Johns v. Pond

177 P. 293, 38 Cal. App. 643, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 146
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 13, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 2556.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 177 P. 293 (Johns v. Pond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johns v. Pond, 177 P. 293, 38 Cal. App. 643, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 146 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

THE COURT.

This is an appeal from a judgment, taken .within sixty days after the entry thereof, in an action wherein the plaintiff sought damages against the defendant, a physician, for negligently,- and without occasion therefor, performing upon her a surgical operation.

The plaintiff alleges in her complaint that the defendant informed her that she bad a fallopian tumor, and operated' upon her for its removal, when in fact the symptoms diagnosed as indicating the presence of a tumor were caused by pregnancy; and that five months later she gave birth to a baby boy weighing nine and one-half pounds. , As a result of the operation plaintiff alleges that her health has been permanently injured, and that she has suffered, and will continue to suffer, more or less pain in body and mind. Upon these facts she bases her demand for damages, placing the amount at twenty-five thousand dollars.

The plaintiff was a witness in her own behalf, and we may paraphrase her testimony as follows: “I shall have been married four years in January, 1916, and have since my marriage lived with my husband. The defendant attended me during pregnancy and at the time of the birth of my first child *645 in the month of January, 1914. Until just prior to the twenty-third day of December, 1914, I enjoyed good health. On that day I telephoned to the defendant to call on me, and when he came I told him that I had been having severe pains in my back and head and also in the pelvic region. I also informed the defendant that I had been examined by Dr. Somers of San Francisco, who said at the time of the examination that he thought I was pregnant five or six weeks. I further told him that I was having a scanty menstruation for almost a day each month. The defendant at that time in my home made what he called a bi-manual examination, and concluded that perhaps my uterus had not contracted after my first child was bom, but in any event he assured me that I was not pregnant, saying, ‘You are no more pregnant than I am.’ At that time he gave me a prescription which I was to use four or five days, and if it gave me no relief I was to let him know. A week or ten days later I called up the defendant and told him that the douche he had prescribed had given me no relief and that my suffering had in fact increased. He told me to call at his office the following day, which I did, and there, after making a more careful examination, he asked me my age. I told him I was twenty-two years old, whereupon he said, ‘Mrs. Johns, you are a very young woman, but I want to tell you that you have a fallopian tumor that is growing over the mouth of the uterus, ’ and that I would have to be operated upon at once; that as soon as the tumor should be removed I would be an entirely different woman. I consented to the operation. It was performed. A few days thereafter the defendant said I was in false, labor pains. I had bearing-down pains in the pelvic region. These pains grew worse and the defendant was sent for. When he called the nurse in attendance she told him that she thought I was going to miscarry. He made no replv but ordered some pills, and left word for them to be given to me as directed. He also ordered hypodermics, which were given to me often during the night, but I suffered intense pain and got no sleep until about 4 o’clock in the morning. In the morning about 9 o’clock the defendant informed me that I was trying to miscarry, that I was pregnant and about to feel life. I asked him why he had not performed an abortion, and told him that he had left me in such a condition that my child would be an idiot or deformed. He replied *646 that he could not perform an abortion for it was against the law, and that he thought the operation would have no effect on the child. Prom that time I worried constantly about the effect the operation would have on the child. Two weeks after the operation defendant took me home from the hospital and carried me up the front stairs to my room. All this time I suffered intense pain, and the defendant told me he expected I would miscarry within nine or ten days. That was the last time he- called. He rendered me no further assistance. The baby was born June 18, 1915. About one month after the operation I observed physical changes in my legs; varicose veins came out on them. This condition existed until the child' was born, during which time, on this account, I could hardly walk and suffered pain and was required to wear elastic stockings. Shortly after the birth of the child I suffered from a hernia, and was operated upon for it. I suffered no accident and do not know what occasioned the rupture , other than the bearing-down exertions which occurred while I was at the hospital. A physiean other than the defendant took care of me at the birth of my child. The baby died within three months after its birth. At one time after the incision I heard the defendant make a statement with reference to the operation in which he said he had made a mistake.”

As to this last statement by the plaintiff and in some other respects she was corroborated by other witnesses.

The defendant testified that in addition to the symptoms reláted by the plaintiff in her testimony- she told him that she had been having hemorrhages between menstrual periods and suffered some dizziness; that she did not suspect pregnancy; that her condition was nothing like it had been with the first child; that considering the history of the case as related by her she was suffering from a fibroid tumor, that her condition was serious and required the performance of an operation; that the operation consisted of an incision about two and one-half inches long in plaintiff’s abdomen; that upon making the incision he discovered that the plaintiff was pregnant and that there was no condition of tumor, whereupon he concluded that the plaintiff had given him an incorrect history of the case; sewed up, dressed, and bandaged the incision; that such an incision is called an exploratory incision, and would have been larger had he not found pregnancy.

*647 According to the testimony of several’ medical witnesses produced by plaintiff, based upon the history of the case as claimed by plaintiff to have been furnished to the defendant, the defendant should have kept the plaintiff under observation for at least six weeks before operating; that if he had done this he would have discovered the error in his diagnosis, for he would have felt the movements bf the living foetus and he would have heard the foetal heart beat.

According to the testimony of nine experts called for the defendant, he was justified in making an immediate operation for tumor only in the event of the presence of hemorrhages between regular menstrual periods; otherwise he should have kept the patient under observation and awaited developments.

From this résumé of the evidence it is quite clear, we think, that if the jury believed, as it appears they did, the testimony of the plaintiff as to what'she told the defendant relating to the history of her case, then the operation was unnecessary, and their verdict cannot be disturbed.

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Bluebook (online)
177 P. 293, 38 Cal. App. 643, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johns-v-pond-calctapp-1918.