Jameson v. Weld

45 A. 299, 93 Me. 345, 1899 Me. LEXIS 56
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 14, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 45 A. 299 (Jameson v. Weld) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jameson v. Weld, 45 A. 299, 93 Me. 345, 1899 Me. LEXIS 56 (Me. 1899).

Opinion

Savage, J.

This is an action on the case for damages alleged to have been occasioned by the surgical malpractice of the defendant, who is a physician and surgeon. The defendant was called to attend the plaintiff a short time after she received injuries to her right elbow joint, and it appears that he diagnosed them as a fracture and a dislocation. That there was a dislocation of both the ulna and the radius is not questioned. That there also was a fracture of some bone or bones in the elbow joint is in dispute. The defendant insists that the evidence tends strongly to show the affirmative of that proposition. This controversy, however, relates [352]*352to the dislocation. The plaintiff in her declaration makes no complaint of malpractice in the defendant’s treatment of any fracture. She alleges, rather, a want of proper skill and care on the part of the defendant in reducing the dislocation, which he undertook to do. It is, indeed, the present contention of the plaintiff that there were no fractures, that the defendant’s diagnosis was wrong, and that his treatment accordingly was wrong. But if the plaintiff is in error in this respect, it still remains necessary to inquire whether, there being fractures, the dislocation was treated with that reasonable degree of skill and care which the law imposes upon surgeons. The fractures, if any there were, are only important as bearing upon the condition of the elbow joint while being treated by the defendant, and as tending to show, with other things, that the defendant did or did not use reasonable skill and care under all the circumstances.

The defendant says that he reduced the dislocation of the ulna at the time he first treated plaintiff, but did not succeed in reducing the dislocation of the radius. He says that he attempted afterwards, from time to time, to secure a reduction of the latter dislocation, by manipulations and otherwise, but never succeeded. He also says that he discovered about a month after his first treatment that the ulna had come out of place again, in some way, and that he then attempted by all proper and reasonable means to replace it. This he was never able to do. And in this situation, both the radius and the ulna dislocated, the defendant, having occasion to be absent from town, left the plaintiff’s arm, after about eleven weeks from the injury. He called another surgeon to take his place, and this was done with the plaintiff’s consent. The defendant had nothing further to do with the case.

It would serve no good purpose to enlarge this opinion by any particular analysis of the evidence. No two cases of this sort are alike, and rarely are they so nearly alike that one ease is valuable as a precedent for another. There is much evidence of an expert nature that the treatment given by the defendant was the usual and proper treatment. This, of course, was largely based upon the testimony of the defendant as to what he found and what [353]*353lie did. There is also medical testimony, on the other hand, that it was improper in some respects. The parties themselves, the plaintiff and the defendant, differ in their testimony, not so much in regard to the real condition of the elbow, for of that the plaintiff does not claim to know anything, nor in regard to the actual treatment, but with respect to the statements made by him to her from time to time, concerning the condition of the elbow and his knowledge of it. The defendant claims that he acted in good faith with the plaintiff, and that he fully and correctly explained to her the condition of the elbow, and the want of success he had experienced in trying to reduce the dislocation. On the other hand, the plaintiff claims that the defendant never told her of his failure in that respect, that he did not state to her the true condition of her arm, and the liability she was under of being seriously and permanently crippled in her arm, that he did not, in substance, fully apprise her of her situation, so that she might obtain other surgical treatment; but she says that, being inquired of by her in the ninth week of the treatment, he assured her that the dislocation had been reduced successfully the first time he treated her. Her statement, if true, does not of itself prove want of skill or care on the part of the defendant, but it does show a purpose to conceal from her the true condition, for some reason or other. It tends to show that the defendant himself was conscious, not only of failure, but of a failure for which he was responsible. And if her statement was believed by the jury, they were entitled to give it considerable weight, and undoubtedly did so, especially in view of the conflict of the medical testimony.

In addition to matters already stated, it appears that the defendant so treated the injury that when the elbow joint became stiff, the arm was extended nearly straight, and was useless. The plaintiff claims that the defendant improperly placed and left it in this position, Her contention is that, if the joint must be stiff, the proper way would have been to leave the arm flexed, so that it could be made somewhat useful, and that reasonable care and skill would have suggested this mode of treatment to the defendant. And whether the defendant used reasonable skill in this respect was one of the propositions before the jury.

[354]*354Upon the whole, we find ourselves unable to say that the verdict of the jury, upon all the evidence, is clearly wrong. It is not enough that it may be wrong, or that the court might have come to a different conclusion. We think the evidence for the plaintiff, if believed, is sufficient to sustain a verdict, and that evidence does not seem to be inherently improbable. The defendant’s motion for a new trial must therefore be overruled.

In the course of the trial, the plaintiff was permitted, against the objection of the defendant, to exhibit her injured arm to the jury, and to this permission the defendant excepted. We think the exception cannot be sustained. The present condition of the arm is claimed' by the plaintiff to have been the consequence of the defendant’s want of skill or care. Such is the effect of her evidence. This is denied by the defendant. Whether it was so or not, or whether some cause for which the defendant is not responsible had intervened and made the arm worse than it otherwise would have been, were questions of fact to be submitted to the jury. In view of the plaintiff’s contention and evidence, we think it was clearly within the discretion of the court to permit the arm to be shown to the jury.

Within a week after the defendant had ceased attending her, the plaintiff was taken to a hospital for further treatment, and there, before anything was done to the arm, an X-ray photograph of the elbow was taken. This X-ray photograph was admitted in evidence, against the objection of the defendant, and exceptions were noted. The learned counsel for the defendant say that their objection lies not to the admissibility of X-ray photographs in general, but to the admissibility of this one in particular, which they claim is an exaggeration and a distortion. We think it is within the discretion of the presiding justice to admit an X-ray photograph. Whether it is sufficiently verified, whether it appears to be fairly representative of the object portrayed, and whether it may be useful to the jury, are preliminary questions addressed to him, and his determination thereon is not open to exceptions. Carey v. Hubbardston, 172 Mass. 106. We may add that an examination of the testimony and of the photograph does not show that this discretion was unwisely exercised in this case.

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

Related

McMann v. Reliable Furniture Co.
140 A.2d 736 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1958)
Kennebec Towage Co. v. State
52 A.2d 166 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1947)
State v. Jones
16 A.2d 103 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1940)
State v. Shannon
196 A. 636 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1938)
Fulton v. Chouteau County Farmers' Co.
37 P.2d 1025 (Montana Supreme Court, 1934)
Chenery v. Russell
167 A. 857 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1933)
State v. Jordan
136 A. 483 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1927)
Ingebretsen v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad
176 Iowa 74 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1915)
Lupton v. . Express Co.
86 S.E. 614 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1915)
Wyldes ex rel. McLaughlin v. Patterson
153 N.W. 630 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1915)
Nolte v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.
165 Iowa 721 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1914)
Hassam v. J. E. Safford Lumber Co.
74 A. 197 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1909)
Elzig v. Bales
112 N.W. 540 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)
Mauch v. City of Hartford
87 N.W. 816 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 A. 299, 93 Me. 345, 1899 Me. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jameson-v-weld-me-1899.