Floyd v. Walls

168 S.W.2d 602, 26 Tenn. App. 151, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 13, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 168 S.W.2d 602 (Floyd v. Walls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floyd v. Walls, 168 S.W.2d 602, 26 Tenn. App. 151, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 145 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

KETCHUM, J.

This , is a malpractice suit brought by Walls against Dr. Bedford F. Floyd, Dr. R. Eustace Semmes, and Dr. Francis Murphey. The declaration is in three counts charging negligence (1) in failing to em *154 ploy the requisite degree of care and skill in the diagnosis and treatment of the plaintiff for injuries received in an accident as hereinafter described; (2) in failing to take X-ray pictures of the plaintiff’s back, which if taken would have revealed an injury to the fourth lumbar vertebra which could have been treated at a much earlier date than it was treated; and (3) negligence in prematurely abandoning the case. On the trial the first and third of these charges of negligence were eliminated and the ease went to the jury on the single charge of negligence in failing to take X-ray pictures of the plaintiff’s back. On the argument of a motion for .a directed- verdict at the close of the plaintiff’s proof a voluntary nonsuit was taken as to Dr. Murphey, the motion for a directed verdict was denied, and the case proceeded against Dr. Floyd and Dr. Semmes. There was a verdict in favor of Dr. Semmes, and one in favor of the plaintiff and against Dr. Floyd for $3000. On the motion for a new trial, the judge suggested a remittitur of $1000 which was accepted by the plaintiff, and a judgment was entered in his favor and against Dr. Floyd for $2000. Dr. Floyd alone has appealed.

The plaintiff was employed by the National Rose Spring & Mattress Company, of Memphis, and worked in a large store room in which bales of cotton linters were piled in stacks twelve or fifteen feet high. On September 13,1939, while he was bending over marking' one of the bales, a bale fell on him from the top of the stack, striking him on the head and inflicting upon him a very serious head injury. He was at once taken to the Baptist Memorial Hospital and Dr. Floyd, who was the physician employed by the insurance company carrying the compensation insurance for the mattress company, was called to treat him.

*155 Dr. Floyd first saw tlie plaintiff in the emergency operating room at the hospital. He was then unconscious and remained in that condition, or a semi-conscious condition, for several days or probably a week. Dr. Floyd from his examination was of opinion that he had sustained a serious brain injury so he called in Dr. Semmes and Dr. Murphey who were neurological surgeons specializing in the treatment of injuries to the brain and spinal cord, to assist him. Together these doctors made a careful examination of the entire body of the patient, who was still unconscious, and found a bruise on one shoulder, but no broken bones. As the most serious injury was to the head they caused N-rays of the skull to be made and drew some of the fluid from the spinal column for the purpose of drainage. This fluid was bloody, indicating a very serious injury to the brain. The X-ray pictures showed a horizontal fracture on the right side of the skull and a vertical fracture extending upwardly from about the middle of the. horizontal fracture.

The plaintiff was assigned to a room in the hospital and from the first, three or four regular day and night nurses were employed to attend him. Later he had one nurse who was on twenty-four hour duty. At first the doctors saw him five or six times a day, but as he improved they saw him less frequently. After he regained consciousness he complained of intense pain in the head; he was very nervous and restless and also complained of pain in his chest and shoulder and in his legs. The three doctors all testify that he did not at any time complain to them of any pain in his back. The nurses’ chart contained notes that he complained of pain in his shoulder and chest and legs and that he was very restless and complained of intense pain in his head. The plaintiff and his wife testify, however, that he made frequent com *156 plaints to the doctors of intense pain in the back, and that they told him that this was the result of the concussion of the brain, and that the only treatment for it was rest and that this pain would pass away in time. This conflict in the testimony, which is about the only conflict in the evidence, must be resolved in favor of the plaintiff, in view of the verdict in his favor.

In view of the complaints made by the plaintiff of pains in his chest' and shoulder the defendants caused numerous X-ray pictures to be made of those areas but those pictures revealed no fractures. No pictures were made of his back because, the defendants say, the plaintiff made no complaint of pain in that re'gion, and their very careful examination of his back to ascertain whether there was any injury to the spinal cord disclosed no objective symptoms of any fracture of the spine. The plaintiff had recovered sufficiently from his injuries to warrant his discharge from the hospital at the end of two weeks, and he was permitted to go home and remain in bed as the defendants regarded absolute rest as the best treatment for his injuries. After the. plaintiff went home the doctors visited him there until he had recovered sufficiently to come to their offices, which he did, from time to time, accompanied by his wife, until the 26th of December, 1939. He still complained of pains in his head and, he says, in his back and other parts of his body; and he had an impediment in his walk so that he had to be assisted by his wife; but the defendants thought that these pains and the shuffling gait were attributable to the nerves centering in the brain and that they would gradually subside.

On December 26, Dr. Semmes was engaged when the plaintiff came to his office; he declined to see him explaining that he had a number of patients in his office and *157 an emergency case that required Ms attention as soon as he conld get there. The plaintiff was evidently dissatisfied with this treatment as he went on that same day to consult his lawyer Mr. Robinson. Mr. Robinson advised him to consult another doctor and recommended Dr. Leo F. Pierotti. Dr. Pierotti had X-ray pictures made of his back, chest and shoulder, those being the parts of the body of which he complained. The X-rays of the chest and shoulder revealed no injuries in those areas, but one of the pictures of the back showed a compression of the superior anterior part of the fourth lumbar vertebra. This was three and one-half months after the accident and after the injury there had been a formation of callus which was a’new growth of osseus tissue around the fracture. This is nature’s way of healing a fracture of this kind, and this growth of callus or the formation of new bone ordinarily extends over a.period of six to eight weeks. The vertebra was not out of alignment and there was no indication of any pressure ■ upon the spinal cord.

As treatment for this fracture Dr. Pierotti sent the plaintiff to St. Joseph’s Hospital where he was kept on a Bradford frame for two weeks. The purpose of this was to immobilize the joint and render the patient more comfortable. He also associated with him Dr. Lipscomb, an orthopedic surgeon, who applied a brace which the plaintiff was still wearing up to the time of the trial.

Dr. Pierotti also suspected a displacement of an inter-vertebral disc which was a cushion of cartilege between the vertebrae, and in order to rule this out he sent the plaintiff to the hospital a second time to make what, is known as the lipidol test.

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.W.2d 602, 26 Tenn. App. 151, 1941 Tenn. App. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floyd-v-walls-tennctapp-1941.