Davis v. Southern Baptist Hospital

293 So. 2d 238, 1974 La. App. LEXIS 3650
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1974
DocketNo. 6051
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 293 So. 2d 238 (Davis v. Southern Baptist Hospital) 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
Davis v. Southern Baptist Hospital, 293 So. 2d 238, 1974 La. App. LEXIS 3650 (La. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

SCHOTT, Judge.

Plaintiffs, the children and legal heirs of Louis P. Davis, Jr., the original plaintiff who died on September 15, 1971, appeal from a judgment based upon a unanimous jury verdict dismissing their claim against all defendants.

Defendants include Southern Baptist Hospital and Francis Everett Brander, individually and as representative of certain underwriters at Lloyds, subscribing to a certificate of insurance issued to the hospital, Commercial Union Insurance Company of New York, another insurer of the hospital, and Drs. Charles W. Pearce and White E. Gibson, III, and their insurer, St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company. The suit was originally filed also against Dr. Charles Brown, Jr. and F. Ritter & Company but was voluntarily dismissed as against them by plaintiffs before trial.

Decedent Davis was afflicted with a serious heart condition and was referred by his regular treating physician, Dr. Brown, to Drs. Pearce and Gibson for open heart surgery. He was admitted to the Baptist Hospital on August 31, 1969, and the surgery was performed on September 10 by Dr. Pearce with assistance from Dr. Gibson. Also participating were a physician-[239]*239anesthesiologist, one or more surgical nurses who were scrubbed and worked in the sterile field, and one or two circulating nurses who worked outside of the sterile field. Utilized during the operation was a Bovie machine, which enables the surgeon to seal off small blood vessels during the procedure by means of the electrocoagu-lation. The apparatus consists of an electrically powered console located outside of the sterile field and principally operated and monitored by a circulating nurse. To the console are connected leads, one to a contact which is applied by the surgeon to hemostats on small blood vessels, another leading to a foot pedal which is used by the surgeon in order to activate the Bovie as needed,- and another leading to a plate which is placed under the patient on the operating table and serves as a ground for the electric current. The patient’s skin is coated with a conductive jelly and the plate is positioned in such a way that the weight of the patient’s body presses firmly upon the plate so as to achieve maximum contact. This Bovie machine was' the property of the hospital and was the hospital’s responsiblity as far as maintenance and upkeep were concerned. The nurses were employees of the hospital.

On the second day after the operation, while decedent was in the recovery room, a lesion was discovered on his back" which Dr. Pearce described as having a dull flesh color, lifeless in appearance at the center and surrounded by a small zone of reddened skin.

Decedent was treated for this condition in conjunction with post operative care by Drs. Pearce and Gibson until February when he was referred to Dr. Louis Krust, a plastic surgeon, for further treatment of the lesion on his back. He remained' in the care of Dr. Krust until the date of his death in September, 1971. When Dr. Krust first saw the lesion he described it as a “one-and-three-quarter inch by four-inch leathery eschar on the mid back at the level of the eighth to tenth thoracic vertebral spine.” He defined an eschar as a leathery area of dead skin and said that decedent had a mild kyphosis or angulation in his back at the site of the eschar which would tend to increase pressure at the site during surgery.

Plaintiffs’ suit for damages was for decedent’s physical and mental anguish, pain, suffering and inconvenience caused by the lesion on his back until his death, but his death is not alleged to be the result of or related to the injury. The principal errors specified by plaintiffs are that the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, though applicable on the basis of the law and the evidence, was not applied and as a result defendants were not found liable.

It should be noted at the outset of this discussion that decedent was the beneficiary of a highly successful surgical procedure at the hands of Drs. Pearce and Gibson which undoubtedly prolonged his life. One cannot help but be highly impressed with the skill of these surgeons in performing an operation which consisted of an incision at the groin area so as to expose the large artery and connect it with an artificial heart-lung apparatus for use during the operation, and a second incision from the top of the chest down to the umbilicus with a division of the breast bone and spreading it apart from four to six inches so as to expose the front surface of the heart. During the operation the heart was actually stopped while the patient was dependent on the heart-lung machine. Thereafter the surgeon opened the large aorta, exposed the aortic valve and accomplished its removal and replacement by an artificial valve selected for size and fixed into position by the surgeon. Thereafter the heart was closed, the aortic valve above the heart was allowed to fill with blood and in due course the heart was restarted and the heart-lung machine disconnected. Any words we might use to paraphrase the doctor’s description of the intricate procedures he employed would be grossly inadequate to emphasize the seri[240]*240ousness and complexity of such procedures. In answer to a question as to whether the operation was a success, Dr. Pearce said:

“I was extremely pleased the way the operation had gone along and the way the patient’s own heart action had been restored and came back so promptly, the fact that we were able to remove all of the diseased valve and including nearly all of the calcium that is at the root of it and to place in its place a prosthesis of good size that should serve and function well in the months and years ahead.”

In the light of these facts it might seem practical to dispose of this case on the theory that the decedent paid a small price in exchange for his life which was clearly in jeopardy and which was undoubtedly prolonged as a result of the services performed by defendants. As Dr. Pearce put it, “I think it’s probably comparable to having your knee skint when you are dragged up on the beach after drowning, a small price to pay for being saved.”

But while this might seem to be a sound practical approach to the problem and while it may very well have been the approach of the jury, plaintiffs are entitled to a disposition of their case in accordance with the law and regardless of the good that flowed to decedent as a result of defendants’ efforts if decedent suffered a substantial injury as a result of defendants’ negligence his survivors are entitled to be compensated for his damages.

Plaintiffs contend that decedent’s injury was a burn from the Bovie machine plate; that he was rendered unconscious and was wholly within the care and control of defendants when the injury occurred; that under these circumstances the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur applies and upon his proof of this untoward incident having occurred the burden of proof shifted to defendants to show that they were free from negligence; that defendants failed to carry their burden of proof; and that plaintiffs are therefore entitled to recover.

Defendants-physicians and their insurers take the position they offered sufficient proof to show that they followed the standard of care customarily used in the community and that they are thereby relieved of negligence.

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Related

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317 So. 2d 270 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
293 So. 2d 238, 1974 La. App. LEXIS 3650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-southern-baptist-hospital-lactapp-1974.