Gregoris v. Manos

40 N.E.2d 466, 35 Ohio Law. Abs. 279, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 895
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 6, 1941
DocketNo 3332
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 N.E.2d 466 (Gregoris v. Manos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregoris v. Manos, 40 N.E.2d 466, 35 Ohio Law. Abs. 279, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 895 (Ohio Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

OPINION

By HORNBECK, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from a judgment entered on the verdict of a jury in behalf of defendants-appellees. The action was for damages for injuries claimed to have been suffered by reason of the malpractice of defendants upon the body of the plaintiff in the unnecessary and negligent performance of a surgical operation.

There are five assignments of error:

1. Refusal to admit certain testimony proffered by plaintiff.
2. In admitting testimony of certain doctors predicated upon a physical ex-[281]*281animation made by them of the plaintiff in the court room after the plaintiff had rested his case in chief.
3. Refusal of the trial judge to give to the jury before argument special charge Nos. 1 and 2 requested by plaintiff.
4. ' In not permitting counsel for plaintiff to use full time allotted to counsel for their argument to the jury.
5. Other errors manifest on the record.

Issues were drawn by the averments of the third amended petition and the answer thereto. We quote somewhat at length from the pleadings because it is vital to a proper determination of some of the errors assigned that the issues be well defined.

It is alleged in the petition that the defendants are regular licensed physicians practicing in the City of Columbus; that defendant, Dr. Manos, was employed on hr about July 1st, 1938, to treat the plaintiff for sickness involving the groin, the appendix and the rectum; that plaintiff was also suffering from a disorder of his nervous system, and that said defendant accepted employment to care for and treat the plaintiff; that the defendant, Dr. -Ho-burg, about a year later, namely, January 1st, 1939, was employed to treat the plaintiff for the ills above mentioned, accepted employment and attempted to care for and treat the plaintiff; that on or about July 6, 1939, plaintiff called at the office of defendant Dr. Manos who instructed the plaintiff to go to the office of defendant Dr. Hoburg, with the statement that he, Dr. Manos, “would meet plaintiff at said office about five o’clock in the afternoon, at which time further treatment would be given the plaintiff; that at said time and place defendants told plaintiff that it was necessary to inject a needle in a cyst in his scrotum, and withdraw the fluid from said cyst, but said puncturing of said cyst was wholly unnecessary. Thereupon they carelessly and negligently punctured said cyst and tore a vein in the scrotum of plaintiff causing him to lose much blood and to suffer severely, both mentally and physically”.

“Defendants then operated upon plaintiff and opened his scrotum so as to tie the vein, which they had so unnecessarily, carelessly and negligently punctured, without giving the plaintiff time or opportunity to get to a hospital or to consult another surgeon. The after-effects of the operation are set forth as the basis of the damages claimed by plaintiff.”

Defendants filed separate answers. Dr. Hoburg’s answer was directed to plaintiff’s original petition as was Dr. Manos’ answer. Thereafter, an entry was journalized disclosing agreement between the parties that the answers filed to the amended petition were to be considered as filed to the second amended petition, but no such entry appears as to the third amended petition, although it is obvious that by common consent the separate answers, as filed by the defendants, were treated as having been set up to meet the averments of the third amended petition and we so consider them.

At the outset it is necessary to call attention to the fact that in the original petition, the amended petition and the second amended petition it was expressly averred that the surgical operation that was performed upon the plaintiff, not only was not necessary, but that it was performed without the consent or sanction of the plaintiff.

The defense set up in the answer of Dr. Hoburg is that he was employed by the plaintiff to treat him for urethritis and the removal of a small cyst from the plaintiff’s right cord just above the right testicle; and that he treated him for said condition and removed said cyst, and after admitting that he is a regular licensed physician practicing in the City of Columbus, generally denies the averments of the-petition.

The answer of Dr. Manos is that he-was employed by the plaintiff to render him professional treatment; that he referred the plaintiff to Dr. Ho-burg for the removal- of a small cyst from his right cord' just above the right testicle, and that Dr. Hoburg removed [282]*282the cyst: In other particulars the answer is- the same as Dr. Hoburg’s.

The. third amended petition omits any allegation that the operation was performed without the consent of the plaintiff. The allegation of- Dr. Ho-burg’s answer that the plaintiff employed him to remove the cyst is undenied, as plaintiff filed no reply.

Testimony was offered and accepted as to plaintiff’s consent to the operation for the removal of the cyst, and the trial judge charged the jury upon the question. There was no motion to amend the petition to conform to the proof.

We then consider errors assigned in the order in which they are set forth in the briefs. . *

1. Refusal of the court to admit certain testimony of C. F. Edwards and John Southard on behalf of plaintiff.

The defendants offered evidence at length to establish that the plaintiff was a psychoneurotic person, and the testimony of Dr. George T. Harding, an alienist, to that effect. The defendants themselves stated that the plaintiff was not sound mentally, and to support this conclusion testified as to his conduct, statements made by him, threats against a doctor who had treated him, and to complaints of various fancied afflictions from which he said he suffered.

This testimony was offered generally, was not limited in its purpose to show the-condition of the plaintiff as -of the date or at about the time of the operation, but may well have been offered and considered by the jury as affecting his state of mind at the time that he instituted his action, at the time of the trial and as it might affect the extent of his damages. The effect of this testimony was’ to make it appear that plaintiff’s afflictions were more imaginary than real, that there was an insufficient physical cause for the ills of which he complained and that they could be accounted for- only upon she hypothesis that he was. mentally unbalanced.

Edwards was a- supervisor for the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Company, to. whom .plaintiff, -in- his capacity • as foreman of the maintenance of way of the road, reported directly. The witness had known the plaintiff for sixteen years and had seen him on an average of three times a week during many of the years that he had known him and at and about the.time under consideration in the case.

The following questions were put to the witness in chief and upon objection were not permitted to be answered:

“Q. Did he (plaintiff) ever complain, to you about sickness?
A. He has.
Q. In what way?”

Objection sustained because the witness was not an expert. The proffer by counsel for plaintiff was:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 N.E.2d 466, 35 Ohio Law. Abs. 279, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregoris-v-manos-ohioctapp-1941.