Ellis v. Twiggs

32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 96, 17 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 172, 1910 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 413
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1910
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 96 (Ellis v. Twiggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis v. Twiggs, 32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 96, 17 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 172, 1910 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 413 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1910).

Opinion

HENRY, J.

The parties to this proceeding in error stand in the relation opposite to that in which they stood below. There Twiggs [97]*97brought his action against Dr. Ellis for wrongfully causing the death of the former’s wife and intestate, by obstetrical malpractice. Mr. Twiggs consulted Dr. Ellis about the last of March, 1905, and upon examination he found that she was threatened with ■ involuntary abortions.

The threatened event occurred on or about April 5. The afterbirth was not removed until about April 9th, its removal being, as Dr. Ellis claims, impracticable until that time.

Afterwards, between April 12 and 29th (one witness positively fixes the former date; see bill of exception, page 198), Mrs. Twiggs exhibited some of the characteristic symptoms of blood poisoning, i. e., chills and fever. On the latter date she went with her husband to the doctor’s office. He, finding that she was suffering from fever, ordered her to go home and to go to bed and stay there. This she did, languishing until her death, June 17, following. Dr. Ellis was in attendance upon her most if not all of this time, although it appears that about the middle of April his patient seemed to be better, so that she determined to dispense with his services and with those of her nurse. The dates as fixed by different witnesses are so confused, that we can say nothing with positiveness as to the actual facts in regard to these details.

A verdict and judgment of $1,500 were recovered against Dr. Ellis.

The errors alleged by him are:

1. The verdict is unsupported by the evidence, both as to fact of liability and the amount of the damages.
2. The refusal of the court to submit to the jury this interrogatory: “When did the decedent first manifest fever or chill, as a sympton of the infection of which she died?”
3. The charge of the court concerning expert witnesses, as follows:
“Much of the evidence in this case has been the evidence of experts, what we call expert witnesses. Witnesses who have particular learning or experience of knowledge about matters that are involved in the trial of the case, are called here to give their opinions, based upon á given state of facts, and many of those [98]*98expert witnesses never saw this woman perhaps; they gave their opinion here based upon a statement of facts as claimed by counsel to have been proved by their witnesses. Expert testimony has some peculiar qualities. It is possible sometimes that expert witnesses may not be put in full possession of the case as it really is before the jury. Some omissions of counsel in' stating a hypothetical case, some inattention of the witness in listening to it, if it is a long question — there is always some — and possible at least, that there may be some slip of that kind. I don’t say that there was any such thing occurred in this case, but that liability, however slight, as it may be, attends more or less the introduction of expert testimony. Sometimes an expert witness takes an interest in one side of a case or in another. He wants to- help somebody or to hurt somebody, and his opinion may be more or less warped, just as the testimony of other witnesses may be more or less warped by interest or by desire to have a certain result to.the case. Some expert witnesses may be more intelligent than others. Some have had more experience than others. Some show from their testimony that they have a better grasp of the case that is put to them than others, and so the testimony of expert witnesses and the value of it may vary — may differ. Now I mention these things not to discredit expert testimony at all, but to enable you gentlemen to weigh that class of evidence, as it is not very frequently that yon are called upon to consider that class of evidence, and I have stated these things to enable you to weigh these expert witnesses and their testimony as it should be weighed. The testimony of an expert witness may, for various reasons, be of little value; may not be so reliable as that of another; may be for want of experience or ability, and so on. Other expert witnesses may render the jury more valuable service. Men who. are candid and capable and clear in their statements, showing that they comprehend the situation, may give the jury very valuable assistance só now I will leave that kind of testimony for your consideration, with these suggestions for your guidance.”

4. The plaintiff in -error also complains of the admissions of sundry hypothetical questions as embracing matters not in evidence.

Concerning the first of these assignments of error, the evidence discloses that it is dangerous to leave the afterbirth Undelivered for as long a period as four days after the delivery of the foetus, in cases of abortion, because it is liable to occasion. [99]*99infection or blood poisoning. True, some of the physicians say that under the circumstances which Dr. Ellis testifies existed in this case the procedure in question was proper; but other physicians testify that it is improper in any case. While it is undoubtedly true that an action for malpractice can not be successfully founded upon the claim that the physician has taken one of two discretionary courses concerning the relative propriety of which' doctors disagree, yet when the propriety of the course actually taken is challenged, as in this case, the question is one for the jury to determine as to whether the course' taken was improper, so as to manifest want of ordinary skill and care on the part of the physician, or whether its propriety is, under the evidence, a discretionary question. The true doctrine should of course be presented to the jury in the charge, and no complaint is made of the charge in this behalf in the case before us. We can not say, from the evidence, that the jury were wrong in finding that the conduct of Dr. Ellis in this case was irreconcilable with the exercise by him of ordinary skill and care as a physician. If the case were originally presented to us, we might essay a decision, but our province is solely to determine whether the jury had any substantial evidence on which to found the verdict at which they arrived.

It is' claimed, however, that upon the facts of this case it is apparent that the blood poisoning originated from some other cause than the delay in removing the afterbirth. It appears to be agreed that infection declares itself within three days after exposure thereto, and Dr. Ellis claims that the first appearance of infection in Mrs. Twigg’s case was nearly three weeks after the removal of the afterbirth. But, as already stated, one witness positively declares that on April 12, while Dr. Ellis was still in attendance upon his patient, and before his alleged dismissal by her, Mrs. Twiggs was suffering from a chill, and there is some testimony at least that the condition of the afterbirth when removed was such as to compel the inference of infection already declared at that time. Moreover, Dr. Ellis himself signed the death certificate in which he had written as the “cause of [100]*100death: Placenta-Previas (?) auto-infection, duration twelve weeks. Contributory cause of death: Sepsis, duration eleven weeks.” While the duration of cause, or contributory cause of death as thus given by Dr. Ellis is too great to support his own theory, it is likewise too great to support the theory of the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ohio C.C. Dec. 96, 17 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 172, 1910 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-twiggs-ohcirctcuyahoga-1910.