Jendrus v. Detroit Steel Products Co.

144 N.W. 563, 178 Mich. 265, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 547
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1913
DocketDocket No. 52
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 144 N.W. 563 (Jendrus v. Detroit Steel Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jendrus v. Detroit Steel Products Co., 144 N.W. 563, 178 Mich. 265, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 547 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

Stone, J.

The claimant and appellee is the widow of Joseph Jendrus, who died on February 19, 1913. Joseph Jendrus, a native of Poland, was on February 14, 1913, an employee of the appellant Detroit Steel [266]*266Products Company, which was then insured under the workmen’s compensation act by the appellant Michigan Workmen’s Compensation Mutual Insurance Company. Joseph Jendrus was at the date last named also subject to the compensation act. On Friday, February 14, 1913, at about 2 o’clock in the afternoon, Jendrus, while in good health and vigor, was at work for his said employer polishing a spring Scroll, when the end of the scroll caught on a belt of a machine, and swung around and struck him violently in the abdomen. Jendrus was immediately placed on a stretcher and sent to Harper Hospital. The insurance company was notified, and its surgeon, Dr. W. H. Hutchings, reached the hospital before the ambulance arrived. He looked at Jendrus before he was taken into the hospital. Before Jendrus was taken into the ward, samples of his urine and his blood were taken, and he was then put to bed. As soon as this was done,/ the surgeon examined him, and found “a tenderness, very slight, almost no sign of contusion on the outside, just a little redness.” This was on the right side between the ribs and the hip. This was at 2 p. m. A delay was necessary for the blood examination. At 4 o’clock Dr. Hutchings saw Jendrus again. He then complained of much pain, and there was marked muscular rigidity over the area where the blow appeared to have struck. At 8 o’clock p. m. another examination was made. The area of hardness was then spreading. The blood examination had shown no internal- hemorrhage, the urine no blood, and the surgeon, with this information, diagnosed the case as that of a ruptured intestine. At this hour Jendrus’ temperature was rising. The surgeon, to confirm his diagnosis, asked Drs. George McKean and Angus McLean to see the injured man. They each examined him at about 8 o’clock, and confirmed Dr. Hutchings’ opinion, and they joined him in saying that an mediate ^operation., was necessary. At this time the [267]*267claimant and an elderly man were at the bedside of the patient. Jendrus spoke very little English and Dr. Hutchings could not speak Polish. He and thé man spoke German, and the doctor explained to him the necessity for an operation. Upon this subject Dr. Hutchings testified before the committee of arbitration as follows:

“I told him that if my diagnosis was correct, that without an operation he was, in my opinion, sure to die; that if he was operated on at that time, he had about nine chances out of ten of getting well. I thoroughly explained that “the longer he delayed the \ operation, the so much worse it was for his chances; \ that if he delayed long enough, there would be no use j of operating. Dr. McLean and Dr. McKean said the same thing. I was not satisfied from the attitude of the man I talked with that he had told him what I said. I was not sure that he did. So I sent down and got one of the maids there who spoke English very well, and who is Polish also, called her in and said to her, T want you to tell this man what I say to you.’ This was around 8 o’clock. ‘You tell him that, if our ] diagnosis is correct, that if he is not operated on, he will surely die.’ I said, ‘If you are operated on now, as soon as we can, your chances of getting well are S about nine out of ten; the longer you delay this, so much you take away from your chances of recovery; if you delay it until you are pretty near dead, probably an operation will do you no good.’ This Polish girl explained this to the man, and he said, ‘No.’ I could see him shake his head. It was apparent from his general attitude that he would not have it, so I went away. * * * I went away leaving instruc- * tions, if they changed their minds, they were to call1, me.”

While the doctors were there in consultation, the patient vomited a little fluid. Dr. McLean testified:

“It was fecal in odor, but was not of a poisonous nature.”

Dr. McKean testified:

“It was almost a fecal vomit, due to reverse acting [268]*268of the peritalsis. It was just the beginning,.o.f peritonitis. * * * It was approaching the fecal vomiting- time.”

The patient was kept quiet during the night. The next morning when Dr. Hutchings again saw him he was worse. The doctor testified:

“His pulse was rapid, the whole abdomen was distended and tender, and the typical signs of advanced peritonitis; that is, he was vomiting considerable quantities of fecal matter, which by that time had become markedly fecal.”

The patient would not consent in the morning to? an operation. Dr. Hutchings went to attend to somej. other operations. Between 11:30 a. m. and 12 o’clock another physician had been called by the Jendrus j\ family, and he testified that when he arrived Jendrus [\ had consented to be operated upon. Dr. Hutchings testified that it was about 12:30 p. m. when he was told by the nurse that Jendrus had consented to an operation. A room was ordered prepared, and the patient was operated upon at 1:30 p. m. This was as soon as the arrangements could be made. The house staff was present and assisted. There was testimony that the vomiting had grown worse, and it had been persistent all the morning, and the distended condition of the abdomen had developed about 9 o’clock. Because of the vomiting Dr. Hutchings directed the assistants to use nitrous oxide as the anaesthetic as being less likely to produce vomiting. Just as the patient was going under the influence of the anaesthetic a large quantity of fecal vomitus came up, and some of it went down in his lungs. They turned his head over in the endeavor to rid him of this. The surgeon testified that there was no way that this vomitus getting into the lungs could be avoided. Dr. Hutchings proceeded with the operation, which took about ten minutes. He made the ordinary incision and found a com[269]*269píete peritonitis. The intestines were so congested that he did not attempt to remove them and find the perforation. He inserted drainage in the abdomen, and began transfusing a salt solution subcutaneously. Following the operation Jendrus’ condition improved. His temperature went down; the vomiting became less, but his breathing remained rapid. There was trouble about washing out his stomach. He had refused to have this done, but finally consented.

Two days after the operation pneumonia developed, and Dr. Ernest Haass was called. He found the patient suffering from aspiration, or “swallow” pneumonia. This was on Monday. The next two days the lungs solidified, and the patient died of pneumonia, in the opinion of most of the physicians. Dr. McLean, however, testified that, while he saw him but a few times, he did not think he died of pneumonia; heV thought it was the peritonitis that was the cause of | his death, but testified that he did not see the patient * after he had pneumonia. After Jendrus’ death a post mortem was performed by Dr. Sill, and it confirmed the diagnosis of the surgeon. The lungs were found to be solidified, and Dr. Sill testified, among other things, as follows:

“I think that the pneumonia process discovered was as potent a factor in causing the death as the peritonitis. I would call that what we term the immediate cause of death.
“Q.

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144 N.W. 563, 178 Mich. 265, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jendrus-v-detroit-steel-products-co-mich-1913.