Force v. Gregory

27 A. 1116, 63 Conn. 167
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 27 A. 1116 (Force v. Gregory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Force v. Gregory, 27 A. 1116, 63 Conn. 167 (Colo. 1893).

Opinion

FbNN, J.

This is an action by a minor child to recover damages against the defendant, who is a homeopathic physician, for alleged malpractice in treating her for ophthalmia. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and from the judgment rendered thereon the defendant appealed to this court.

The only questions presented which are necessary to consider relate to the charge of the court to the jury. Evidence was offered to show that the defendant in treating the plaintiff adopted the remedies prescribed by the homeopathic practitioners. It appeared that the allopathic school of medicine would treat such a case differently, and in the latter way the plaintiff claimed that she ought to have been treated. The defendant asked the court to charge the jury — “that treatment by a physician of one particular school is to be tested by the general doctrines of his school, and not by those of other schools.” The court refused to so charge, and charged as follows : — “ In regard to that matter I will say that the defendant’s negligence or want of skill in the treatment of the plaintiff’s eye must be determined by all of the *169 evidence in the case, and if the defendant adopted the treatment laid down by one particular school of medicine, and the medical testimony offered by the plaintiff related to treatment prescribed by a different school, you will weigh the testimony, having regard to any bias or prejudice that might influence the testimony of those who belonged to a different school from that of the defendant. You should also take into consideration the training and education of the defendant for his profession, the experience which he has had, and the degree of skill with which he handled the case, all bearing upon the question whether the defendant used ordinary care and skill in the treatment of the plaintiff.” The defendant claims that the court erred, both in refusing to charge as requested and in charging as it did.

In the absence of special contract physicians and surgeons, by holding themselves out to the world as such, impliedly contract that they possess the reasonable and ordinary qualifications of their profession, and are under a duty to exercise.reasonable and ordinary care, skill and diligence. Landon v. Humphrey, 9 Conn., 209; Kendall v. Brown, 74 Ill., 232; Small v. Howard, 128 Mass., 131; Ballou v. Prescott, 64 Maine, 305; Leighton v. Sargent, 31 N. Hamp., 119; Penn. v. Wilbur, 49 N. Jer. Law, 685; Potter v. Warner, 91 Penn. St., 362; Hathorn v. Bichmond, 48 Verm., 557; Gates v. Fleischer, 67 Wis., 504. In determining what constitutes reasonable and ordinary care, skill and diligence, the test is that which physicians and surgeons in the same general neighborhood and in the same general line of practice ordinarily have and exercise in like cases. Hathorn v. Richmond, supra; Utley v. Burns, 70 Ill., 162; Almond v. Nugent, 34 Iowa, 300; Small v. Howard, (supra,) 35 Am. Rep., 363; Leighton v. Sargent, supra. In addition to this, however, regard must be had to the advanced state of the profession at the time of the treatment. Small v. Howard, supra; Gates v. Fleischer, supra; Smothers v. Hanks, 34 Iowa, 286; Nelson v. Harrington, 72 Wis. 591.

Premising these general principles, we come to the precise question presented by the appeal: Ought the defendant’s *170 request to charge to have been complied with? And was the charge, as given, correct and sufficient?- The language of the request may be found in Patten v. Wiggin, 51 Maine, 594, where the following charge was held to be correct: “If there are distinct and different schools of practice, and a physician of one of those schools is called in, his treatment is to be tested by the general doctrines of his school, and not by those of other schools. It is to be presumed that the parties so understood it. The jury are not to judge by determining which school, in their own view, is best.” And the same principle was clearly stated, in an able opinion, in Bowman v. Woods, 1 Greene, (Iowa), 441, and we are aware of no authority to the contrary. But notwithstanding this, it seems to us that the inherent difficulty in an endeavor to vindicate the action of the court-below, is not because the court failed to charge in the identical language of the request, nor because of the language actually used by the court, which appears correct so far as it goes, but rather because the court, in refusing to charge as requested and only charging as it did, omitted to bring to the attention of the jury a consideration which, in view of the testimony received, and the claims made thereon by counsel, ought to have been presented to them. It having appeared how the allopathic school of medicine would treat a case of the character of the one in question, the court, as we have seen, said: — “ If the defendant adopted the treatment laid down by one particular school of medicine, and the medical -testimony offered by the plaintiff related to the treatment prescribed by a different school, you will weigh the testimony, having regard to any bias or prejudice that might influence the testimony of those who belonged to a different school from that of the defendant.” Doubtless this is correct; the testimony should be so weighed. But if the defendant adopted the treatment, not of one particular school in the abstract, but of his own particular school, which he publicly professed and practiced, and the medical testimony offered by the plaintiff related to treatment prescribed by a different school, such testimony should be weighed, not alone with regard to bias or prejudice influencing the testimony *171 of witnesses, but with regard to bias or prejudice which might influence or incline the jury in favor of one school rather than the other. For, as was said in Patten v. Wiggins, supra ;-“ The jury are not to judge, by determining which school, in their own view, is best.” And as it seems to us, from the testimony presented, which did not stop with the statement of how, in the view of the witnesses, such a case ought to be treated, but went farther and stated how “ the allopathic school of medicine would treat it,” it was precisely from such bias or prejudice the defendant stood in danger. Indeed, the counsel for the plaintiff freely admitted, in argument before us, that the respective merits of the two schools of medical practice were, and as he claimed of right ought to have been, on trial before the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
27 A. 1116, 63 Conn. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/force-v-gregory-conn-1893.