Kershaw v. Tilbury

8 P.2d 109, 214 Cal. 679, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 506
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1932
DocketDocket No. L.A. 11133.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 8 P.2d 109 (Kershaw v. Tilbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kershaw v. Tilbury, 8 P.2d 109, 214 Cal. 679, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 506 (Cal. 1932).

Opinion

THE COURT.

A hearing was granted in this case in order that we might more fully consider the propriety of 'the award of damages. Upon such consideration, we adopt that part of the opinion of the District Court of Appeal which deals with the other issues involved in the action, as follows:

“This is an action for damages brought by Jo Dell Kershaw, by her guardian ad litem, against the defendants Lloyd E. Tilbury and Helen L. Tilbury, as physicians, for alleged malpractice. The salient facts of the case are about as follows:
*682 “On July 7, 1927, the plaintiff being about 9 years of age, suffered pain in her left leg just above her ankle. The mother, who is her guardian ad litem herein, called a physician, who advised her that pus was forming on the bone similar to a bone felon. He advised her to make arrangements to take her to a hospital and have an X-ray made and an operation performed and that the child was suffering from an infection known as osteomyelitis. The child had, for her age become proficient in toe dancing. The mother, fearing an operation would leave an ugly scar on the child’s leg and that an operation might result in permanently disabling her daughter from future dancing, sought the services of a drug-less physician. Disclosing these facts to a neighbor, she was told by her friend that Dr. Lloyd E. Tilbury was treating his wife with some success. The neighbor, at the request of the child’s mother, got in touch with the defendant Lloyd E. Tilbury by phone and asked him whether he could cure a case of infection of the bone of a girl about 9 years of age. This neighbor was advised by the doctor to have the child write her name on a piece of paper and bring the specimen of her handwriting to him and that he would advise him if he could cure the plaintiff.
“Dr. Tilbury had for some time prior thereto been diagnosing and treating diseases by a method known as radio treatment. His diagnosis was made by what is called a diagnostic machine, which is briefly described as follows: The mechanism is contained in a box approximately 16 inches long, 12 inches wide and from 4 to 5 inches deep, the top of the box being covered with bakelite. Two dials on the right were for measuring the wave length of the disease. Two dials on the left were for measuring the intensity of the disease. These dials measured from 1-10 and from 10-1000. One dial is set near the center and is used to measure greater intensity from 100-10,000. Another dial near the center is used for turning on the different kingdoms, such as animal, vegetable, mineral, electrical and ether waves, measuring from 1-5. Appellant briefly sets out and describes the contents of the box which, so far as the decision of this case is concerned, need not be gone into.
“With this machine Dr. Tilbury diagnoses diseases in the following manner: From the terminal on the left front of *683 the machine extends a wire attached to an electrode which is placed over the solar plexus of the patient. The patient’s emanation passes through this terminal through the aerial to the kingdom wire and from there to the plate condenser, from whence it passes to the coil condenser on the right of the machine where the wave length of the disease is ascer-V tained. These emanations from the patient passing through the condenser are amplified 3000 times. From the terminal in the front left of the machine extends a wire which is attached to an electrode which is placed over the solar plexus 'of a healthy individual. Thus emanations from the patient passing through the machine amplified 3000 times are received by this healthy individual. By tuning in on the wave length there is a vibration set up through the sympathetic nervous system of a healthly individual to such a degree that a tenseness will appear over a definite area of the solar plexus of a healthy individual or reagent. In order to ascertain the degree of intensity of the disease Dr. Tilbury used a plain circular rubber rod about eight inches in length and about five-eighths of an inch in diameter, charged withv a woolen cloth, and picked up this reaction of the tenseness by passing this rubber rod, which is a negative field, over the tensed area, causing the rod to adhere. Then by turning on the dials to the left of the machine and if necessary the-one in the center front, passing the rod over this area until the rod no longer adheres or until the tenseness disappears, and by reading the amount of intensity on the dials, Dr. Tilbury knows how severe the disease is. This method was , used for all diseases, keeping in mind each disease as a'1 definite wave length.
“After ascertaining the nature of the disease that the patient is suffering from, Dr. Tilbury treats said disease with a machine known as ‘radio method’. This treating machine is briefly described as follows: It consists of a box five inches wide, eight inches long and six inches deep, the top of which is covered with bakelite, to which one dial and four terminal posts are affixed. One post connects with the aerial, one post connects with the ground wire and one post to an electrode which is placed on the occiput of the] patient and. from the other post a wire extends with multiple' electrodes which go to any part of the body which is affected. Inside of the box are multiple coils and other devices which *684 need not for the purpose of this decision be described herein. The dial on this machine registers from 1-100 and is capable of giving off 550 different wave lengths.
"This machine is used in the following manner: From the terminal to the right extends a wire on which is an electrode that is placed on the occiput or back of the head. From the terminal to the left extends a wire with many terminal branches to which are attached electrodes that are placed over various parts of the diseased areas of the patient’s, body.
“Immediately after the telephone call by the neighbor of the plaintiff to the doctor he obtained a specimen of the handwriting of Jo Dell Kershaw and brought it to Dr. Tilbury’s office. Dr. Tilbury took it and between himself and his wife, Helen L. Tilbury, co-defendant herein, operated certain dials on what Dr. Tilbury described as his diagnostic machine by placing a metal plate on the paper containing the handwriting of the plaintiff, which plate was connected up with the diagnostic machine. Thereupon the defendant Helen L. Tilbury exposed her bare abdomen while the defendant Lloyd E. Tilbury stroked it with his rubber rod and worked the dials on the radio. While the doctor was thus stroking her bare abdomen Mrs. Tilbury explained that she felt a pain in the left leg and hip. Dr. Tilbury then stated to the friend that he had found one condition that required immediate attention and requested him to bring the child in for treatment; that in his opinion an operation was not necessary. About 5 o’clock Mrs. Kershaw took the plaintiff in her arms, as she was unable to walk and in intense pain, and brought her to the office of the defendants, where she was placed upon a settee in the office. There the defendants diagnosed plaintiff’s trouble by placing one of the electrodes in the back of plaintiff’s neck and a similar electrode on her stomach and on the part of the leg which was affected, all of said electrodes or plates being connected to the little radio box. As Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
8 P.2d 109, 214 Cal. 679, 1932 Cal. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kershaw-v-tilbury-cal-1932.