Fausette ex rel. Johnson v. Grim

186 S.W. 1177, 193 Mo. App. 585, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 54
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 186 S.W. 1177 (Fausette ex rel. Johnson v. Grim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fausette ex rel. Johnson v. Grim, 186 S.W. 1177, 193 Mo. App. 585, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 54 (Mo. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinions

TRIMBLE, J.

This is an action for malpractice. Defendants are physicians and surgeons conducting a hospital at Kirksville.

On December 13, 1913, plaintiff, a married woman twenty-five years of age, then living at Hannibal, was taken suddenly ill with a severe pain in the region of her right ovary (which is also the region of the appendix, the two being close together, the ovary being, perhaps, a little higher than the appendix). Prior to that, at times of menstruation, she had suffered with pain in her right ovary, but the attack of December 13 was much more severe than anything she had had before, and besides, she had missed one or two menstruation periods and was about two months advanced in pregnancy. She called Dr. [587]*587Shanks of- Hannibal who pronounced her trouble appendicitis and advised an operation as soon as she recovered from the attack. He used palliative remedies and treated her until the 15th of December, when she had so far recovered as to have no fever and was able to walk.

On the 18th of December, plaintiff, accompanied by her mother and sister, went to defendants’ hospital and consulted them in regard to her condition. She told defendants of her illness of .the 13th that she was sick only a few days, that Dr. Shanks said it was appendicitis, but that she preferred to come to defendants’ hospital. After listening to a history of her trouble and making a physical examination, which included an investigation through the vaginal canal, defendants told her that her appendix and right ovary were diseased, and advised an operation for the removal of both. According to plaintiff’s petition and the evidence of plaintiff and the evidence introduced in her behalf, when defendants advised the operation she informed them that she was pregnant and asked what effect an operation would have upon her pregnancy, telling them she would not submit to an operation if it would endanger her chances of becoming a mother. She and her witnesses, her mother and sister, say that defendants assured her an operation would have no effect whatever upon her pregnancy, that she would be up and out of the hospital in two weeks and could go on and bear her child at the proper time.

The operation was performed next morning and five days later, December 24, plaintiff suffered an abortion caused, as she claims, -by the operation. Six days after the abortion she became afflicted with postoperative insanity. At defendants suggestion and direction she was taken away from the hospital on January 3,1913. She had been manifesting symptoms of post-operative insanity from December 30, and [588]*588while being taken from Kirksville to Hannibal became violently insane. On January 6, 1913, she was adjudged insane and committed to the State Hospital at St. Joseph where she remained until October 7, 1913, when she was discharged, having recovered her sanity. Prior to her discharge and while she was insane, her guardian brought this suit for $7500 damages. A verdict and judgment for $1000 was obtained, and defendants have appealed.

The case was submitted to the jury upon two charges of negligence. The first of which was that, with knowledge of plaintiff’s pregnancy, defendants carelessly diagnosed her trouble as acute appendicitis when by ordinary care they should have known that she did not have that disease, and carelessly advised an operation which was not necessary to preserve her life and health and which resulted in an abortion, and that the two brought on post-operative insanity, all of which impaired her mind and health and endangered her life.

On this branch of the case plaintiff’s theory is that an operation, for appendicitis and the removal of an ovary, upon a pregnant woman, is recognized by the medical and surgical fraternity as so likely to produce an abortion that ordinarily good and careful practice requires that no operation he had unless the patient’s condition on account of the appendicitis is so dangerous as to imperatively require it; that even though she has had an attack of appendicitis, yet, if she has so far recovered as to have no fever, this shows she no longer has acute appendicitis and when it has ceased to he acute, the patient is no longer in danger from that attack at least. And since seventy-five peí; cent of all cases of appendicitis run their course to recovery without an operation, and the only purpose of an operation upon a person who has recovered from an attack of appendicitis is to prevent a recurrent attack, it is not good practice to operate, [589]*589for appendicitis and a diseased ovary, upon a pregnant woman when her pnlse and temperature show the attack is no longer acute, because the danger of producing an abortion is so much greater than the danger of a recurrent attack.

Plaintiff, in support of her theory, introduced two witnesses, one a physician of Adair county and the other a surgeon in charge of another hospital in Kirksville. The latter testified that it was bad practice to operate for appendicitis upon a person whose temperature was normal as the normal temperature showed the 'disease was no longer at an acute stage; that an operation for appendicitis and the removal of an ovary of a woman from one to three months in pregnancy might result in an abortion; that the chances for such a result were about even; that the chances of an operation resulting in postoperative insanity are about one in from 200 to 400 cases; and that the plaintiff’s post-operative insanity was the result of the operation and abortion combined. Plaintiff’s other witness testified that it was bad practice to operate upon a person for acute appendicitis whose temperature was normal and in which no other conditions were present. He further testified that the “safest treatment” for a woman one or two months pregnant, who has so far recovered from an attack of appendicitis as to have a normal temperature, is to treat her with a mild laxative and get her out of the pregnant state without an operation as a surgical operation is so likely to produce an abortion. It will be noted that, thus far, plaintiff’s experts predicated their evidence that it was bad practice to operate when the temperature was normal, only with reference to one who had just recovered from an acute attack of appendicitis and who has no other complications or troubles except pregnancy. On cross-examination, however, the last mentioned expert testified that surgeons do not frequently operate for an [590]*590ovarian cyst unless it is necessary to save the patient’s life. He stated, however, that there is always an element of danger in an ovarian cyst, but that unless the growth is rapid and it becomes impaired during pregnancy it is best not to remove it. He also stated that it was a question in his mind whether there was any other stage of appendicitis than the acute; that if concretions and pus are found in the appendix it is conclusive proof that appendicitis exists.

There was no evidence that defendants were incompetent or unskilful surgeons nor was there any claim that the operation itself was not performed in a skilful and proper manner. The charge is that defendants negligently advised an operation. . In this kind of a case plaintiff must not only prove that the operation was unnecessary but also that the operation was one so palpably unnecessary that a surgeon of ordinary care and skill would not have advised it.

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Bluebook (online)
186 S.W. 1177, 193 Mo. App. 585, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fausette-ex-rel-johnson-v-grim-moctapp-1916.