Delaney v. Rosenthall

196 N.E.2d 878, 347 Mass. 143, 1964 Mass. LEXIS 731
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 196 N.E.2d 878 (Delaney v. Rosenthall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delaney v. Rosenthall, 196 N.E.2d 878, 347 Mass. 143, 1964 Mass. LEXIS 731 (Mass. 1964).

Opinion

Spiegel, J.

In this action of tort for malpractice the defendant rested at the close of the plaintiff’s case and the judge directed a verdict for the defendant. The case comes here on the plaintiff’s exceptions to this and other rulings.

We summarize the evidence as follows: The plaintiff worked for the Colonial Engineering Company (Colonial) as a fabricator of sheet metal. On November 17, 1958, the rotating disk of an electric sander with which he was working “snagged . . . and flew off into his left hand,” causing *144 serious lacerations and profuse bleeding. The vice-president of the company applied a bandage, and one of the mechanics in the shop took him to the office of the defendant, a physician practising in Somerville. The defendant bathed the hand and injected 1 ‘ shots ’ ’ of penicillin and anti-tetanus and a third which the plaintiff “did not know.” The defendant stitched up the lacerations with thirty-seven stitches, bandaged the hand, and prescribed medication for relief of pain.’ The defendant asked the plaintiff whether he wished to continue to be treated by him or by another physician, and the plaintiff stated that he would continue treatments with the defendant. The plaintiff, as directed by the defendant, returned to the defendant’s office November 19, two days later. On this occasion he did not see the defendant, but was treated by a woman in a white uniform named Phyllis, who worked for the defendant as an “assistant.” Phyllis, a high school graduate, had previously worked as an aide for two years in a hospital. Phyllis removed the bandage, looked at the hand, soaked, bathed, and rebandaged it, and instructed the plaintiff to return on Friday, November 21. He did so and was treated by the defendant. The thumb was swollen to twice its normal size and the flesh was swelling around the stitches, which “were starting to disappear in the flesh.” The doctor removed some of the stitches and “squeezed” the thumb. Pus was starting to come out of the cuts where they had been stitched. When the defendant pressed the thumb the plaintiff “felt a tremendous pain.” Phyllis applied the bandage and the defendant told the plaintiff to soak the hand and “to keep the bandage continually wet.” Pills were prescribed but after a few days these did not relieve the pain as effectively as at first. Three or four days later the plaintiff returned to the defendant’s office and Phyllis gave him a shot of penicillin and bathed and soaked the hand.

On November 28 the plaintiff went to the defendant’s office but did not see the defendant. Phyllis took out the remaining stitches and pressed the thumb as the doctor had done.

*145 Around December 1 the plaintiff was seen by the defendant at his office. The thumb was now three times its normal size and he could not move it at all. The surface of the thumb was hard and it had turned a “reddish, brownish color.” When the defendant pressed the thumb the plaintiff “thought he was going to collapse from the pain.”

On the second or third visit after December 1 the plaintiff was seen by the defendant. The swelling of the thumb was increasing. The plaintiff asked the defendant if an X-ray would do any good and the defendant told him that it would not. However, on December 22 an X-ray was taken of the plaintiff’s hand at the defendant’s office. This was the first time that an X-ray had been taken by the defendant. The plaintiff, between the first visit on November 17 and the last on December 22, went to the defendant’s office seventeen times but on no more than five of these visits was he seen by the defendant.

On December 26 the plaintiff consulted Dr. John Fagan, a surgeon practising in Cambridge. On Dr. Fagan’s advice the plaintiff went to the Cambridge City Hospital on the following morning. There X-rays were taken of his thumb and drains were inserted. This treatment produced beneficial results, for the pain was “immediately relieved and he [the plaintiff] was able to sleep for the first time. ’ ’ He remained in the hospital thirty days and when he was discharged his thumb had become normal in size and the swelling had gone, but he could not flex it.

Subsequently, the plaintiff reentered the hospital and came under the care of an orthopedic surgeon and underwent further operations to his hand. One of these involved a bone graft in the thumb. The plaintiff’s condition which made these operations necessary was diagnosed as osteo-myelitis. This had caused a portion of the bone in the thumb to become dead, and it became necessary to remove the dead bone in order to avoid amputation of the thumb. The condition of the thumb gradually improved and the plaintiff was discharged. “His thumb was half an inch shorter and it was stiff and it had no joints.” The plaintiff was unable to resume work until the following December.

*146 Dr. Fagan testified at the trial that the treatment which he prescribed after the plaintiff came under his care was “the most conservative course of treatment.” There was no expert medical opinion that the defendant was negligent in his treatment of the plaintiff. The defendant’s answers to the plaintiff’s interrogatories indicate that the defendant thought hospitalization of the plaintiff to be desirable. 1 The plaintiff testified that the defendant “never told me to go into the hospital” and that on one occasion, when specifically asked about alternative courses of treatment, the defendant told the plaintiff that cutting and draining the thumb would require hospitalization and would be “too painful.” On another occasion, in the course of treatment, Phyllis said to the defendant that Colonial’s plant manager had been inquiring when the plaintiff would be able to return to work. The defendant became angry and said to her, “I could put this man in the hospital and it would cost them more money.”

The main issue before us is whether the trial judge was in error in directing a verdict for the defendant. The duty owed by a physician to his patient has been stated frequently. This court has recently said: “ [T]he undertaking of a physician as implied by law is that he possesses and will use the reasonable degree of learning, skill and experience which is ordinarily possessed by others of his profession in the community where he practises, having regard to the current state of advance of the profession . . . and that he will in cases of doubt use his best judgment as to the treatment to be given in order to produce a good result. He does not warrant a cure.” Riggs v. Christie, 342 Mass. 402, 405-406.

*147 From the conflict between what the defendant said in answers to the plaintiff’s interrogatories and the advice which the plaintiff testified he was given, together with his testimony as to the defendant’s comment concerning the cost to Colonial involved in hospitalization of the plaintiff, the jury would be warranted in finding that the defendant did not “use his best judgment ... in order to produce a good result.” In the instant case there was evidence from which the jury could also find the following: (1) That the defendant failed to prescribe hospitalization even after it was clear that the plaintiff’s thumb was infected.

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Bluebook (online)
196 N.E.2d 878, 347 Mass. 143, 1964 Mass. LEXIS 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delaney-v-rosenthall-mass-1964.