Hundley v. Martinez

158 S.E.2d 159, 151 W. Va. 977, 1967 W. Va. LEXIS 141
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1967
Docket12666
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 158 S.E.2d 159 (Hundley v. Martinez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hundley v. Martinez, 158 S.E.2d 159, 151 W. Va. 977, 1967 W. Va. LEXIS 141 (W. Va. 1967).

Opinion

Caplan, Judge:

This is a malpractice action instituted in the Court of Common Pleas of Kanawha County by the plaintiff, J. Howard Hundley, against the defendant, Antonio Martinez, an ophthalmologist. In this action the plaintiff seeks recovery from the defendant for damages he claims to have suffered by reason of the alleged negligence of the defendant when the latter performed an operation on his right eye.

An examination of the record reveals that the plaintiff, having experienced difficulty with the vision of his right eye, went to see Doctor Martinez, the defendant, who informed him that he had a cataract formation and advised that it be corrected by an operation. The plaintiff consented and the operation was performed on him by the defendant on August 1,1962. After the operation Mr. Hundley remained in the hospital for eight or nine days, during which time he was examined daily by Doctor Martinez who assured *979 him that the “eye was all right, getting along fine.” For several weeks after the operation, npon the advice of his doctor, the plaintiff kept a veil or guard over his right eye.

According to the testimony of the plaintiff, he went to see the defendant on. many occasions during the ensuing months and on each occasion he was assured by the defendant that his eye would he all right. He continued to inform Doctor Martinez that his vision was very poor in that eye and that he was virtually blind in the daylight. In November 1962 the defendant prescribed glasses but this attempted correction did not help Mr. Hundley, a practicing attorney in the City of Charleston, who was past eighty years of age. He continued to call upon the defendant until May 22, 1963 when he paid his last visit. During all of these visits, Doctor Martinez repeatedly told him his eye was all right and that he would recover his vision. Finally, on May 22, 1963, the defendant told him he could not prescribe any further glasses and that the plaintiff’s difficulty was that he had retina trouble. The plaintiff testified that during the months subsequent to the operation he was relying on his doctor and believed that his vision would improve. However, there was no improvement and Mr. Hundley continues to be virtually blind in that eye.

Several months after the operation, Mr. Hundley began to have serious difficulty with the vision of his left eye. As a consequence, on February 12, 1965, he consulted Doctor A. C. Chandler, a specialist in eye surgery, and was informed that he was in need of an operation for a cataract on his left eye. This operation was performed by Doctor Chandler on March 5, 1965. The plaintiff testified that Doctor Chandler on this occasion examined his right eye and informed him that more than half of the iris of that eye was missing and stated that he could not help him. The question and answer pertaining to the condition of the right eye *980 were objected to by tbe defendant and tbe objection was sustained. Doctor Chandler did not testify in tbe trial of tbis case.

Mr. Hundley related that Doctor Chandler’s report of tbe condition of bis eye was tbe first information that be bad that bis eye was permanently damaged and that bis vision would not return.

Tbis malpractice action was instituted on May 5, 1965, wherein be charged that Doctor Martinez “negligently and carelessly cut, tore, severed and otherwise removed more than one-balf of tbe iris of bis, tbe plaintiff’s said eye***”. His complaint alleges total and permanent impairment of bis sight.

It should be noted that tbe date of tbe operation performed on tbe plaintiff by tbe defendant was August 1, 1962 and that tbe action was instituted on May 5, 1965. Tbe plaintiff, anticipating a plea of statute of limitations, charged in tbe complaint “that tbe defendant well knew at tbe time that be bad wrongfully removed a large part of tbe iris of tbe plaintiff’s eye and bad severed tbe aforesaid muscles controlling the pupil of tbe plaintiff’s eye. He thereafter deliberately and fraudulently withheld tbis information from the plaintiff and fraudulently deceived tbe plaintiff by telling him that bis eyesight would improve; and that be bad trouble with the retina of bis eye and that such trouble was tbe cause of bis lack of ability to use bis eye, which was wholly untrue since be knew that tbe condition would not and could not improve, and be knew that tbe plaintiff bad no retina trouble whatsoever. Tbe plaintiff did not know that a large part of tbe iris of bis eye bad been torn away and did not learn about tbe deception practiced upon him by tbe defendant until a few weeks prior to tbe institution of tbis action when be went to tbe office of another eye specialist who examined bis eye and advised him that a large part of the iris of bis eye was missing, and tbe aforesaid muscles controlling tbe pupil of bis eye *981 had been severed, which was the reason that he was unable to nse his said eye.”

In answer, the defendant, Doctor Martinez, denied that he was guilty of negligence in the performance of the operation and further interposed a plea of the statute of limitation. It is, of course, his position in relation to that plea that if he were negligent such negligence occurred on August 1, 1962, the date of the operation, and that more than two years having passed prior to the institution of this action, such action was barred by the statute of limitations.

During the trial the plaintiff called Doctor Martinez to testify as a “hostile” witness. During his testimony, Doctor Martinez read into the record his official report of the operation as dictated to his secretary immediately after said operation. This was permitted by the court but the plaintiff’s request to have a photostatic copy thereof admitted as evidence was denied by the court. The testimony of Doctor Martinez, reading from the report, is as follows:

“ ‘Mr. J. Howard Hundley, 215 Loma Road, Charleston, West Virginia. DI 3-6823. Age 80. 8/1/62. Operation: Cataract extraction, right eye. Operating Surgeon: Dr. Antonia C. Martinez. Assistant Surgeon : Dr. Edwin M. Shepherd. Under local anesthesia of Novocain and Hydase, a conjunctival flap was made toward the cornea and the incision was made about one millimeter behind the limbus in the scleral tissue. We applied five sutures and we did three peripheral iridectomies.
‘It should be iridotomies — it’s iridectomies but it should be iridotomies.
‘The erisophake was placed on the lens and the lens dislocated posteriorly with fluid viterous presenting. The erisophake did not take hold. We caught the lens with the spoon which engaged the iris. The iris was very thin and tore and the greater part of it *982 Rad to be removed. We closed the wound. Put air in the anterior chamber and injected penicillin sub-conjunctivally. AM: bas.’ ” “Bas is the initial of my secretary.”

Following the testimony of Mr. Hundley, counsel for the plaintiff offered the deposition of Walter B. Loewe, an ophthalmologist of New York City, and requested that it be read into the record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 S.E.2d 159, 151 W. Va. 977, 1967 W. Va. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hundley-v-martinez-wva-1967.