Gault v. Poor Sisters Of St. Frances Seraph Of The Perpetual Adoration

375 F.2d 539
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 1967
Docket16839
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 375 F.2d 539 (Gault v. Poor Sisters Of St. Frances Seraph Of The Perpetual Adoration) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gault v. Poor Sisters Of St. Frances Seraph Of The Perpetual Adoration, 375 F.2d 539 (6th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

375 F.2d 539

Larry GAULT, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
POOR SISTERS OF ST. FRANCES SERAPH OF the PERPETUAL
ADORATION, INC., a Corporation Organized and Existing under
the Laws of the State of Indiana, doing business in
Tennessee as St. Joseph Hospital, Sister Bernadine,
Administrator, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 16839.

United States Court of Appeals Sixth Circuit.

March 30, 1967.

Newton P. Allen, Memphis, Tenn., Armstrong, McCadden, Allen, Braden & Goodman, Memphis, Tenn., on the brief, for appellant.

James F. Schaeffer, Memphis, Tenn., for appellee.

Before O'SULLIVAN, EDWARDS and McCREE, Circuit Judges.

EDWARDS, Circuit Judge.

Defendant, an Indiana corporation doing business as St. Joseph Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, appeals from a jury verdict rendered in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $162,500. Plaintiff had alleged he had suffered serious and permanent injuries while a patient in defendant's hospital as the result of defendant's negligence in administering a solution of 10% sodium hydroxide (instead of an .85% saline solution) into plaintiff's stomach.

Plaintiff's complaint alleged, and his testimony at trial tended to prove, that the sodium hydroxide burned the lining of his stomach, intestinal tract, esophagus, nose and mouth causing him to be hospitalized for 19 weeks, to lose weight from around 130 pounds down to 88 pounds, suffer major surgery involving the removal of a portion of his stomach, suffer drug addiction as a result of administration of pain medicine, suffer constriction of the esophagus which occasions frequent vomiting and periodic mechanical dilation of the esophagus, suffer substantial loss of wages and incurlarge hospital bills, and suffer permanent disabilities which one doctor estimated at 30% to 35% of his total bodily function.

Appellant claims that the District Judge erred in denying its motion for new trial because 1) there is no evidence in this record to sustain a negligence verdict for plaintiff; 2) there is no evidence of permanent injury and the verdict is based on speculation and is grossly excessive; 3) the jury was guilty of misconduct, was subjected to extraneous influences, and its verdict was a product of passion and prejudice. We shall discuss these issues under three headings: 'Negligence,' Amount of Verdict,' and 'The Jury's Deliberations.'

NEGLIGENCE

Plaintiff's complaint and the evidence he adduced to support it tended to indicate that his injuries occurred during a gastric cytology test from the administration, by sheer mistake, of a caustic solution which was searing to human tissue and potentially lethal. The testimony tended to establish that the mistake was made because the sodium hydroxide solution and the normal saline solution were kept in the same low cabinet in bottles of identical shape and color.

Defendant's evidence tended to dispute the conclusion that any mistake was made at all. It tended to blame the events of March 27, 1964, on plaintiff's previously existing medical problems, including the possibility of a hiatus hernia and a stomach ulcer. DefendantS evidence also tended to minimize the claimed permantent effects of the injury.

Some of the significant evidence which the jury had a right to believe follows. The discharge summary prepared by a staff physician of appellant's hospital and read into the record at trial will serve to give a brief history of the events following plaintiff's admission to St. Joseph Hospital on March 22, 1964:

'Q. Would you read the discharge summary?

'A. (Reading) 'This twenty-year-old male was admitted because of pain across the sub-xiphoid area radiating into the left chest which was worse with deep breathing and after meals but constantly present to some degree and had several severe attacks in the middle of the night. He also complained of much belching, gas and indigestion and also complained of some difficulty swallowing solids. He had been in the hospital previously in December, 1963, at which time GI and gallbladder series revealed no evidence of hiatal hernia or ulcer. However, the symptoms had continued and he was re-admitted for further workups. His case has been discussed with Dr. Van Fossen, and she suggests admission for possible esophagoscopy and gastroscopy. Following admission a chest, GI and gallbladder were done which revealed fair visualization of the gallbladder but a stone could not be excluded. There was questionable deformity of the duodenal cap on GI series, so re-check x-rays were ordered for the following morning. Re-check spot films of the duodenum showed no evidence of ulcer. Gallbladder revealed excellent function with repeat does of dye. His admission lab work was within normal limits other than for an elevated white count-- 13,100 with 70 percent segs. After the x-rays a gastric analysis was ordered by Dr. Van Fossen along with x-rays of the spines, on 3-24. On 3-26 Dr. Van Fossen ordered gastric cytology. At this time it was stated that a caustic substance was instilled into the stomach and that the patient regurgitated this material with burning of the mouth and throat and upper GI tract. At this time treatment was instigated by Dr. Van Fossen, and she and Dr. N. E. Rossett followed the patient for the rest of his hospital stay. Any further comments on treatment would be from their records on the chart. Discharge diagnosis was corrosive esophagitis and gastritis secondary to caustic substance in the stomach and esophagus.' That is signed by Dr. Glen Head.'

Plaintiff's own testimony on the crucial episode concerned follows:

'Q. After she inserted the tube, did she leave the room, or was she prepared fully at that time to proceed with the test?

'A. I am sure she left the room at that time. I assumed to get more supplies.

'Q. Now, tell us what happened.

'A. She came back, and she had a flask-like thing with her then, and she then began to put that into my stomach, the contents of the flask into my stomach, and immediately after she put it into my stomach it felt like someone had dropped a blow torch in the bottom of my stomach, and I started getting sick at my stomach, and I jerked the tube out of my nose, and I don't know whether I asked her-- I made her somehow realize that I wanted something to throw up in, and she pushed a can over to me, and I threw up, and immediately when I threw up, I noticed that it was blood and mucus, and I threw up two or three times possibly, and lay back on the bed and hit the wall and hollered, 'Oh, my God, why?', and I remember the look on her face. I was looking at her, thought maybe she might give me something to help me, and she just looked bewildered like this never had happened before, or she didn't know what had happened, and then she left and then came back, and later the nurse's aide from the 2nd floor came up to get me.

'Q. Mr. Gault, do you know how long you were there alone after Mrs. Geiger had left the room?

'A. No, sir. At that time, time wasn't important to me.

'Q. Did you vomit any more while she was gone, while you were waiting?

'A. Yes, sir, I vomited.

'Q. Now, Mr.

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375 F.2d 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gault-v-poor-sisters-of-st-frances-seraph-of-the-perpetual-adoration-ca6-1967.