Hall v. Steele

226 P. 854, 193 Cal. 602, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 349
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1924
DocketL. A. No. 7318.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 226 P. 854 (Hall v. Steele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Steele, 226 P. 854, 193 Cal. 602, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 349 (Cal. 1924).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This action was one wherein the plaintiff sought to recover damages from the defendant for injuries received as the alleged result of the negligence of the defendant in the performance of a surgical operation. The plaintiff headed her complaint with the caption, “Damages for Negligence,” and then proceeded to allege:

“1. That in and' about the month of October, 1920, and at all times herein mentioned, at Los Angeles, California, the defendant Gertrude Steele held herself out to the general public, and particularly to this plaintiff, as a surgeon and dermatologist, skilled in the art of such profession, and as such, able with skill to treat the plaintiff for the ailment hereinafter mentioned.
“2. That plaintiff was at the times herein mentioned a motion picture actress, earning her living by employment from various motion picture companies as an actress on the screen.
“3. That at the time heretofore mentioned, plaintiff’s lower lip was too large and full tq correspond with her face in general, in the work which she was performing. That plaintiff consulted with defendant, believing defendant to be a surgeon and dermatologist, skilled in the art of such profession. That defendant represented to plaintiff that by removing a slight or small strip of skin from the lower lip of plaintiff, that said lip would be narrowed and the shape would not be changed, and that said lip would then correspond with the face of plaintiff in general, and would add largely to the harmony of plaintiff’s face, and in this way make plaintiff a better subject for the screen, thereby enlarging her earning power.
“4. That plaintiff believed the representations of defendant and employed defendant as such surgeon and dermatologist to perform the operation of removing a slight or small strip of skin from the lower lip. That on or about the 11th day of October, 1920, defendant performed the operation aforesaid. That defendant so negligently and unskillfully performed said operation that the lower lip of plaintiff, instead of being narrowed and made more sightly, was caused to droop *605 on each side, revealing the teeth of plaintiff when plaintiff endeavored to close her lips, and making plaintiff’s lips and mouth ugly and unsightly, and disproportionate to plaintiff’s face.
“5. That through and by the negligence and unskillfullness of defendant plaintiff’s face has become permanently disfigured and made unsightly, and her earning capacity as a motion picture actress is greatly lessened and impaired, if not altogether destroyed, to her damage in the sum of $15,000.00. ...”

From the foregoing averments of the plaintiff’s complaint it indubitably appears that the action is one sounding in tort the gravamen of which is the alleged negligent and unskillful performance of a surgical operation; and that whatever is said therein as to the engagement of the defendant as a surgeon and dermatologist to perform said operation and as to representations made by the defendant as to the probable effect of said operation upon the plaintiff’s features are to be considered as mere matters of inducement to the main cause of action and not as averments of the breach of a contractual relation forming the basis of the present action. This case in that regard falls within the rule laid down in Harding v. Liberty Hospital Corp., 177 Cal. 520 [171 Pac. 98]; Basler v. Sacramento etc. Ry. Co., 166 Cal. 33 [134 Pac. 993]; Krebenios v. Lindauer, 175 Cal. 431 [166 Pac. 17]; Marty v. Somers, 35 Cal. App. 182 [169 Pac. 411]. It is true that in the foregoing cases the doctrine was applied in relation to the plea of the statute of limitations, but the like principle is applicable to cases wherein the plaintiff is not suing for breach of warranty made in connection with the contract of employment of the surgeon, but solely for the unskillfulness of the operation performed. In such cases whatever representations the physician, surgeon or dermatologist may have made as an inducement to the performance of the operation are not essential to the plaintiff’s alleged cause of action for negligence, the sole actionable issue being as to whether or not the operation was skillfully or unskillfully performed. In an ordinary action for malpractice the physician or surgeon is not to be held as a warrantor of cures or of consequences other than those arising from a breach of his duty to skillfully perform the operation, and if, as the individual *606 cases show, through no unskillfulness on the part of the surgeon the plaintiff’s broken arm was permanently impaired (Houghton v. Dickson, 29 Cal. App. 321 [155 Pac. 128]; McGraw v. Kerr, 23 Colo. App. 163 [128 Pac. 870]), or the patient’s nervous system shattered (Booth v. Andrus, 91 Neb. 810 [137 N. W. 884]), or if the patient fails to recover (Wurdemann v. Barnes, 92 Wis. 206 [66 N. W. 111]), or even if, as in this case, the facial expression of the plaintiff is altered to an extent amounting to a disfiguration, the plaintiff cannot recover in this form of action without being able to show that the specific operation which the surgeon was engaged to perform, was negligently and unskillfully performed.

In the discussion of the legal principles applicable to this the interesting inquiry is suggested as to whether a mere naturopath or so-called “beauty doctor” is entitled as such to be placed in the same category or to claim the same immunity from liability, as is applied by law to regular medical practitioners and surgeons whose mission it is to minister to those who are ill or injured or afflicted with diseases or physical injuries which medicine or surgery skillfully applied may cure; while a naturopath or “beauty doctor” does none of these, but merely assumes or undertakes to remove physical or facial deformities not due to disease or injury but existing as natural deficiencies or defects of form or countenance which for the comfort, convenience, or vanity of the individual it is deemed desirable to have removed. The question as to whether the practitioner undertaking to remedy by a surgical operation such deformities or defects and who, while performing with skillfulness the proposed alteration, does not remove the particular physical defect, or, doing so, produces another and perhaps more objectionable deformity, can rely upon the rule which protects the regular practitioner or surgeon from liability for the effect of an operation skillfully performed is, as we have observed, an interesting one, but we do not think it arises in the present case, in view of the state of the pleadings, which sound in tort and count upon an alleged unskillful surgical operation. A different issue involving this very question would have been presented if the action had been one for the breach of warranty as to the result of the operation performed. Another question which is presented upon the face of this record, but which has not been discussed in the briefs *607

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 P. 854, 193 Cal. 602, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-steele-cal-1924.