Fisher v. Wilkinson

382 S.W.2d 627, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 678
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 14, 1964
Docket49337
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 382 S.W.2d 627 (Fisher v. Wilkinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. Wilkinson, 382 S.W.2d 627, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 678 (Mo. 1964).

Opinion

STOCKARD, Commissioner.

Plaintiff has appealed from a judgment in favor of defendants entered pursuant to jury verdict in her suit for alleged malpractice wherein she sought damages in the amount of $130,000.

Plaintiff’s only point on this appeal pertains to the giving of an instruction at the request of defendants. However, defendants contend that plaintiff did not make a submissible case for the jury. For the reasons subsequently set out we agree with defendants’ contention, and it is therefore unnecessary to discuss the allegedly erroneous instruction.

Dr. Everett A. Wilkinson had been the family physician for plaintiff since 1937. In April 1958 he performed an operation on plaintiff to remove her gall bladder. She was hospitalized about two weeks and had what was referred to as an uneventful operation and confinement. On the third day after her release from the hospital her son called Dr. Wilkinson by telephone and stated that plaintiff was “sick,” that she had a- “slowing” of urine, and that she appeared to have a temperature. Dr. Wilkinson , asked that plaintiff’s son obtain a thermometer and take his mother’s temperature. When this was done it was then after office hours, and plaintiff’s son talked to Dr. Reinhardt (who was associated with Dr. Wilkinson in the practice of medicine) and related to him the symptoms of his mother. Dr. Reinhardt testified that in view of the recent gall bladder operation, the symptoms indicated that plaintiff had a urinary tract infection. He first suggested that plaintiff be given a sulpha drug, but her son stated that his mother had been allergic to it in the past. The doctor then prescribed terra-mycin, and he testified at trial that it was *629 the “commonly accepted medication for this condition.” No house call was requested .by plaintiff or her son.

Plaintiff testified that on the following day, a Sunday, she was “no better,” and that her skin was beginning to have a sensation of scratching as though “someone had rubbed me with wire.” On Monday she called Dr. Wilkinson and told him that she still had a temperature, and that she had a “sensation” in her face and eyes. She testified that she asked Dr. Wilkinson if the cause could be the medicine she was taking and he replied that it was not, and that “everybody takes terramycin.” On the following Wednesday, in response to a request from plaintiff, Dr. Reinhardt made a house call to see plaintiff. He testified that at that time he did not notice anything unusual .about plaintiff’s skin and he diagnosed her condition as a low-grade urinary infection. He obtained a urine specimen for examination, and later reported to plaintiff by telephone that there was nothing in her urine “to worry about.” Plaintiff’s son testified that his mother had redness around lier eyes and that “they were starting to puff and swell.” However, it is not clear from his testimony when he first noticed this condition. Mrs. Mamie Winn, who was visiting plaintiff, testified that she was present when Dr. Reinhardt called, and that plaintiff then had very small red spots beneath the surface of the skin, and that her eyes “were swollen and puffy looking.” Plaintiff testified that when Dr. Reinhardt was there he “pulled my gown and housecoat ■down, and looked around a little” and said that he “could see no redness.” While plaintiff did not specifically so state, the inference is that Dr. Reinhardt made this examination by reason of some suggestion or complaint by plaintiff.

On the following Tuesday, May 6, Dr. Reinhardt returned to see plaintiff, and at that time plaintiff was “obviously sick,” although not “critically ill,” and she “had a redness, a rash, * * * over her face and shoulder, * * * [and the] upper part of her trunk” which was “an allergic reaction to something.” He told her that she “should be in the hospital immediately,” but she “absolutely refused” because she said that she could not afford it and she did not think she was yet that sick. Dr. Reinhardt then prescribed a cortisone preparation which was a recognized treatment for allergic reaction. On Thursday, May 8, she re-entered the hospital where her condition was diagnosed as exfoliative-dermatitis.

Dr. Wilkinson testified that all drugs have potential “side effects,” including aspirin, depending upon the individual. He further stated that the only side effects of or reaction to terramycin of which he was aware by reason of his own experience, “and that would include possibly any case that has ever been in Research Hospital,” was “pseudo-mucinous entercolitis” which is a reaction that occurs in the bowel resulting from the antibiotic killing off normal bacteria as well as the infection producing bacteria.

Dr. Harry Wiener, of New York, who was associated with Chas. Pfizer & Company, producer of terramycin, as associate medical director and director of technical writing, testified that dermatitis was not an expected or a common condition to be looked for in the use of terramycin, and further that the occurrence of exfoliative-dermatitis brought to his attention by Dr. Wilkinson and Dr. Reinhardt in 1958 was the only case in which it appeared that the cause could be traced to the use of terramycin. The “package insert” or “package brochure” supplied in 1958 by Chas. Pfizer & Company "with terramycin and available to members of the medical profession, contained a paragraph headed “Precautions,” and therein it was státed that “Glossitis and dermatitis as reactions of an allergic nature may occur but are rare. If adverse reactions occur or individual idiosyncracy or allergy occur, discontinue medication.” Dr. Wiener testified that the term “dermatitis” used in the brochure was used without the term “exfoliative” and with reference only “to dermatitis, meaning essentially a skin irritation” which does not include exfoliative, and the two are distinct conditions, the ex- *630 foliative-dermatitis being a “much more serious condition than dermatitis alone” and also being a “very rare condition.”

Plaintiff does not charge that defendants do not each possess the requisite knowledge and skill. In fact, the testimony establishes beyond doubt that they do. She does charge negligence on their part in the failure to exercise that skill, and those charges as set out in her verdict directing instruction are as follows:

(1) defendants failed “to make a reasonably careful examination * * * to discover and diagnose the ailment or ailments from which she was suffering; ”

(2) defendant Dr. Reinhardt called upon, examined and treated plaintiff at “irregular intervals” and “too far apart to treat effectively plaintiff in her illness, * * *

[thereby] depriving plaintiff of the continuous attention of a physician who had the benefit of observing day to day changes in plaintiff’s condition;”

(3) defendants failed to “change the medical care and treatment of plaintiff after it should have been reasonably apparent to a physician of ordinary skill and learning that plaintiff was not responding favorably to the treatment given;”

(4) defendants failed to discover within a reasonable period of time that plaintiff was suffering from an allergic reaction after it should have been reasonably apparent; and

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Bluebook (online)
382 S.W.2d 627, 1964 Mo. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-wilkinson-mo-1964.