Dunn v. Styron

10 S.W.2d 1018
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 8, 1928
DocketNo. 2224.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 S.W.2d 1018 (Dunn v. Styron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunn v. Styron, 10 S.W.2d 1018 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

We adopt the statement of the nature and result of this case as found in appellant’s brief.

This is a suit instituted in the district court of Dawson county by R. O. Styron, as next friend in behalf of his infant daughter, Virginia Kathlyn Styron, against Dr. W. H. Dunn, to recover from him the sums of $30,-000 actual and $10,000 exemplary damages for alleged injury and mistreatment of the plaintiff by the defendant, while acting in the capacity of her physician; the plaintiff alleging that such injury was occasioned by the negligent and unskillful operation of an electric machine by the appellant while undertaking to treat the appellee for an ailment diagnosed by appellant as infantile paralysis. Appellee further alleging that appellant did not have or use professional, medical, surgical, scientific, trustworthy, or ordinary knowledge, learning, skill, diligence, care, or attention in the examination, diagnosis, discovery, or treatment of said child, and said disease, with said machine, current, energy, or otherwise; that appellant was careless, negligent, and indifferent in the selection, maintenance, and operation of said machine, and that the methods used were improper, unnecessary and dangerous, and condemned by the medical profession in similar localities and circumstances; that appellant permitted too much electricity to enter the patient’s right leg and body; that the exposure was for too long time and that the machine, connections and exposures were carelessly, loosely, and negligently placed and arranged as to cause too much electrical friction and heat; that there was an excess dosage, and the machine was defective and not properly equipped for control of dosage, and that the current of the machine was concentrated upon the child’s right leg between her knee and ankle for such time and with suph intensity that her leg was burned and scorched to and into the bone, and thereby she was crippled for life. Appellant answered by general and special exceptions and general denial, and further pleaded that he had treated the appellee with skill and abili *1019 ty and in said treatment had applied to her an electrical treatment known as diathermia, which treament he alleged .was beneficial in •such cases and was practiced by many leading physicians of the larger towns of this ■state, and that the electric machine used was modern and approved, and that he was «killed in its operation and operated it skillfully while treating the appellee, and that ■through no fault, negligence, or lack of skill ■on his part the child’s limb had received a ■slight burn or abrasion during the application of such treatment, which was of itself mot a serious injury, but that owing to the ■disregard by appellee’s mother in the care •and dressing of such injury the child’s leg had become infected, and that her injuries were caused by the infection and not by th,e ■electrical treatment applied by him. The case was submitted to the jury on special issues. On issues submitted the jury found ■the facts substantially as follows:

(1) The defendant failed to have and use such care, skill, and diligence as a physician, in the treatment of the plaintiff, as is ordinarily had and used by the average members of the medical profession in good standing in the same or similar localities, and under the same or similar circumstances.

(2) The plaintiff was injured as alleged as a natural, direct, and proximate result of the failure of the defendant to have and use such care, skill, and diligence as is stated in special issue No. 1.

(3) The jury found in favor of plaintiff actual damages in the sum of $3,000.

The jury found in favor of defendant on :the issue of exemplary damages. The court rendered judgment for plaintiff on the verdict of the jury. Defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and appeal perfected.

Opinion.

By this suit, the issues briefly reviewed, the plaintiff, Virginia Kathlyn Styron, an infant, not two years old, by next friend, sought to^ recover damages against Dr. W. H. Dunn, alleged to have resulted from the negligent and unskillful operation of an electric machine by Dr. Dunn while undertaking to treat the plaintiff for an ailment diagnosed as infantile paralysis. The defenses interposed were general denial as to negligence and unskillfulness; that he had treated the child with skill and ability, and in said treatment had applied to her an electrical treatment known as diathermia, alleged to be beneficial in such cases and practiced by many physicians, was modern and approved ; that he operated the diathermic machine skillfully in the treatment; and that through no fault of his' the child’s limb (between the knee and ankle) had received a slight burn or abrasion during the application of such treatment, but that through want of care on the part of the child’s mother in removing the bandage and placing thereon another, the child’s leg had become infected, and that her injuries were caused by such infection.

It is submitted by appellant, under the 'first proposition, that the evidence does not sustain the verdict of the jury in the answers returned to issues 1 and 2, to the effect that appellant failed to have and use such care, skill, and diligence as a physician in the treatment of the child as is ordinarily had and used by the average members of the medical profession in good standing in the same or similar circumstances, and that the injuries complained of were caused by, or the proximate result of, such failure.

The jury’s findings on issues of fact to which the above refers form the basis upon wbieh the judgment was entered. No objection appears to have been made to any evidence found in the record, so that all of the evidence offered was heard and considered by the jury and the trial court. The evidence covers more than 100 pages of the record, besides copies of photographs of the child’s leg showing its appearance at the time the photographs were taken, and at the time some of the witnesses saw the child’s leg and testified with reference to its condition and the probable cause of its condition as seen.

Appellant contends under this proposition that for the jury to give an affirmative answer to the first and second issues submitted, it was necessary that some evidence should have been offered showing how the average physician, in the same locality as the one at bar, treated similar ailments under similar circumstances, and that no such evidence was offered or is found in the record; that the jury’s answer, under the issues, was necessarily a comparison of-the treatment admin-isteréd by Dr. Dunn to this patient with what such treatment would have been had the child been treated by other average physicians in that locality under the same or similar circumstances. It is submitted that the evidence does not show the treatment administered by Dr. Dunn was different from the methods that average physicians would have used. The case of Hamilton v. Harris (Tex. Civ. App.) 223 S. W. 533, is referred to as sustaining the contention. In our opinion the case is not in point on the rule of evidence contended for. The case discusses a rule of law as to the extent of the liability of a medical practitioner, and holds that he engages that he possesses such degree of skill as is ordinarily possessed of the profession generally, and that he will exercise that skill with reasonable care and diligence, and to exercise his best judgment, and that when he has done so his liability ceases.

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.W.2d 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-styron-texapp-1928.