Goodnight v. Phillips

458 S.W.2d 196, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2726
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 30, 1970
Docket15623
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 458 S.W.2d 196 (Goodnight v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodnight v. Phillips, 458 S.W.2d 196, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2726 (Tex. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

PEDEN, Justice.

Appeal by the heirs of Chester Goodnight, deceased, from a take-nothing judgment in a suit against the appellee, Dr. Phillips, alleging medical malpractice and breach of contract in connection with an operation he performed in 1960 to repair Mr. Goodnight’s inguinal hernia. The patient has since died of causes not claimed to have been connected with the operation. The plaintiffs alleged in their petition that the doctor’s negligence resulted in permanent injury to the decedent’s left thigh and left testicle, that the patient’s informed consent to the surgery was not given and that the doctor guaranteed that the operation would be completely successful, but it was not. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

This case was the subject of a prior appeal. The opinion may be found at 418 S.W.2d 862.

In the trial upon which this appeal is based, the jury’s findings made in response to special issues were: 1) the jury did not find that in the course of the hernia operation the defendant failed to provide sufficient opening through the inguinal ring so as to permit normal circulation of blood to the plaintiff’s left testicle, 4) the jury did not find that the doctor made an oral agreement with the plaintiff that the hernia operation would be performed without injury to other parts of the plaintiff’s body, 7) it did not find that the loss of blood supply, if any, to the plaintiff’s left testicle was proximately caused by the accident of June 6, 1960, 8) the jury found that the loss of blood supply, if any, to the plaintiff’s left testicle was proximately caused by post-operative swelling of the cord, 9) it found no damages to the patient as a direct and proximate result of the damage, if any, to his left testicle directly and proximately caused by the doctor’s negligence, if any, 10) it did not find that the operation into the plaintiff’s left thigh to obtain fascia lata was without his consent, and 12) it found no damages to the plaintiff based on physical pain and/or mental anguish as a direct and proximate result of the damage, if any, to his left leg directly and proximately caused by the doctor’s negligence, if any. It was not necessary for the jury to answer issues numbered 2), 3), 5), 6) and 11), because they were predicated on affirmative findings (which the jury did not make) to other issues.

None of the jury findings was favorable to the appellants. Reference is made to the earlier opinion for a summary of Mr. Goodnight’s testimony. His death occurred after the first trial and before the second. His testimony in this second trial was read from the record made in the first one. The appellants in this case called on no doctor other than the appellee to testify as to the medical standards of a reasonable medical practitioner concerning either treatment of the patient or his consent.

Dr. Phillips testified that he agreed in June, 1960, to perform the hernia repair operation on Mr. Goodnight but did not guarantee that it would be successful. He decided that the best suture material for part of this operation would be fascia lata, which he obtained from the patient’s left thigh, and he said he informed the patient of his plan to do this but did not tell him *199 all the possible complications which might result from the two surgical procedures because it was not accepted medical practice to do so in the Houston area in 1960.

It is uncontroverted that after the surgery the patient’s left testicle grew smaller and rose higher than the right one. Dr. Phillips’ testimony furnishes the only explanation of these changes: they were due to a decrease in the blood supply to the left testicle resulting from swelling of the tissues before or after the operation. He denied that any operating procedures caused the swelling and loss of blood supply, but said he noticed swelling at the time of and after the operation. He related that the opening he provided was adequate by doctors’ tests.

The appellants’ first point of error is that the trial court erred in overruling the appellants’ objections to Special Issue No. 7. The objections preserved in appellants’ amended motion for new trial were a) the issue was evidentiary, b) no sole proximate cause issue was raised by the evidence or submitted and c) the issue constituted a comment on the weight of the evidence because it assumed the testicle was damaged by the accident of June 6, 1960, a controverted fact issue.

The issue was a defensive one and was answered in favor of appellants. “When an incorrect issue is answered in favor of the complainant, the error will be ignored in the absence of an affirmative showing of prejudice. Submission of evi-dentiary issues is usually, though not always, considered harmless.” 3 McDonald, Texas Civil Practice 1168-9, § 12.37. We do not agree with the appellants that the issue assumes that the testicle was damaged by the accident, and we conclude that submission of the issue did not constitute reversible error.

Appellants’ second point of error is that the trial court erred in overruling these objections to Issue No. 8: a) no evidence of probative force that the loss of blood supply was proximately caused by post-operative swelling, or at least no evidence to show sole proximate cause as a defensive submission, b) the issue was not submittable since the law of the case as established by the Court of Appeals held the fact issue involved to be determined by Issue No. 1, and that Issue No. 8 would be an eviden-tiary issue and a negative submission of the same fact involved in Issue No. 1, therefore, the law of the case prevented submission of Issue No. 8, and its submission was prejudicial as evidenced by the finding of the jury under Issues 8 and 1, c) the issue as submitted commented on weight and sufficiency of the evidence and by failing to insert ‘if any’ after the words ‘post-operative swelling’, informed the jury that the Court’s opinion was that there was post-operative swelling, so as to assume such fact, to the prejudice of plaintiff, d) that the placing of the words ‘if any’ after ‘blood supply’ further prejudiced and commented, in that the evidence was undisputed that the damage was due to a loss of blood supply, e) that there was no evidence of probative force supported by competent medical authority directed to the facts of this case which indicated that the loss of blood supply was due to “post-operative swelling of the cord.”

We hold that the submission of Issue No. 8 did not cause the rendition of an improper judgment in the case. The jury did not find any primary negligence. It is un-controverted that there was post-operative swelling, and Dr. Phillips testified that in his opinion the loss of blood supply caused the problem to the patient’s testicle. He also testified that this swelling interfered with the blood circulation in the cord and testicle. The issue did not contain any comment on the weight of the evidence, and its submission was harmless.

As to the appellants’ third point, we find no error in the trial court’s having declined to permit the appellants’ counsel to examine records of the Harris County *200 Medical Society made six years and more after the occurrences made the basis of this suit and to make a bill of exception from them.

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Bluebook (online)
458 S.W.2d 196, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodnight-v-phillips-texapp-1970.