Davilla v. Ochsner Clinic

103 So. 2d 285, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 887
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 9, 1958
DocketNo. 20963
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 103 So. 2d 285 (Davilla v. Ochsner Clinic) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davilla v. Ochsner Clinic, 103 So. 2d 285, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 887 (La. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

McBRIDE, Judge.

Plaintiff, Sidney T. Davilla, then aged 57 years, was admitted to the Ochsner Foundation Hospital, Metairie, Parish of Jefferson, August 5, 1947, and on August 7 submitted to an operation for diaphragmatic herniation, performed by Dr. Alton Och-sner. The wound resulting from said operation eviscerated (the stitches broke), and the physicians in the early morning hours of August 19 re-sutured the wound. In all, plaintiff remained in the hospital until September 5, 1947.

Davilla brought this suit on August 6, 1948, claiming of defendants (who are alleged to be the owners and operators of the hospital and their liability insurer), in soli-do, the sum of $30,000 as damages, charging that some person or persons in the employ of the hospital during his stay therein following the operation placed a tourniquet on his arm in connection with the introduction into his vein of a needle for an infusion, or some similar medical purpose, and negligently permitted such tourniquet to remain on his arm for an extended period of time. He alleges that the fact that the tourniquet was allowed to remain on his arm caused serious injuries, viz., a right axillary neuritis with deltoid muscle atrophy.

The petition sets forth no specific date the tourniquet was applied. Defendants initially interposed an exception of vagueness which, however, was never tried, and we were informed during the argument of the case that the exception was abandoned by the pleaders because the attorneys for plaintiff furnished defense counsel with the information that the alleged incident occurred “on or about the 17th of August, 1947.”

Defendants answered the suit October 13, 1955, generally denying negligence or liability, but the case was not tried in the court below until November 21, 1956, or more than eight years after the petition was filed.

The trial judge held in favor of defendants and dismissed the suit handing down brief reasons, the gravamen of which is that he thought plaintiff had failed to prove his case by a preponderance of evidence. Plaintiff has appealed.

The focal point in the case is one of fact. Did any employee of the hospital negligently apply a tourniquet to plaintiff’s right arm from which plaintiff suffered damages?

At the outset we notice that the date the tourniquet is alleged to have been negligently left on plaintiff’s arm was never shown convincingly or with any degree of certainty. After the exception of vagueness was filed, defendants’ counsel were informed that the incident took place on or about August 17, 1947. During direct examination plaintiff testified that the accident happened about twenty-four hours after the evisceration of the wound was re-sutured, and that the nurse applied the tourniquet about 6:30 p. m. This would place the alleged incident as having occurred on August 21. However, in the course of cross-examination plaintiff was vague in fixing the date mentioning that the incident could have happened on August 17, 18, or 19. It appears that during January 1948 plaintiff consulted Dr. Benjamin F. Morton of Birmingham, Alabama, and in a report sent by this physician to him, the history of plaintiff’s complaint as given by him to the physician is stated thus: “According to the information obtained, you had an operation for a diaphragmatic hernia August, 1947. The day following the operation at about 6:30 p. m., a rubber tourniquet was applied to the right arm.” This statement of plaintiff which Dr. Morton attributes to him would identify the date as August 8. The record also discloses that plaintiff told Dr. J. A. Colclough, who appeared as his only medical expert at the trial, that the tourniquet was applied the day after the operation — in other words, on August 8. Mrs. Davilla testified she [287]*287arrived at the hospital at 11 o’clock a. m. on the morning after the second operation, i. e., the re-suturing of the eviscerated wound, and that plaintiff’s right arm was swollen twice its size and was badly discolored. According to her testimony the incident occurred on August 20.

■ Plaintiff is a resident of Birmingham, Alabama, and after his hospitalization returned to that city. On January 5, 1948, he consulted Dr. Morton, above-mentioned, and thereafter on the same day plaintiff addressed a letter to Ochsner Clinic reading as follows:

“Since my operation and, particularly, since my arrival home, I have had a definite numb feeling in my right arm and shoulder, which was occasioned by, and your Nurses and Orderlies will verify this, a Tourniquet left on my right arm unnecessarily; indeed, for several hours, when the needle for the hose containing blood and vitimized water was inserted in my arm. This incident caused my arm to swell to twice the normal size and, in fact, the arm turned blue. Your Nurse, immediately, brought in Hot Water Bottles, etc. in an effort to help the situation. However, today, realizing that this numb, limp feeling in my right arm was growing worse, I immediately consulted a Nerve Specialist here who advised that the Axilary nerve was dead, because of this afore-said Tourniquet, remaining indefinitely on my arm, there.
“The above for your information.”

The above-quoted letter, by the admission of plaintiff, was the first notice of any kind he gave to the hospital that he was claiming an injury had been sustained during the tenure of his stay there, and it must be noted that the letter was not written until exactly four months had expired from the time of his discharge from the institution.

From the witness stand plaintiff maintained the tourniquet was placed on his arm by a nurse named “Miss Altomat,” and his recital of the incident appears from his testimony as follows:

“ * * * Well, then they put the tourniquet on my arm. They did that on several occasions, but on this particular occasion, that caused this accident, the nurse covered me up, and I went to sleep, and when I awoke I was in excruciating pain, and my arm was at least twice its normal size. But I didn’t get excited. I figured that the swelling would go down. They rushed in with hot water bottles and every other device, and I guess that led me to believe it would be all right, and then later on I noticed a recession of the muscles in my shoulder in the flesh, and the flesh left the bone there, and today I have nothing but a kind of bone in my shoulder, because that tourniquet was forgotten about on my arm. They took the tourniquet off, and they rushed in and out with hot water bottles.”

Plaintiff sought corroboration for his statements by producing a witness named Gene Moore who identified himself as a one-time orderly in the employ of the hospital and testified:

“I was walking down the corridor, and I looked in at Mr. Davilla, and he was asleep, and he had an infusion in his arm, and the bottle was empty, and his arm was swollen up about double the size of the arm, up here (indicating), and I walked in, and I said, ‘Oh, oh, it looks like they done messed up’, in a joking manner, and I rushed out and called the nurse, and she came down, and she was all excited, and she removed the tourniquet, and she told me to go get some hot water bottles, and I went and got some hot water bottles, and applied them to his arm.”

Much significance must be given Moore’s statement that plaintiff had an infusion in his arm and the bottle was empty, for this will come in for some discussion later. Special mention should also be made that [288]

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Bluebook (online)
103 So. 2d 285, 1958 La. App. LEXIS 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davilla-v-ochsner-clinic-lactapp-1958.