Harold v. Radman

355 A.2d 477, 31 Md. App. 184, 1976 Md. App. LEXIS 484
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 13, 1976
Docket721, September Term, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 355 A.2d 477 (Harold v. Radman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harold v. Radman, 355 A.2d 477, 31 Md. App. 184, 1976 Md. App. LEXIS 484 (Md. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

*185 Menchine, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Mary F. Harold, individually, William H. Harold as her husband, and both as husband and wife jointly, (appellants) sought damages for permanent injury, medical expense and loss of consortium respectively against Dr. H. Melvin Radman (appellee) for alleged medical malpractice in performing a hysterectomy operation and in subsequent aftercare. At trial before a jury in the Baltimore City Court, verdicts in favor of the defendant were directed by the trial judge at the end of the plaintiffs’ cases. Appellants have appealed from the judgments thereafter entered.

The narrow issue presented in this appeal relates to the refusal by the trial judge to permit Dr. Harold Hirsh to testify as an expert witness. 1 In consequence of the trial court’s rejection of the proffered witness, the appellants were left without expert testimony in the medical malpractice case. They maintain that the ruling of the trial judge constituted reversible error.

Prior to the rejection of the proposed witness a voir dire examination had been directed to the qualifications of the proffered witness.

The Voir Dire Examination of the Proposed Witness

On direct examination it was shown that the witness graduated from the Georgetown Medical School in 1942, and trained as an intern and resident for three years at the Gallinger Municipal Hospital, now known as the District of Columbia General Hospital. Thereafter, he became a Fellow in Medicine at that institution. He has been engaged in the practice of medicine since 1947. In 1950 he was certified by the Board of Internal Medicine. Certification in Internal Medicine meant that he had completed five years of training *186 and had passed written and oral examinations and was allowed to practice the most skilled kinds of problems in medicine.

At the time of trial he was a Clinical Associate Professor of Medicine at Howard University School of Medicine. His teaching duties at Howard University School of Medicine occupied him from two to six months annually.

He had written about ninety medical articles and was the author or contributor to five medical text books. His writing primarily was in the area of infections and diseases of the urinary tract or bladder and the use of antibiotics.

He is a consultant of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, and in the past had been a consultant for the Food and Drug Administration, and the United States Public Health Service.

At the time of trial he was engaged as a consultant to the Armed Services Institute of Pathology with respect to medical problems in the Armed Services, the Veterans Administration and the National Institutes of Health. His duties for the Armed Services Institute of Pathology required the review of cases for determination whether there had been violations of medical standard of care in any of the Armed Services.

In the course of his practice, he had had privileges at Suburban Hospital; Holy Cross Hospital in Montgomery County, and Prince George’s County Hospital. He had been Chief of Staff for a home for the aged located in Montgomery County.

At one hospital he supervised the treatment of some thirty to sixty ward patients who were under the day to day care of two interns and a resident. This duty required him to review their diagnoses and treatment and note the progress of the patients until discharge.

He declared that he was familiar with the standard of medical care and skill exercised or expected to be exercised by physicians and surgeons engaged in the field of gynecology and urology in the Baltimore area.

Cross-examination developed that at the trial of the case *187 his practice of medicine was confined primarily to consultation. He acknowledged that he had seen but two private patients within the month preceding trial. He acknowledged that his last operating room activity had been about one year before the trial, when he was in attendance for the purpose of teaching students during an operation by a surgeon. His last association as non-operating member of an operating team performing a hysterectomy occurred about three years prior to trial.

The witness acknowledged that he had never personally conducted any kind of significant surgery and that in the conduct of his specialty of internal medicine he would call in a surgeon for any recommended surgical procedures.

His cross-examination then continued with the following questions and responses:

“Q Have you ever done a hysterectomy?
A No, sir.
Q Do you feel yourself qualified to do the repair of a fistula?
A Personally?
Q Yes.
A No, sir.
Q Do you feel yourself qualified to do a hysterectomy?
A No, sir.
Q And isn’t it true that an internist who is not a surgeon, when such procedures are deemed necessary, the internist consults or calls in the surgeon and follows the advice and procedure of the surgeon?
A 1 don’t think I would like to use the term follows.
I think that we have a — come to an understanding as to whether the operation has to be done, and what kind of operation, and on many occasions, depending on the condition of the patient, and 1 have always participated with the surgeon or sometimes even by myself *188 in explaining to the patient the need for it, because even before you start, you call a surgeon, and you have to explain to the patient why you are calling the surgeon, so you have to know the surgical indications, and I think that the internist also has a duty to his patient, and that his patient has to know what the complications are, and what will happen if those complications — show that from a technical point of view, no, I can’t do the technology, but from the point of view of knowing whether the surgery is indicated, what the problems are, what complications could be expected, what should be done with the complications, I think that I know those as well as any surgeon, particularly in this kind of operation, which is so relatively common.”

His redirect examination on voir dire included the following:

“Q Doctor, have you ever diagnosed the need for a hysterectomy?
A Many times.
Q Have you ever diagnosed fistulas?
A On a number of occasions, yes.
Q Are you familiar with the procedure to repair a fistula?
A You are talking — where, sir?
Q Bladder or —
A Yes.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Searle v. Bryant
713 S.W.2d 62 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1986)
Sewell v. Wilson
641 P.2d 1070 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 1982)
Hunsaker v. Bozeman Deaconess Foundation
588 P.2d 493 (Montana Supreme Court, 1978)
Radman v. Harold
367 A.2d 472 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1977)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
355 A.2d 477, 31 Md. App. 184, 1976 Md. App. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harold-v-radman-mdctspecapp-1976.