Doty v. Lutheran Hospital Ass'n

194 N.W. 444, 110 Neb. 467, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 247
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1923
DocketNo. 22438
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 194 N.W. 444 (Doty v. Lutheran Hospital Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doty v. Lutheran Hospital Ass'n, 194 N.W. 444, 110 Neb. 467, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 247 (Neb. 1923).

Opinion

Dean, J.

Plaintiff sustained a fracture of the femur, or thigh Ibone, of his left leg about midway between the knee and the hip, and other minor injuries to his head and face, caused by the overturning of an automobile, owing to a defect in a highway, at a bridge approach. When the car turned over, plaintiff was thrown to the bottom of a ditch which was about 22 feet deep. He was immediately taken to the defendant Lutheran Hospital Association at Beatrice for treatment. Plaintiff alleges that the defendant hospital and the defendants Dr. Hepperlen and Dr. Brown “were and are now jointly engaged in the general practice of medicine, surgery and nursing and world'-g together in the establishment, maintaining and conducting of a public hospital for the nursing, medical and surgical care of the sick, injured and afflicted;” and that, after defendants were employed by him, the medical treatment and attention given him was “negligent, careless and unskilful,” to his damage in the sum of $20,000. In their respective separate answers defendants denied generally the averments of the petition and each specifically denied plaintiff’s allegations which charged carelessness, negligence, lack of skill, and the like.

When plaintiff concluded the introduction of his evidence, the defendants separately moved for a directed verdict on the ground, as alleged, that plaintiff “failed to introduce sufficient evidence to make a prima fade case in his favor and against the several moving defendants.” The motions were sustained. Thereupon the jury, pursuant to the court’s instruction, returned a verdict in favor of the défendants and each of them. Plaintiff appealed.

It was on the day of the accident that plaintiff was [470]*470taken to the defendant hospital for treatment and for about five days thereafter he was unconscious. Subsequently his injured leg was bandaged with cotton which was held in place by a circular screen made of light wire, in shape and form like an ordinary legging, the pressure on the leg being adjusted by straps and buckles. Plaintiff testified that Dr. Hepperlen advised him that if the pressure of the screen device hurt him he should loosen the straps, “ ‘and if it don’t hurt you buckle them up a little tighter,’ he says, T leave that to you.’ ” He also testified that adhesive straps were used which reached “above the knee cap down over the foot,” and that a weight was attached that “pulled a little on it;” that he was confined in the hospital seven weeks and a day and during all of that time he saw Dr. Hepperlen almost every morning, but that his limb was examined only three times, for about ten minutes each time, and that Dr. Hepperlen was the doctor who made each of the examinations.

It has been held that a physician is not chargeable with negligence where intervals elapse between his visits when the patient requires no attention during such intervals, but that he is chargeable with negligence where, during such intervals, the patient requires attention. Tomer v. Aiken, 126 Ia. 114.

Continuing plaintiff testified that the broken ends of the bones were not placed in apposition at the hospital !but were so placed that one broken .end lapped over the other broken end, which shortened the leg about two inches and caused it to be crooked and bow shaped, and that a lump was thereby caused to appear on the front of his leg; that he called attention of the nurses to the lump which was about the size of a goose egg, and that Miss Gerding, the head nurse, and some of the other n ,ii-sps under her were present, and that one of them said, “That is all right, the doctor will take care of that. I could not tell you anything about it, the doctor will attend to that part of it;” that subsequently he asked Dr. [471]*471Hepperlen what caused the lump, and the doctor said, “ ‘I don’t know, we will look after that tomorrow.’ That was the day that they came in and took the bandage off.”

Plaintiff also testified that defendant Dr. Brown examined his jaw, which gave him great pain, for'what was believed at the time to be a fracture, and he advised plaintiff that when he was able he would be taken into the X-ray room and they would find out the trouble, but that the jaw bone was given no further attention; that after he had been at the hospital about six weeks bed sores developed; that a few days afterwards, when the nurse gave him his shaving utensils and a looking glass, he, for the first time, discovered that blotches had broken out on his face, and when he asked the nurse what the blotches were she said she did not know but that she would call Dr. Hepperlen. When the doctor came to his bedside he said, “ ‘That is a breaking out caused from your stomach,’ he says, ‘That will be all right in a day or two;’ ” that the next day, or about that time, Dr. Hepperlen told plaintiff that he had to go home; that he protested that he was ill and unable to leave his bed and could not place his foot on the floor and was in no condition to be moved, ’but the doctor said he must go; that the next day, over his protest, the attendants and nurses dressed him and, the hospital authorities having caused notice to be sent to his wife, he was wheeled out of the hospital on a chair to a truck, where his wife and a man from his neighborhood were in waiting, and under such conditions was sent to his home at Vesta, in Johnson county, 27 miles distant; that, about 15 hours after he was carried into his own house, a physician was sent for and it was discovered that the blotches on plaintiff’s face and person disclosed smallpox; that his home was then quarantined for about two weeks, but not until after perhaps 50 friends and neighbors in his home community had called upon him; that, when he recovered and the quarantine was raised, almost immediately one [472]*472of hig five little ones was stricken with the same malady and the home was again quarantined for about three weeks, or in all about five weeks; that neither Dr. Hepperlin nor the head nurse nor any other person at or connected with the hospital told him or his wife, when he left the hospital, that he had the smallpox a i. d that he did not find it out until informed by a doctor after he arrived at his home.

Two physicians testified that a person becomes infected with smallpox about 14 days after exposure; so that it appears from the evidence that plaintiff acquired the disease while he was a patient at the hospital, but whether plaintiff became infected by the negligence of the defendants or any. of them does not appear in the evidence.

That one or more at the hospital knew that plaintiff was so afflicted appears from the evidence of Dr. Ziegler, who testified that, just before plaintiff was sent from the hospital, Dr. Hepperlen telephoned him that “Doty was ready to come home and had the smallpox,” and that if he did not go home he would be taken to the pest house. But plaintiff was sent to hig home without being told that he was afflicted with a loathsome and contagious disease, and, of course, without any directions or necessary precautions respecting his own safety and the safety of his family and others with whom he would naturally come in contact. Whether negligence was shown was a question of fact for the jury. 30 Cvc. 1574.

That the smallpox was communicated by plaintiff to only one person, a daughter, so far as the record shows, was not due to the defendants’ foresight. It may be added, however, that if plaintiff was put to any expense for medical treatment or otherwise, in this behalf, it is not made to appear in the bill of exceptions.

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194 N.W. 444, 110 Neb. 467, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doty-v-lutheran-hospital-assn-neb-1923.