Fink v. Steele

171 A. 49, 166 Md. 354, 1934 Md. LEXIS 40
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 20, 1934
Docket[No. 108, October Term, 1933.]
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 171 A. 49 (Fink v. Steele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fink v. Steele, 171 A. 49, 166 Md. 354, 1934 Md. LEXIS 40 (Md. 1934).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a judgment for damages for alleged negligent treatment of a child by a dentist. The suit was brought by Margaret Elizabeth Steele, by her father and next friend, Clement Steele, appellee, against Samuel M. Fink, appellant. The case went to trial on the second amended second count of the declaration, the first count having been abandoned, wherein it was alleged that “on or about April 3rd, 1931, the plaintiff (appellee) was a patient of the defendant (appellant), a practicing dentist at Elkton, Maryland, at which time the defendant, acting in the scope of his employment, filled a tooth of the said infant plaintiff, and that said filling remained in said tooth for a period of five days, whereby said infant plaintiff suffered great physical injury, both serious and permanent; that said injuries to said infant plaintiff were caused directly by said defendant in filling said tooth and allowing said filling to> remain in said tooth for five days, and that the filling of said tooth and permitting said filling to remain in said tooth for a period of five days was due to the want of reasonable care, skill and diligence and to neglect in the care, skill and diligence on the part of the said defendant, and that said acts of the defendant and the injuries resulting therefrom were not due to any want of care on the part of the said infant plaintiff or her father and next friend directly contributing to said injuries.” The defendant demurred to this declaration as amended, and the demurrer was overruled, and the first question in order on this appeal is the sufficiency of the declaration.

The defendant’s first objection to the declaration is that the charge of negligence is too general, so general, in fact, that it does not amount to a charge of negligence at all. If *357 the declaration, “contains a plain statement of the facts necessary to constitute a ground of action (it) shall be sufficient.” Code, art. 75, sec. 3. Such a reasonable degree of certainty is required as to warn the defendant of the claim, or demand made on him (1 Poe, Pl. & Pr., sec. 562; Phelps v. Howard County, 117 Md. 175, 178, 82 A. 1058); “so that they may be understood by the party who is to answer them” (Phila., B. & W. R. Co. v. Allen, 102 Md. 110, 113, 62 A. 245, 247). Measured by these simple rules as guides, what do we have' here? A child went to a practicing dentist to have a tooth filled. He accepted the employment; he filled the tooth; the filling remained in the tooth five days “whereby” the child “suffered great physical injury both serious and permanent.” There is no charge of negligence to this point. It is a mere statement of what happened to the child following the filling of the tooth. Ho physician or dentist is chargeable with the results of his efforts if he has applied the degree of care and skill ordinarily required and to be expected of one of his profession in the treatment of disease or injury. Angulo v. Hallar, 137 Md. 227, 232, 112 A. 179. The declaration then says that the injuries “were caused directly by the defendant in filling said tooth and allowing the filling to remain for five days.” There is no charge of lack of care, skill, or negligence in this, but the declaration goes on to say “that the filling of the tooth and allowing the filling to' remain in said tooth for a period of five days was due to the want of reasonable care, skill and diligence and to neglect in the application of care, skill and diligence on the part of the defendant.” Suppose the declaration, after the statement of the injury, had said: “Said injuries so suffered by” her “had been caused directly by” and were “due to the want of reasonable care, skill, diligence and the neglect of the defendant.” If he had treated the plaintiff at the times stated, it would have given him notice of the claim he was called on to defend, and that is that for a period of five days he had failed to exercise the degree of care and skill required of one of his profession, *358 and that "by reason of this failure and neglect the plaintiff had suffered injury for which compensation was demanded of him.

The defendant also objects to the declaration on the ground that it is bad for duplicity, in that it undertakes to allege two acts of negligence, when one alone would be effectual, if properly alleged and proved. One act, he contends, is the filling of the tooth; the other, allowing the filling to remain in the tooth for five days. There is nn allegation that the tooth was improperly or unskillfully filled. Aside from the filling of the tooth, the declaration is silent as to just what was done by the defendant during the five days in which the damage, if any, was done; but there is the single allegation that in the filling of the tooth and in allowing it to remain in the child’s tooth for five days she sustained injuries which were due to the want of reasonable care, skill and diligence, and neglect on the part of the defendant. We, therefore, think the court was right in overruling the demurrer to the declaration.

The principal contention of the defendant on the trial of the facts is that his prayer for an instructed verdict for want of legally sufficient evidence should have been granted. We think the prayer was improperly refused, but it is necessary to review the evidence in order to show why this court arrives at such a conclusion.

In September, 1930, the infant plaintiff was taken by her father to' the defendant, at which time a small front tooth was extracted. Later in the month she again went tn the defendant, and from that time until Eovember 23rd, 1930, she made several visits; one of the things done being the filling of a lower right “six year molar.” On the last Tuesday of March, 1931, the child, who was then in the third grade, came home from school and informed her mother that the filling had come out while she was at school. The mother said it was the filling in the six year molar. She sent the child that day to Dr. Fink to have the tooth refilled, and on her return from the doctor’s she saw the refill. The father *359 testified to the same effect. The infant plaintiff testified that she had been sent by her mother to the defendant to have the tooth filled and that it was refilled. She did not know the day or the month, but the first filling had come out, and as soon as she came home ffom school her mother sent her to Dr. Fink to have the tooth refilled, and she said that he did refill it. The father said, “She complained of her tooth aching when she returned home.” That evening they tried to give the child relief, but “she seemed to get worse. * * * The next day she was suffering and there were signs of swelling. * * Dr. “Wallace Johnson, from Xewark (Delaware), the family doctor, was called in. After Dr. Johnson left the home, the father went to Dr. Fink’s office and told him that “Dr. Johnson had examined the girl and advised us to have the filling removed by whoever put it in.” He replied that “that wasn’t the cause of her trouble, that she had the mumps.” He told Dr. Fink that she had been over the mumps about a month. This was Wednesday evening. The next day, Thursday, according to the testimony of the mother, Dr. Fink went to her house to see the plaintiff and repeated that “it was due to the mumps.” The child’s face was then “swollen terribly; * * * her face was almost square.” Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
171 A. 49, 166 Md. 354, 1934 Md. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fink-v-steele-md-1934.