Haggerty v. St. Louis, Keokuk & Northwestern Railroad

74 S.W. 456, 100 Mo. App. 424, 1903 Mo. App. LEXIS 494
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 74 S.W. 456 (Haggerty v. St. Louis, Keokuk & Northwestern Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haggerty v. St. Louis, Keokuk & Northwestern Railroad, 74 S.W. 456, 100 Mo. App. 424, 1903 Mo. App. LEXIS 494 (Mo. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

1. The point is raised that the petition does not state a cause of action, wherefore the motion in arrest ought to have been sustained. No objection to the petition was taken before verdict by demurrer or motion, or by opposing the reception of testimony to prove its averments. But we think the petition pleads a cause of action that would have been good against a demurrer, and is certainly good at this stage of the proceedings. The cause of action stated is that the defendant obligated itself to furnish competent and skillful physicians and surgeons to attend injured employees who were members of the relief department; that in disregard of said obligation it furnished unskill - ful surgeons who treated plaintiff in a negligent way to his detriment, and that he submitted to treatment by said surgeons on account of the contract between him and the defendant company for surgical attendance by virtue of his membership in the relief fund. The objection made to those allegations is that they state a conclusion of law instead of facts; but we think they state the ultimate facts according to their legal effect-in creating a certain contract, instead of stating the evidence in detail; and this is good pleading. Pye v. Rutter, 7 Mo. 548; Page v. Freeman, 19 Mo. 471; Jones v. Louderman, 39 Mo. 287; Kansas City v. Johnson, 78 Mo. 661; Long v. Armsby Co., 43 Mo. App. 253. It would have been improper for the plaintiff -to set out all the regulations of the relief department in order to show a contract or obligation on the part of the defendant to furnish skillful surgical attendance to injured members, while it was proper for him to aver that such [440]*440an obligation existed. Reilly v. Cullen, 159 Mo. 322. "Whether be proved it or not is another question.

Accepting defendant’s contention that it is liable only if it failed to exercise due care in selecting a surgeon and is not liable for the surgeon’s negligence, enough was stated in the petition to constitute a cause of action on the theory that the defendant was negligent in making choice of surgeons to wait on plaintiff. As we have pointed out in the statement, the use of the word “proper” in the paragraph we have quoted from the petition, instead of the word “improper,” is manifestly a clerical error; for the latter word is shown by all the allegations of the petition to be the one meant. Other excerpts might be quoted from which an intention to allege want of due care by the railroad company in selecting a physician may be deduced. Failure to allege a fact without which the jury could not have rendered their verdict, is cured by verdict if the existence of the fact can be gathered by reasonable intendment from those definitely averred. Munchow v. Munchow, 96 Mo. App. 553; Bank v. Railroad, 46 Mo. App. 555.

The case, however, was not submitted to the jury on the defendant’s theory, and any imperfect allegations may be cured hereafter by amendment. The petition is desultory and can be worked over with advantage.

2. It is insisted no evidence was adduced by the plaintiff tending to prove that in point of fact Dr. Bourne employed Dr. Smith, and this contention is strenuously urged as sufficient to defeat plaintiff’s demand. We do not lay so much stress on it as defendant’s counsel do, who treat the case as though the question of the .railroad company’s liability depends entirely on whether Dr. Bourne hired Dr. Smith, and if he did, whether he acted by' authority. But this is narrowing the issues joined by the pleadings. The petition does not base plaintiff’s light to recover solely on maltreatment by Dr. Smith, nor state a case in which the surgery of Dr. Smith is alone called into question. Throughout, [441]*441it treats Bourne and Smith as two physicians who were employed by the company, pursuant to its obligation, to attend plaintiff, set his leg and give him surgical attendance until it healed; and, we think, there was evidence tending to prove that Smith and Bourne both treated the case. Bourne himself testified that he visited the plaintiff every month, after the accident happened, until August. He also testified to giving him advice about abstaining from work; while Haggerty testified that Hr. Bourne told him on two occasions he was strong enough to go to work, inquired about his limb at different times, advised him about leaving the splints off, examined it, and, at the time of his first visit, said he would turn the case over to Smith; that afterwards when he expressed dissatisfaction with the setting of his leg and wanted it re-set, Dr. Bourne said that was unnecessary and might produce a worse result. Dr. Bourne doés not deny conferences with Dr. Smith about the case, but contends such incidents were mereiy informal talks between two doctors, one in charge of a case and the other casually observing it, instead of regular professional consultations by surgeons giving joint treatment. His visits he explains by saying it was his duty as medicql examiner of the relief department, to visit all patients in order to keep the superintendent posted as to how long they were entitled to benefits and when they were well enough to resume work. Such facts warranted the inference, if the jury thought proper to draw it, that Dr. Bourne was an attending surgeon; though they are compatible, too, with defendant’s theory.

3. Bourne’s right to employ Smith is still more earnestly questioned; but we think that issue was for the jury under the evidence. The passage of the answer recited in the statement of facts alleges that the relief department had the option to furnish members surgical attention when injured, or refrain from doing so, but that the practice was to allow the injured member to [442]*442select Ms own surgeon. Dr. Bourne testified that while it was customary in certain cases to pay bills for treatment, it paid them only when the member was disabled by an accident.. Further, he said, in effect, that if he was satisfied the surgery a member was receiving was unskillful, he would malee a report of it; that the relief department could advise as to the surgeon but could not change one against the patient’s will. Moreover, the regulations of the department directly empowered medical examiners to certify bills for surgical treatment; and those facts, while they do not conclusively prove Dr. Bourne was authorized to employ Dr. Smith, warrant the inference that he might do so without exceeding Ms duty; and, in fact, his authority was practically admitted when the answer said the relief department might, if it deemed best, employ surgeons for disabled members. • There is evidence to show this right was exercised in this instance, whether it ever was in any other'or not; and as the pleadings and evidence stand, a case was made for the jury as to whether the defendant was remiss in performing its duty. What its duty was we will now inquire.

4. Granting that the plaintiff was negligently and unskillfully treated by physicians employed by the defendant company, the question arises whether the company’s responsibility is to be determined by the doctrine of respondeat superior; in other words, whether the defendant is liable for their malpractice if it was reasonably careful in-selecting them; or is only liable if it was not careful in that respect.

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.W. 456, 100 Mo. App. 424, 1903 Mo. App. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haggerty-v-st-louis-keokuk-northwestern-railroad-moctapp-1903.