Furr v. Herzmark

206 F.2d 468
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJuly 29, 1953
Docket11536
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 206 F.2d 468 (Furr v. Herzmark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Furr v. Herzmark, 206 F.2d 468 (D.C. Cir. 1953).

Opinions

FAIIY, Circuit Judge.

This appeal questions the action of the District Court in directing a verdict for the defendant at the conclusion of all the testimony. The issue was defendant’s alleged negligence as a doctor in performing several operations upon the plaintiff and in the treatment associated with the operations. The basic operation was the removal from plaintiff’s right leg of two inches of the femur to shorten the leg so as to bring it into better coordination with the left leg, which by reason 'of injuries in childhood had not grown to full length and usefulness. The discrepancy between the two tegs had led to pains in the back and other difficulties which it was thought could be remedied in this manner.

This first operation was performed December 17, 1946. The defendant doctor used a drill with bit to bore holes in the bone to aid in the chiseling or cutting of the part to be removed and also to aid in the attachment by screws of a metal plate to [470]*470hold in alignment the segments joined after the removal. In the drilling a fragment of bit about a quarter of an inch in length broke off. It was left embedded in the femur. Aside from the question whether the operation should have been performed at all, this is the first basis for the claim of negligence. But we find no evidence of negligence which could properly have gone to the jury on the bit episode. Furthermore, there was no evidence of damage due either to breaking the bit or leaving it in the femur. The testimony was clearly to the effect that in the circumstances of the particular case it was better practice to leave the fragment where it was lodged than to risk weakening the bone by the cutting necessary to remove it. And although bone infection subsequently developed none of the testimony attributes any of it to the bit fragment. No sinus from the infection led to the fragment so as to relate it to the infection.

A metal plate with four screws was attached over the joinder to assist in holding together the two segments which had come into existence by the operation. The wound was closed and the leg from foot to waist was encased in a plaster of Paris cast. Pain developed. About 10 days after the operation an x-ray was taken, disclosing an angulation or outward bowing of the leg; that is, the segments of the femur were out of alignment. The cast was removed, the angulation corrected by manual manipulation and a new cast put on. X-rays, after these occurrences showed that a screw in the metal plate and the plate itself were loose. It also became obvious that a piece of bone had broken off on the inner side of the thigh probably as a consequence of chiseling done in the operation.

We lay aside for the moment the loose screw and plate so a's to dispose at this point of any problem regarding this broken-off piece of bone. There was no evidence showing any injury or damage attributable to it. The fragment adjusted itself in a healthy manner as time went on, without injurious consequences. So, like the broken piece of bit, this aspect of the case called for no submission to the jury.

We return to the boose screw, loose plate and subsequent developments. Appellant was released from the hospital January 22, 1947. The loose conditions were shown by an x-ray made February 13, 1947. The joined segments had not then become firm. X-rays of April 17, 1947, and June 23, 1947, indicated a similar situation and it was concluded that some fibrous tissue, interposed between the segments, was preventing union. The patient had in May gone to Florida for four weeks. After his return a second operation was performed July 2, 1947. The four-screw plate was removed, the segments were separated, the edges of the wound were curetted or cleaned of the fibrous tissue, six new screw holes were drilled and a new six-screw plate was attached to the femur. Fever developed and was treated by penicillin. The defendant testified that infection is a usual cause of fever; and before the patient left the hospital the wound was known to be infected. Defendant concluded plaintiff was suffering from osteomyelitis, that is, bone infection. The area was drained. The temperature became normal and the patient was released from the hospital August 10, 1947, when defendant made a note that his condition was satisfactory but there was a slight infection at the lower end of the wound. Drainage continued. Later on a severe putrid odor accompanied the infection. In September plaintiff consulted two other doctors on appointments arranged by the defendant. The reports of these doctors were to the effect that the metal should be removed, the bone thoroughly cleaned and the wound permitted to heal from the inside out without being closed. The defendant, however, attempted what he described as a more conservative measure, the use of penicillin, teclear up the infection. But the infection, and drainage continued. A third operation-was performed October 31, 1947, during-which the six-screw plate was removed, the-area was cleansed of all overlying tissue, was washed out thoroughly with a saline solution, the bones were placed in alignment, and the wound was packed with vasoline gauze and sulfa powder and left open to drain and heal from the bottom up with-[471]*471oat a plate and without .screws. Over a period of time the infection cleared and the wound healed.

The leg remained in casts of various types or in braces for about 17 months, most of the time with the knee immobilized. As a result adhesions formed which seriously reduced the degree of flexion of the knee. In the effort to remedy this condition the plaiutiff, on July 2, 1948, was given an auesthetic and defendant doctor broke the adhesious by a manual manipulation of the knee. X-rays showed a bony substance or fragment below the kneecap which plaintiff sought to prove was broken off from the patella or kneecap as a consequence of the manipulation coupled with the weakened condition of the kneebone structure due to long immobilization. We find no evidence, however, that any injurious consequences are attributable to- this fragment even if there was an issue of fact as to its source, We further hold that there was no evidence creating a factual issue for the jury as to negligence in the manner in which the manipulation was performed.

The plaintiff in time recovered. In the end there was a generally satisfactory re-suit from the operations. This, with the evidcnce as a whole, leads us to agree with the trial court that there was no issue of negligence for the jury to resolve arising from the original decision of defendant to undertake the basic operation.

^ , ¡11 From the foregoing it will be seen ,LJ f - . ,7..,-, . that we are of the view that with respect to (1) breaking the hit and leaving the * < , - , -.11 broken fragment where it became lodged, , 53 . . . , „ ° (2) the manner of performing the íirst manipulation in January 1947, (3) the manipulation to break the adhesions at the knee, (4) the presence of the hone fragment on the inner side of the femur and of a bony substance below the knee, and (5) the original decision to operate, no case against the defendant was made for jury consideration.

This leaves the question whether there was a factual issue of negligence to go to the jury by reason of (1) the angulation some few days after the first operation, (2) the presence of the loose screw and plate, (3) the relation of the foregoing factors to the performance of the second operation and the insertion then of a six-screw plate, and (4) the relation of all these factors to the bone infection and third operation when the plates and screws were removed.

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206 F.2d 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furr-v-herzmark-cadc-1953.