Edwards v. Quackenbush

149 P.2d 809, 112 Colo. 337, 1944 Colo. LEXIS 183
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMay 1, 1944
DocketNo. 15,167.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 149 P.2d 809 (Edwards v. Quackenbush) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. Quackenbush, 149 P.2d 809, 112 Colo. 337, 1944 Colo. LEXIS 183 (Colo. 1944).

Opinions

THE defendant in error, a young housewife, to whom we shall hereinafter refer as plaintiff, brought the action, here for review, against plaintiff in error, a physician and surgeon, hereinafter to be called defendant, and his then codefendant Dr. L. James Dixon, to recover damages in the sum of $25,000 allegedly resulting from the negligent severance of plaintiff's ileum (the lower portion of the small intestine) from the caecum (the cul-de-sac in which the large intestine begins) in the performance of an appendix operation, and negligently binding together of small loops of the small intestine, resulting in an almost complete obstruction therein. By an amendment to the complaint, plaintiff further alleged negligence of the defendant in his postoperative treatment. By his answer, defendant denied the allegations of the complaint as to negligence and damage; asserted that he had saved plaintiff's life and that in the performance of the appendectomy defendant had rendered his best services and exercised his best judgment, and counterclaimed for $110 allegedly owing from plaintiff for his services in that connection. Dr. Dixon, in his answer, stated that he had not participated in the operation beyond handing the surgical instruments used therein to defendant; that upon the basis of his observation, plaintiff's intestine was not severed and, upon information and belief, denied the remaining allegations of the complaint.

Trial was to a jury. Defendants unsuccessfully interposed *Page 340 motions for nonsuit upon the completion of plaintiff's case, and at the close of all the evidence, they moved for a directed verdict, principally upon the grounds of the insufficiency of the evidence to establish negligence or damage. The court sustained this motion as to Dr. Dixon but overruled it as to the defendant. However, in such connection and at that time, very properly as we view from our examination of the evidence, the court took from the jury the further consideration of the charges of postoperative negligence and malpractice against defendant, as well as the claim of plaintiff that her ileum might have been severed by a ligature wrongfully placed therearound in the performance of the appendectomy. This circumscription on the scope of the inquiry, although patently favorable to defendant as to the aspects withdrawn, was not objected to by plaintiff then or now. Thereupon, on this single issue, under instructions not objected to by defendant, the case was submitted to the jury which found in favor of plaintiff and assessed $18,000 damages against defendant. Subsequently defendant's motion for new trial was overruled and judgment entered in accord with the verdict. Asserting, inter alia, that the evidence was insufficient to establish the negligence of defendant, or to warrant the submission of the question to the jury, defendant specifies that the court erred in overruling his motions for nonsuit and for a directed verdict in his favor, and in not granting a new trial.

Briefly summarized, the evidence on the issue of liability as limited by the trial court is as follows: Plaintiff was stricken with acute appendicitis and her affliction was correctly diagnosed as such by defendant, who properly recommended an early operation. In pursuance, plaintiff was taken to St. Philips Hospital, in Denver, which was conducted by Dr. Dixon. There her appendix was removed by defendant. In a few days fecal matter (excretions of the bowels) began to exude from the incision. This and other disturbing conditions *Page 341 continuing, as hereinafter will be mentioned in greater detail in our discussion of the question of damages, several months thereafter an operation by another surgeon disclosed, as he testified, that plaintiff's ileum had been cut in two and that the two ends were about eight inches apart. Fortuitously, by skillful and delicate successive operations by the latter surgeon, a proper union of the loose ends of the ileum was finally effected. The surgeon who performed the second and subsequent operations, when asked to account for the separation of the ileum, said: "It could have been an accidental severance with a knife or scissors. That's the only way." The resident physician at Denver General Hospital, who assisted in the second operation, testified: "The terminal ileum was found to be completely severed from the caecum. * * * It was severed or cut so the two ends were not approximating one another; they were several inches away. * * * The stump (of the lower portion of the separated ileum) looked like it might have been severed. I couldn't say definitely, — with some sharp instrument of some sort." As defendant stresses, on cross-examination this witness admitted that he could not pronounce with certainty that the severance of the ileum had been accomplished by a mechanical instrument. Defendant testified that he did not either cut or sever the ileum in the course of the appendectomy and claimed that his placing a gauze packing around the ileum before the appendix was cut precluded such a possibility. Dr. Dixon substantiated both of these statements. However, cross-examination and the testimony of other medical witnesses tended to show that in the procedure actually followed in the questioned operation positive infallibility in the protection of the ileum from an accidental cut was not insured by the insertion of gauze packing. Defendant and Dr. Dixon further stated that plaintiff's intestines were friable from inflammation caused by some pre-existing infection, and intimated that the fecal discharges through the incision came via *Page 342 a fistula from lesions resulting therefrom. In opposition, the surgeon and assistant performing the corrective operations, said plaintiff's intestines were normal and displayed no signs of any diseased condition whatsoever. Defendants called five other physicians and surgeons, who as experts testified hypothetically that had the ileum been severed completely the early death of the plaintiff from peritonitis caused by the consequent flooding of the abdominal cavity with fecal matter, would have been almost inevitable, and since she had not perished, expressed as their opinion, that the intestine had not been severed in the appendectomy. Plaintiff met this theory with expert medical testimony to the effect, as it was said the second operation actually revealed, that through nature's protective processes, the upper end of the severed bowel, following the line of least resistance, had become adherent to the abdominal wall at the place of the incision and there had formed a seal whereby the fecal matter from the organs above was discharged on the outside of the abdomen at that point, and that coincidentally the lower severed end of the intestine, being deprived of fluid, had sealed off and taken a position of repose. Also, there was disagreement in the opinions of the medical witnesses as to the length of the period during which rectal discharges might continue after a severance of the ileum, the evidence of those for plaintiff, on the one hand, being that such as factually were known to have occurred, properly could be attributed to previous accumulations in the lower bowels below the disjunction, while contra, defendants' experts expressed that the established rectal emissions demonstrated that there had been no severance of the bowel tract.

[1, 2] It is to be observed that the testimony of no medical witness so much as suggests that the ileum at the alleged area of disjunction was involved in the original condition of acute appendicitis or that it was necessary to cut it, treat it or do anything at all with it, in *Page 343 order to remove the appendix.

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Bluebook (online)
149 P.2d 809, 112 Colo. 337, 1944 Colo. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-quackenbush-colo-1944.