Harold E. Hayward v. Dr. Dean H. Echols

362 F.2d 791, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 5732
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 22, 1966
Docket22176_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 362 F.2d 791 (Harold E. Hayward v. Dr. Dean H. Echols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harold E. Hayward v. Dr. Dean H. Echols, 362 F.2d 791, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 5732 (5th Cir. 1966).

Opinion

GEWIN, Circuit Judge:

This is an appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana dismissing appellant’s case for failure to prove a cause of action sounding in tort. The controversy involves a diversity suit for damages filed by appellant against various doctors and a hospital for personal injuries sustained during the course of a brain operation. 1 The case was tried by the court sitting without a jury.

Plaintiff below (appellant) Harold E. Hayward, developed neuralgia pains sometime during 1957, which were ultimately concentrated in the posterior area of the right side of his mouth near the base of the tongue. 2 Plaintiff testified that during 1958 the pain became progressively worse “until I was just frantic.” In 1959 he was still experiencing rather severe pain and decided to consult physicians at the Ochsner Clinic in Jef-erson Parish, Louisiana, concerning possible steps which might either arrest or alleviate his suffering. On arriving at the Ochsner Clinic he was told that Dr. Ochsner was out of town, but he was referred to Dr. Dean Echols for an interview. On discovering that Dr. Echols also was out of town, plaintiff was then referred to Dr. John Jackson, a member of the staff at the Ochsner Foundation Hospital. Plaintiff gave Dr. Jackson a complete history of his difficulty, informing this physician that he had previously seen neurosurgeons in Jackson, Mississippi and Memphis, Tennessee, about his case and that they were of the opinion that his neuralgia pains involved the fifth cranial nerve.

Dr. Jackson, however, diagnosed the trouble as ninth nerve neuralgia rather than fifth nerve neuralgia and told Mr. Hayward that the ninth nerve operation would have far less serious residual effects than the fifth nerve operation which would deaden or anesthetize one-half of his face. Previously, Mr. Hayward had been apprised of the severe consequences of the fifth nerve operation and was anxious to avoid it, if possible. The interview and examination by Dr. Jackson lasted approximately one hour and 15 minutes, and as plaintiff recalls he was told by Dr. Jackson that Dr. Echols, Head of the Department of Neurosurgery at Ochsner Clinic, would contact him upon the latter’s return to New Orleans.

Several days later plaintiff had a telephone call from Dr. Echols. During this conversation, plaintiff testified: “Dr. Echols and I talked about it, about the treatment, about the treatment of the *793 spray he wanted me to try on my mouth inside. He told me what to get, I got it, and he told me to try it and let him know the results.” Dr. Echols testified that he made no record of this telephone conversation, but that he told the plaintiff to obtain from a pharmacist a 2% Pon-tacaine solution and to spray his tonsil region to the back of his tongue for the purpose of determining whether this would give him some relief. Dr. Echols explained to Mr. Hayward that if he was actually suffering from ninth nerve neuralgia, the pontacaine solution should control the pain to some extent.

Actually, the use of the pontacaine solution is not intended as a treatment or cure of the condition from which Mr. Hayward was suffering. While, in a proper case, one obtains temporary relief from the pain by using the spray, its chief purpose is a diagnostic test. Mr. Hayward testified that his pain was relieved for a period of 30 to 45 minutes after the spray was applied. 3

No further examination of the plaintiff was conducted until October 18 or 19, 1959, when he was admitted to the Ochsner Foundation Hospital prior to the ninth nerve operation. Dr. Echols testified that his assistant, Dr. Mostellar went to see Mr. Hayward about an hour after he was admitted to the hospital on the evening of October 18, 1959, and “he recorded a brief note.” The following morning Dr. Mostellar examined the patient, interviewed him, recorded his observations and made his diagnosis. The diagnosis read in part:

“Impression: (1) Tic douloureau, mainly glossopharyngeal tic. This may have a latent trigeminal compo nent.” 4

Dr. Mostellar felt that the principal difficulty was ninth nerve neuralgia, but there was also the possibility of a latent fifth nerve disorder. Since Dr. Echols had not seen the patient personally at this time, he stated that he did not make his diagnosis of plaintiff’s disorder solely on the strength of Dr. Mostellar’s or Dr. Jackson’s conclusions. The following testimony describes the antecedent procedure Dr. Echols utilized before making his final diagnosis as ninth nerve neuralgia:

“Q. Dr. Echols, under the standard custom in the practice of neurosurgery in the New Orleans area and particularly at the Foundation Hospital are residents or students in neurosurgery, such as Dr. Mostellar was in October 1959 permitted to make a final diagnosis that is relied upon by the neurosurgeons ?
“A. They are required to make-and record their diagnoses, right or wrong. The neurosurgeon of course, cannot rely on the man he is teaching for correctness in diagnosis. * * *
“Q. All right, sir. What did you do, as the neurosurgeon who was to operate on Mr. Hayward, immediately following the receipt of Dr. Mostellar’s report of his interview on the day before the operation?
“A. Well, I realized that I was a little bit on the spot. Dr. Jackson said he thought that this was ninth neuralgia, but he had a little reservation in his mind and had told me so, and so forth. My assistant, Dr. Mostellar, *794 had said this is mainly ninth nerve neuralgia, but he had a little reservation. So, I saw that I had to make the decision myself — So I went to see Mr. Hayward and did talk to him. I asked him if he tried the Pontacaine spray on the tonsil region of his tongue and he pointed to the Pontacaine atomizer which was at his bedside. He said ‘Yes, I’ve been using this frequently during the day. It is controlling the pain very well.’ I said ‘Do you have any pain anywhere on your face, or have you had any pain on your face anywhere ?’ He said, ‘No, its all been in my tongue and just behind my third lower tooth,’ And I said, ‘What part of your tongue?’ because that is important, since the fifth nerve supplies the front one-third of the tongue, and the ninth nerve supplies the back two-thirds of the tongue. I said, ‘Is this pain at the tip of your tongue?’ He said, ‘Where?’ and Mr. Hayward, at my request, opened his mouth widely and put his finger in his mouth and pointed way back to the back of his tongue and to his tonsil region.
“Then on the strength of his personally telling me where his pain was located and what it was like, after telling me that he did not have pain in his forehead, eyes, cheeks, upper lip, lower lip or the front of his tongue, and after telling me that the Ponta-caine did a good job of controlling his pain, I said to him, ‘I am satisfied that you are suffering from ninth nerve neuralgia and I want to cut your ninth nerve this morning.’ ”

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Bluebook (online)
362 F.2d 791, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 5732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harold-e-hayward-v-dr-dean-h-echols-ca5-1966.