James v. Falk

360 P.2d 546, 226 Or. 535, 85 A.L.R. 2d 1014, 1961 Ore. LEXIS 290
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 360 P.2d 546 (James v. Falk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James v. Falk, 360 P.2d 546, 226 Or. 535, 85 A.L.R. 2d 1014, 1961 Ore. LEXIS 290 (Or. 1961).

Opinion

SLOAN, J.

The jury sustained plaintiff’s contention that defendant had committed malpractice in attempting to treat her for a fracture of the femur in her right leg. Defendant appeals from the judgment entered. He submits fifty-one assignments of error. Most of the assignments challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain certain allegations of the complaint. There are also assignments directed at the failure of the trial court to take the case from the jury.

The trial was long; the facts complicated. The record contains hundreds of pages of detailed, technical medical testimony. For us to answer each of the assignments by recitation of the evidence presented would require an opinion of interminable length. To do so would better inform the parties of the reasons why we sustain the trial court. It would serve no other useful purpose. We will comment on some of the issues, particularly those which tend to present material questions of law. To accomplish that purpose a general statement of facts will suffice.

Plaintiff was a young wife, 21 years of age. Defendant was an osteopathic surgeon who practiced his profession at his own clinical hospital at Canyonville, Oregon. On June 1, 1956, plaintiff sustained the fracture in an automobile accident. The fracture was a serious one; the bone splintered into several pieces. It was not a compound fracture. Plaintiff was immediately taken from the scene of the accident to *537 defendant’s hospital. There she was examined by defendant. X-rays demonstrated the nature of the fracture. Defendant recommended to plaintiff’s husband that the fracture be reduced by surgery. The husband testified that he asked defendant if it would be better to remove plaintiff to some other place for treatment. Defendant was said to have advised that he could adequately care for plaintiff’s injury.

The fracture was surgically reduced by defendant. This was done by the insertion into the fractured bone of what was referred to as an intramedullary rod. The bone fragments were secured by use of wood screws. No cast was placed on the leg but a boot type east was placed on plaintiff’s foot to prevent rotation. Several days afterwards a red spot appeared at the site of the incision. The inflammation was called to defendant’s attention. He administered certain antibiotics. For the next five or six days the inflammation became worse and more painful to plaintiff. Then the infection which caused the inflammation erupted and pus drained therefrom. Plaintiff had osteomyelitis.

Defendant continued the same course of treatment. On June 21, 1956, he caused plaintiff to get up and move about on crutches. Plaintiff remained in defendant’s care until July 24 when she left and placed herself under the care of an orthopedist in Eugene. There the osteomyelitis was surgically treated. Eventually some of the diseased bone was removed from the leg and also the intramedullary rod was removed. Plaintiff eventually recovered. However, her right leg was left about two inches shorter than her left, with a stiff knee and other disability which can result from the treatment she endured.

It should also be mentioned that within a few days after the original accident it was discovered that plain *538 tiff was pregnant. In November, 1956, she suffered a missed abortion caused by the death of the child within her. It was alleged that the abortion was proximately caused by defendant’s negligence.

It was claimed that defendant was negligent in three principal particulars: (1) He .should not have ah tempted to treat such a severe fracture; (2) that he should have applied a full leg and partial body cast to fully immobilize plaintiff and should not have ordered plaintiff to move about; and (3) in failing to properly treat the infection when it first became apparent. Proximate cause, of course, was also alleged. Defendant denies any failure upon his part and also contends there was no evidence of proximate cause sufficient to go to the jury. Our examination of the record convinces us that the case was properly submitted to the jury on all the issues presented. There was direct evidence that defendant failed “to exercise that degree of care, skill, diligence and knowledge which is ordinarily possessed by the average of the members of his profession in good standing in similar localities.” Hamilton v. Kelsey, 1928, 126 Or 26, 29, 268 P 750. And, that this failure was a proximate cause of the injury and disabilities claimed.

One of the issues presented which requires more particular mention involves the difference in the degree of skill, if any, that should have been exercised in this situation by an osteopath as distinguished from a medical doctor. All of plaintiff’s expert witnesses were medical doctors. Defendant claimed that medical doctors were not qualified to testify to the standard of practice of an osteopath. Defendant relies on Sheppard v. Firth, 1959, 215 Or 268, 334 P2d 190, and similar eases to support his position. The Sheppard case held that a medical doctor could not, within the facts *539 of that case, testify to the measure of skill of a chiropractor. The opinion said, however, that there is “an exception to this general rule which arises whenever the methods of treating a particular ailment are generally the same in either school” or “where a physician, although trained in one school, steps out of the practice of his own school and attempts to treat a patient in the manner practiced by another school.” 215 Or at 271.

Either exception would apply to this case. There was evidence from which the jury could have concluded that both schools of practice followed the same precepts in treating a fracture of the kind in question. On the other hand, if there was any difference, which we cannot find from the record, the evidence would also establish that defendant relied on standards followed by the medical doctors to justify the course of treatment he adopted in this case. The evidence submitted by def endant’s witnesses would lead one to believe that the basic difference between the two school’s was that of philosophy. There was no showing that philosophy had any value in treating a severe fracture of the femur.

There are several assignments which complain that hypothetical questions asked of the plaintiff’s medical witnesses contained facts not in evidence or items of evidence Which had been disproved. The hypothetical questions were asked of four witnesses. Other doctors, including defendant, testified at length as to the medical problems presented by this case. The peculiar circumstances of the case necessitated long statements of assumed facts. Most of the questions required several pages of the transcript to record. The testimony of one doctor would indicate that it required almost one-half hour to state the assumed facts to him. At the *540 time the questions were actually asked, defendant’s objections were general. The court refused to allow the objections because of the lack of specific reference to the facts complained of but gave defendant leave to renew his objections. After the evidence was all submitted, court and counsel retired to chambers and there engaged in a long discussion of what defendant claimed were the particular facts either not in evidence or that had been disproved.

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Bluebook (online)
360 P.2d 546, 226 Or. 535, 85 A.L.R. 2d 1014, 1961 Ore. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-falk-or-1961.