malpractice action brought by respondent Bernard Cooper against Lillian Elson, a trained nurse employed by appellant, The National Motor Bearing Company, Inc., and against said company. Respondent Cooper was also an employee of the aforesaid company. A verdict in the sum of $25,000 in favor of respondent was returned by the jury. A motion for new trial was denied on condition that respondent would consent to a reduction *231 of the judgment to the sum of $15,000. Such consent was thereafter filed.

In May, 1951, Bernard Cooper, while engaged in the course of his employment for appellant company received a puncture wound on the left side of his forehead when another employee let a piece of metal slip from his hand. He went directly to the first aid room of the plant and received treatment from the nurse, Mrs. Lillian Bison. She swabbed the wound with mercurochrome or some other antiseptic and put a bandage on it. No one else was in the room. She did not ask him to sit down, but treated it while he was standing. According to respondent’s testimony she did not examine or probe the wound, but just swabbed and bandaged it. He was told to return the next day which he did. Mrs. Bison again applied antiseptic but did not probe it. On the next day he also went to the dispensary, but on that occasion the nurse just looked at the wound.

The wound appeared to close up but left a little red mark about the shape of the cut. The redness did not go away until the operation. After about two or three months the redness began to spread, and the area became puffy and raised in about three or four months after the original injury. Respondent on visits to the dispensary in this period would point out to Mrs. Bison that the wound didn’t seem to be healing properly and she would say if it didn’t she would have to do something. Some months late a little scab started to appear in the center.

In March, 1952, respondent visited the dispensary for a check of a chest injury and asked Mrs. Bison if she would send him to a doctor to examine his forehead. She referred him to Dr. Arden Hedge who excised a piece of tissue for laboratory examination. Dr. Lindsay, a pathologist, examined the specimen and reported that it contained a basal cell carcinoma, and the carcinoma had not been fully removed by the excision. On March 23, 1952, respondent was operated on, and a larger area was excised. Skin was removed from his right forearm and grafted to the forehead. He was hospitalized for four days. The entire basal-cell carcinoma was removed in the second operation.

Respondent testified that he was absent from work for 35 days on account of the operation. He had headaches that continued from the time of the operation up to and including the time of trial. There was a feeling of tightness in his forehead, and when he combed his hair he experienced a *232 prickling sensation. There was some limitation of motion in his arm for some months after the skin was removed for the graft. He experienced considerable embarrassment because of the livid scar on his forehead the size of a half-dollar. There was testimony by Dr. Jesse Carr that respondent has the type of skin subject to this type of cancer, and that he will probably get more cancer in the area where the excision has been done.

Appellants contend that they were prejudiced because respondent was permitted to call as a witness Dr. Arden B. Hedge under authority of section 2055 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and over objection of counsel for appellants. They say that if Dr. Hedge had not so testified they would have been entitled to a nonsuit because there would have been no expert testimony on behalf of respondent, since a malignant and cancerous condition is a matter which requires expert testimony. Bespondent did not wish to call the doctor as his own witness because he wanted to elicit evidence that could only be gained on cross-examination. Bespondent’s case was tried on the theory that a foreign body was left in the wound by the negligence of the nurse, and that this foreign body acting as an irritant, caused the cancer. The only evidence of a foreign body occurs in the reports of Dr. Hedge to the appellant company’s insurance carrier. Dr. Hedge, after he had made these reports, decided on further study that he had been mistaken in his first judgment that there had been a foreign body in the wound, and that the body which he had removed from it was a natural product of the body function of plaintiff. Dr. Hedge testified that cancer was not more likely to occur in a wound than in an area where there was no wound, that it could not be caused by a blow, cut, metal sliver or oil in a wound. Because the doctor was testifying under section 2055, respondent was able to impeach him by use of his earlier deposition.

It would seem that respondent is correct in his argument that appellants cannot claim they were prejudiced, because they could not have secured a nonsuit even if Dr. Hedge had not testified under section 2055. The testimony of Mrs. Bison, the nurse, established the standard of care in the community for nurses, and the reports of Dr. Hedge of his diagnosis and treatment of the wound, and the company’s records showing that the cancer resulted from an industrial accident, would have been sufficient evidence to compel the denial of a nonsuit.

*233 In Estate of McDonald, 191 Cal. 161 [215 P. 545], in which it was argued that a certain witness should not have been examined as an adverse party under section 2055, Code of Civil Procedure, it was said that no prejudice resulted since the witness was competent to testify in the case regardless of section 2055, and it was not shown that any evidence elicited was inadmissible under the general rules of evidence.

The facts on which it was decided to permit the doctor to testify under section 2055 were as follows: The appellant company employed registered nurses to operate a first aid dispensary at their plant; employees were instructed to report to this dispensary if injured while at work; nurses may practice only “in conjunction with curative or preventive medicine as prescribed by a licensed physician” (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2725); the appellant nurse worked under standing orders that were drawn up and signed by Dr. Arden Hedge; in event the injury was beyond the scope of the nurse’s practice, she was required to send employees to a doctor who was on the company’s panel; Dr. Hedge had an understanding with the company that he would accept as patients all employees sent to him by the company; the doctor’s services were paid for by the company through their insurance carrier; the employees always had to see the nurse first in order to get referred to the doctor; when employees went to the doctor they were to go for the specific purpose for which the nurse had referred them.

From the facts that trained nurses in operating a dispensary for the appellant company, necessarily must do so under general directions furnished by a licensed physician, that in this case such directions or “Standing Orders” were signed by Dr. Hedge, that he had an understanding that he accept all employees referred to him, an inference could reasonably be drawn by the trial court that he was an agent of appellant company in the carrying out of their medical program.

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Bluebook (online)
288 P.2d 581, 136 Cal. App. 2d 229, 51 A.L.R. 2d 963, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-national-motor-bearing-co-calctapp-1955.