Guth v. Vaughan

231 Ill. App. 143, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 153
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 26, 1923
DocketGen. No. 27,865
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 231 Ill. App. 143 (Guth v. Vaughan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guth v. Vaughan, 231 Ill. App. 143, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 153 (Ill. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

On October 22, 1918, the plaintiff, Eric W. Guth, brought suit in the circuit court of Cook county against the defendant, Elmer E. Vaughan, for malpractice. There was a trial by the court with a jury, and at the close .of all the evidence a directed verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant. This appeal is therefrom.

The declaration contains three counts and an amendment. Substantially, it charges that the plaintiff on July 6, 1918, employed the defendant, Dr. Elmer E. Vaughan, to treat him for a broken leg; that the defendant accepted and undertook the employment ■as physician and surgeon but that he “so carelessly and unskilfully set, reduced and treated the said broken and fractured leg that by and through the want of skill, care and wrongful acts * * * the plaintiff became and has ever since and will forever remain greatly reduced, weakened and injured”; that said injury was prolonged, increased and aggravated by the unskilful conduct of the defendant as aforesaid; that the plaintiff was at all times in the exercise of ordinary care and was injured without any fault or negligence on his part. The ad damnum is $20,000.

The defendant filed a plea of the general issue and a special plea setting up the statute of limitations.

The theory of the defendant is that (1) a certain release given by the plaintiff to one Florsheim, whose automobile struck him and caused the injuries on account of which surgical treatment became necessary, is a bar to the plaintiff’s action against the defendant, Dr. Vaughan, and (2) that there is in the record no competent evidence to sustain the charges of negligence made against the defendant.

The theory of the plaintiff is (1) that the release given to Florsheim did not release the defendant as there was no evidence tending to show that the plaintiff was injured by the negligence or wrongful act of Florsheim; that the injury may have been the result of a mere accident; that Florsheim was, therefore, not a joint tort-feasor with the defendant and was not in fact a tort-feasor at all, and (2) that he, the plaintiff, introduced sufficient evidence of the defendant’s unskilfulness to make out a cause of action and that it should have been submitted by the trial judge for the determination of the jury.

The evidence showed substantially the following: On July 6, 1918, the plaintiff, Eric W. Girth, who was then twenty-one years of age, while crossing Sheridan Boad on Boscoe street in the City of Chicago, at about 6:30 in the evening, was struck by an automobile belonging to one Florsheim. He was taken to the Chicago Union Hospital and put in charge of the defendant, Dr. Elmer E. Vaughan. He was suffering from a fractured femur of the right leg. The doctor took him to the operating room and put on a temporary splint and four or five days later put on what is called an ambulatory splint, which the plaintiff wore until the middle of August, 1918. The ambulatory splint was manufactured by one Sieman and was put on by him and the defendant together. It is a complicated pneumatic mechanism used for the purpose of keeping the parts of the fractured bones in apposition and the leg itself in proper condition during recovery.

The plaintiff walked on the injured leg in July, 1919, about a year after the accident, but then only with the use of crutches. The first work he did after the accident was on March 29, 1920. He has been working ever since and his leg has been improving ever since he left the Montrose avenue hospital, and now, according to his testimony, he walks on it pretty well.

Dr. Boss, who was called to attend the plaintiff on October 5, 1918, testified that he found the bones of the femur were overlapping about two inches at an angle; that he and Dr. Moje, opening up the leg, chiseled the bones apart and “cut away the callous formation between them and squared the ends of the bones and took a piece about six inches long from the shin and fitted it into the femur and fastened the bones together with kangaroo tendon, sewed up the wound and put on splints”; that they did not get a satisfactory healing; that the parts were so emaciated and that the circulation was so poor that later on, to stimulate healing, they opened up the leg and “refurbished off the ends of the bones” and fastened them together with two ivory splints and wire and put on rubber bands at the top of the thigh to hold the blood in the thigh for certain periods of time in order to bring about a healing; that the second operation turned out all right; that the bones healed end to end; that the patient was under his supervision from October 5, 1919, until June 3, 1920. Dr. Boss further testified that an X-ray plate of the leg as it was just after it was broken showed merely a simple fracture which was neither compound nor comminuted. He was shown other X-ray pictures which were taken before he himself operated and they showed, he testified, that the fracture of the femur had not been reduced; had not been set; that the ends of the bone were overlapped about two inches; that they showed the condition of the leg at the time he operated in October, 1918. He further testified, in answer to a hypothetical question which purported to contain the substance of the evidence, that he did not think ordinary care and skill were used by the defendant; that such a fracture as the plaintiff suffered ought to heal in about six weeks to two months; that when he first examined the plaintiff it was his opinion that the plaintiff would never thereafter have the use of the right leg.

The defendant, Dr. Vaughan, testified that when-the plaintiff was brought to the hospital on July 8, 1918, suffering from a fractured femur, he took him to the operating- room and fitted a straight board splint on the leg and kept up a moderate degree of extension of the leg and kept the plaintiff in bed for four days; that he caused extension to be made on the foot until he could bring the ends of the bone together ; that on July 10, 1918, he, together with one Sieman, fitted an ambulatory splint to the leg; that that splint was so arranged that by means of a key the extension of the leg could be increased or decreased; that the extension was continued until he was sure he had proximated the ends of the bone; that, after that was done, the plaintiff was X-rayed and the bones found to be in good condition; that he continued to watch him from day to day and inquired as to his condition and examined his leg to see what degree of shortening, if any, had taken place; that when he called he frequently found the upper pneumatic ring loosened; that on July 26, 1918, he had another X-ray taken which revealed that position of the bones had been changed and that the proximation was only about one-third of the surface of the bone whereas it had been about three-fourths; that he then loosened the splint and readjusted and realigned the bone; that he kept up the same kind of treatment until August-15, 1918, “when it seemed to be firm”; that that was ascertained by taking off the splint and examining the condition of the bone with the fingers; that at that time it seemed to be solid; that the plaintiff then began to. get up and walk on a pair of crutches, and by about the last of August was allowed to go home; that in treating him and setting the leg and watching it and adjusting the splint he exercised the best skill and care of which he was capable.

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Bluebook (online)
231 Ill. App. 143, 1923 Ill. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guth-v-vaughan-illappct-1923.