Haskins v. Howard

16 S.W.2d 20, 159 Tenn. 86, 6 Smith & H. 86
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 20 (Haskins v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haskins v. Howard, 16 S.W.2d 20, 159 Tenn. 86, 6 Smith & H. 86 (Tenn. 1929).

Opinion

Mix. Justice Swiggaet

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action for damages against a surgeon for malpractice. There was a verdict for plaintiffs in the circuit court, upon which judgment was rendered. The Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court, and the case is before us by the writ of certiorari, heretofore granted, on the petition of the defendant, Dr. Haskins. The parties will he herein referred to as plaintiffs and defendant, according to their status in the trial court.

It is assigned as error that there is no evidence to support the verdict.

The case is the result of an operation performed by Dr. Haskins upon 'M'rs. Maggie Howard, for the purpose of removing an ovarian tumor. After his patient had been subjected to ether, Dr. Haskins undertook to correct cervical lacerations by the application of a cauterizing instrument, and then made an abdominal incision. Examination then disclosed pregnancy of three or three and one-half months advancement, and the incision was closed. Plaintiff’s evidence is that Dr. Haskins stated *89 that he had found pregnancy and that there was no tumor, hut both Dr. Haskins and his assistant testified that they also found a small tumor which the pregnancy made it inadvisable to remove.

Mrs. Howard suffered a miscarriage on the fifteenth day after the operation. While there is evidence that such a result of the operation would have developed usually within three or four, days, there is sufficient evidence to support the concurrent finding of the trial court and the Court of Appeals that the operation, and particularly the cauterizing of the cervix, was the cause of the miscarriage. Evidence of bleeding, which began before Mrs. Howard left the hopital and g*rew continuously worse until the date of the miscarriage, justified this inference, under the expert testimony in the record. There is no dispute that Mrs. Howard suffered a serious impairment of health as the result of the miscarriage, and there is no assignment of error that the amount of the verdict is excessive.

At the time of the operation Mrs. Howard was twenty-six years old, with several children. Her youngest child was seventeen months old. She testified that she told Dr. Haskins she was not sure she was not pregnant, and that her last menstruation was four months earlier. The hospital chart confirms this statement. ¡She was examined at home and then, more thoroughly, at the hospital, and the operation was advised. Neither the patient nor her husband was given any intimation that Dr. Haskins was apprehensive that she was pregnant, and, according to the testimony of Tom Howard', the decision in favor of the operation was made on the statement of Dr. Haskins that he was “positive” that Mrs. Howard was suffering from a tumor.

*90 Botli Dr. Haskins and his assistant, Dr. Long, testified that they would not have operated on the woman if they had known she was pregnant, yet Dr. ITaskins testified that he was “apprehensive” of pregnancy at the time he operated, and that he was “not one hundred per cent sure she wa's not pregnant.” He further testified that Mrs. Howard was in no danger of death, and that he was induced to operate and not to delay because “the woman was suffering;, seeking relief. She was in the hospital on expense, and they were very poor people.”

There is abundant evidence in the record that an operation on a pregnant woman is likely to cause a miscarriage, and Dr. Long, Dr. Haskins’ assistant, testified, “we do not operate on pregnant women unless it is absolutely necessary . . . for fear of1 miscarriage.”

The case stated in the first count of each of the declarations is that Mrs. Howard submitted to the operation on the statement of Dr. Haskins that she was' suffering from an ovarian tumor and that the operation was necessary, and thereupon the doctor “needlessly and carelessly” performed the operation, discovering pregnancy instead of a tumor. Thé declarations aver that the operation was unnecessary and was performed through mistake, due to unskillfulness, carelessness and negligence in improperly diagnosing the malady from which Mrs. Howard was suffering-.

It was conceded on the trial that Dr. Haskins was a physician of skill and ability, and his qualifications as a surgeon were not questioned. Evidence was offered that physicians of requisite skill are often unable to definitely ascertain pregnancy under the conditions of this case, and that the defendant’s failure to discover Mrs. Howard’s condition prior to the operation was not negli-g'ence.

*91 By the submission of hypothetical questions to other surgeons, testifying as experts, defendant sought to show that he was not negligent in advising and undertaking the operation. The value and weight of this evidence was, however, destroyed by the omission from the hypothesis submitted to the experts of the fact that the defendant himself entertained an apprehension that Mrs. Howard was pregnant at the time he operated. There is no expert testimony in the record that it is not negligence for a surgeon to operate for a suspected tumor while entertaining an apprehension of pregnancy, when a delay would confirm or disprove the diagnosis without endangering the life of the patient. The value of the opinion of an expert witness upon a supposed state of facts must depend upon the agreement or nonagreement of the supposed ease with the actual facts of the case on trial. Woodward v. Insurance Co., 104 Tenn., 49, 54; Fisher v. Insurance Co., 124 Tenn., 450, 506-508.

The Court of Appeals was of opinion that the defendant was negligent in advising and undertaking the operation in view of the symptoms of pregnancy present, when he himself entertained a doubt or apprehension of pregnancy; that in view of this doubt and the admitted fact thát a delay would not have endangered the life of his patient, it was the defendant’s duty to delay the operation until he could make a more certain diagnosis.

We agree with the learned Court of Appeals that the testimony of Dr. Haskins himself was a sufficient predicate-for the inference of negligence made by the jury. Such an inference is not dependent upon testimony of experts, and the issue was addressed to the intelligence and discretion of the members of the jury.

*92 We do not liave for decision whether Dr. Haskins could have conclusively protected himself from the imputation of negligence by laying' before Mrs. Howard or her husband the facts within his knowledge, including his apprehension of pregnancy and the consequent hazard of the proposed operation, and leaving to them the decision whether to proceed or delay until the diagnosis could be made certain. The defendant does not claim to have communicated to either of the plaintiffs the fact of the uncertainty of his diagnosis, and Mr. Howard testified that defendant said to him: “I am satisfied that your wife is not pregnant; she has a tumor in her, and the quicker you can get it out the better she will be. . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 20, 159 Tenn. 86, 6 Smith & H. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haskins-v-howard-tenn-1929.