Harris v. Campbell

409 P.2d 67, 2 Ariz. App. 351
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedDecember 21, 1965
Docket1 CA-CIV 28
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 409 P.2d 67 (Harris v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Campbell, 409 P.2d 67, 2 Ariz. App. 351 (Ark. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

DONOFRIO, Judge.

Opal Harris and Donald E. Harris, her husband, appellants herein and plaintiffs below, brought suit against Dr. Zeph B. Campbell and his wife, appellees and defendants below, for alleged malpractice by Dr. Campbell upon the person of Mrs. Harris. The case was tried to a jury and at the close of all the evidence the court granted a motion for a directed verdict in favor of the defendants on the grounds of failure of proof. Judgment was rendered on the verdict, and after the usual motion for a new trial was overruled this appeal was taken.

In May, 1958, Mrs. Harris a woman of 41 years of age, mother of five children, married 24 years who was suffering from a herniation of the bladder and other complications consulted the defendant, Dr. Campbell, a specialist in the field of gynecology. He recommended surgery consisting of a vaginal hysterectomy and plastic repair to cure these problems. At the time *353 no mention was made that surgery might affect future marital relations. The operation was performed by him on June 19, 1958, employing the Heaney technique, which is the usual procedure for this type of operation. Following the operation and up to February 1959, Mrs. Harris was treated by the defendant for granulated tissue, which was frequently cauterized. Approximately six weeks after the operation, she attempted marital relations with her husband but was unable to have them successfully.

Because of dissatisfaction Mrs. Harris quit the defendant and saw another physician who treated her for granulated tissue in the area of the operation which had lasted for about seven or eight months. This condition eventually cleared up. She continued to have a problem, however, with marital relations which was due to a shortness of the vagina. This fact forms the basis of this action. The explanation of this condition by Dr. Campbell was that it was either the onset of menopause, congenital shortness of the vagina, or granulation of tissues.

Plaintiff was seen by Dr. Preston Brown, a gynecologist, who testified that her condition was the result of operative and post-operative conditions. At this point Dr. Brown testified that he could not state with medical exactitude what was the cause of the condition but that there were several possibilities. He testified that during the Heaney hysterectomy process a colpoperineorrhaphy completes the operation. This is where a wall of the vagina is repaired and “the muscles of the perineum, that is, the bundle of muscles between the vagina and the rectum, are strengthened and shortened as need be”.

To pinpoint the evidence and the court’s ruling thereon we set out the following testimony by Dr. Brown:

“MR. ELY: Your Honor, our point is that the doctor has stated that there are a number of possibilities; that he cannot state with medical exactitude what caused it, but he does have an opinion; but it was due to operative or post-operative conditions, if you will; and I am asking him what some of these possibilities are, Your Honor.
THE COURT: No, I believe our own Supreme Court has touched on that. You cannot deal with possibilities. You must have facts.

Objection be sustained.

Q. BY MR. ELY: Doctor, would you have testified that with medical exactitude you cannot predict what is the cause of this condition except that in your opinion it was due to the operative or postoperative conditions ?
Now, Doctor, then there are only possibilities, is that correct?
A. That is correct, sir.
Q. Doctor, would you list for the Judge and the jury all the possibilities?
MR. CAVANAGH: The same objection, if the court please.
THE COURT: Objection will be sustained.”

id,

“Q. BY MR. ELY: Now Doctor, of all the explanations possible—and now dealing with medical exactitude—is one of these explanations the cause of this operative or postoperative condition?
MR. CAVANAGH: Object to the form of the question as not intelligent; number two, it is asking the doctor to assume possibilities, and the Court has already ruled on that. THE COURT: Sustained.
Q. BY MR. ELY: Doctor, you have testified that in the time that you practiced that you had never had granulation tissues postoperativewise in this type of operation lasting for seven or eight months, is that correct?
A. That’s right, sir.
*354 Q. .Doctor, are there several explanations of that?
A. The explanations for prolonged granulation tissue would be very-hard to assess.
One would assume that there is a raw surface persisting through which the granulation appears. Now, that failure to heal raw surface may be something inherent in the body of the patient; that there may be some defect in her healing mechanism; and that it may be that the flaps that we have described that are folded together have separated, thus leaving a larger surface from whiph granulation tissue would arise.
Q. Might one of those be improper on the part of the operating surgeon ? ..
MR. CAVANAGH: If the Court please, this again is speculation. There is no proof of what whatsoever.
THE COURT: Sustained.”

Appellants contend that it was error to sustain the objections to the evidence offered and with this evidence, if admitted, there is sufficient evidence to submit this case to the jury. Even though we consider the evidence we cannot agree that it would have been sufficient together with the other evidence in the case to establish a prima facie case for consideration by the jury. Even though it were possible that certain operative and post-operative conditions may have caused the condition (shortness of vagina) in Mrs. Harris there was no evidence that any of them was probable. There must have been at least a probability (as opposed to a possibility) that the operation or the treatment in connection therewith was improper.

“Before liability would attach, if the injury could have been due to several causes, any 'one of which might have been the sole proximate cause, it must be shown as between these causes that it was the physician’s negligence that caused the injury.” McBrayer v. Zordel, 127 Colo. 438, 257 P.2d 962, 965 (1953).

We next consider the offer of proof with reference to the performance of the colpoperineorrhaphy. The offer of proof by appellees was as follows:

“He would have further testified that another possibility that definitely cannot be ruled out in a colpoperineorrhaphy and that is an interior reconstruction of the vagina vault, and he would have said in this respect that the definite possibility would be an incorrect colpoperineorrhaphy causing taking away too much vagina which would have resulted in the shortening.

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409 P.2d 67, 2 Ariz. App. 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-campbell-arizctapp-1965.