Dietsch v. Mayberry

47 N.E.2d 404, 70 Ohio App. 527, 25 Ohio Op. 315, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 643
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 1942
Docket282
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 N.E.2d 404 (Dietsch v. Mayberry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dietsch v. Mayberry, 47 N.E.2d 404, 70 Ohio App. 527, 25 Ohio Op. 315, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 643 (Ohio Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Carpenter, J.

This was an action for damages against a physician for alleged malpractice in that he failed to properly care for the eyes of plaintiff at his birth and for the loss of one of them a few weeks thereafter. Prom a verdict and judgment for defendant, plaintiff appealed on questions of law.

The defendant is a general practitioner of medicine in Bryan and Williams county, Ohio, and was employed by the father of plaintiff to attend the birth in the family home, where plaintiff was born April 4, 1940. A competent practical nurse employed by the father, and a registered nurse who accompanied the doctor and was employed by him, assisted at the birth, and attended the plaintiff.

It is undisputed that plaintiff’s eyes were then swollen more than normal, and that the nurses at the direction of defendant instilled in his eyes the silver nitrate drops, or prophylactic, required by Section 1248-5, General Code.

April 7, 1940, the defendant called at the Dietseh home and examined the plaintiff and his eyes were then “still a little swollen’-’ and “there was some discharge from both eyes.” This he attributed to the silver nitrate. April 11, 1940, he again called and the nurse in charge called his attention to the continued discharge and swelling of both eyes, and, as to the left ■one, that there was something on the ball that appeared like a blister which would not wash off with the boric acid solution she had been using at defendant’s direction. After a minute examination of the eyes, he told the mother they “were perfectly all right *529 .and would be O. K. and she was not to worry.” He prescribed the use of a five percent solution of argyrol, which was applied as directed.

April 15th the swelling in the left eye, and the spot .in its center, having become more pronounced, the nurse telephoned the defendant about it and the next ■day the father took plaintiff to defendant’s office. The left ‘£ eye was bulging and had a grayish appearance or a dull appearance” and defendant suggested consultation with an eye specialist. At the instance of the father, he arranged with one at Port Wayne, Indiana, to see him the next day. Before plaintiff reached the specialist his left eye had ruptured and when it failed to respond to treatment, it was removed May 6, 1940.

In the pleading and trial, plaintiff’s claim was that the spot on the left eye was a corneal ulcer which by prompt use of available treatment could have been •cured. Some medical evidence supporting all of these •claims was before the jury. The defendant’s claim was .that the condition of that eye was due to congenital weakness and could not have been saved by any known treatment.

The first error assigned is that the court withdrew from the consideration of the jury an allegation of negligence in the petition that defendant failed to administer or cause to be administered the prophylactic treatment at birth. The undisputed evidence is that this was done, both nurses and the doctor so testified, .and there was no contrary evidence.

The second assignment of error is more difficult. It is that the court, on motion of defendant, withdrew from the consideration of the jury as a ground of negligence the allegation of the petition that the defendant failed to report to the local health officer that plain'tiff was suffering from ££inflammation of the eyes” as *530 provided for in the following sections of the General Code:

Section 1248-1. “Any inflammation, swelling or redness in either one or both eyes of any infant, either apart from or together with any unnatural discharge from the eye or eyes of such infant, independent of the nature of the infection, if any, occurring any time within two weeks after the birth of such infant, shall be known as ‘inflammation of the eyes of the new born.’ ” 106 Ohio Laws, 321.

Section 1248-2. “It shall be the duty of any physician, surgeon, obstetrician, midwife, nurse, maternity home or hospital of any nature; parent, relative and any persons attendant on or assisting in any way whatsoever, any infant or the mother of any infant at childbirth or any time, within two weeks after childbirth, knowing the condition, hereinabove defined, to exist, within six hours thereafter, to report such fact, as the state board of health shall direct, to the local health officer of the city, town, village or whatever other political division there may be, within which the infant or the mother of any such infant may reside. For such services the attending physician, surgeon, obstetrician, midwife, nurse, maternity home or hospital shall receive from the state treasurer a fee of fifty cents.” 106 Ohio Laws, 321.

The purposes and effect of this procedure are disclosed by Section 1248-3 and the material part of Section 1248-4, General Code, which are as follows:

Section 1248-3. “It shall be the duty of the local health officer:

“1. To investigate or to have investigated each case as filed with him in pursuance with the law, and any other such case as may come to his attention.

“2. To report all cases of inflammation of the eyes *531 &f the new born and the result of all such investigañon as the State Board of Health shali direct.

“3. To conform to such other rules and regulations as the State Board of Health shall promulgate for his further guidance.” 106 Ohio Laws, 321.

Section 1248-4. “It shall be the duty of the state board of health:

“1. To enforce the provisions of this act.

“2. To promulgate such rules and regulations as shall, under this act, be necessary for the purpose of this act, and such as the State Board of Health may deem necessary for the proper guidance of local health officers. # *

“4. To provide, if. necessary, daily inspection and prompt and gratuitous treatment to any infant whose eyes are infected with inflammation of the eyes, provided further that the State Board of Health, if necessary, shall defray the expense of such treatment from such sum as may be appropriated for its use. * * *

“6. To furnish copies of this law to all physicians and midwives as may be engaged in the practice of obstetrics or assisting at childbirth.”

Regulations 31, 32, 34, 35 and 36 of the State Board of Health, now the State Department of Health, in April, 1940, provided the details how physicians should .make the reports required by the statute, substantially as it specifies, except by regulation 32 if “the •condition of the case so requires, in addition to the written report, an immediate notice of such case shall be given to the health commissioner in the most rapid manner available.”

The court is bound to take judicial notice of such rules and regulations. Duncan v. Evans, 60 Ohio App., 265, 20 N. E. (2d), 729.

The only reported decision directly in point cited by counsel or that the court has been able to find, was by *532 the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts in Medlin v. Bloom, 230 Mass., 201, 119 N. E., 773.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.E.2d 404, 70 Ohio App. 527, 25 Ohio Op. 315, 1942 Ohio App. LEXIS 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dietsch-v-mayberry-ohioctapp-1942.