Klucken v. Levi

200 N.E. 566, 293 Mass. 545, 1936 Mass. LEXIS 1157
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 200 N.E. 566 (Klucken v. Levi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klucken v. Levi, 200 N.E. 566, 293 Mass. 545, 1936 Mass. LEXIS 1157 (Mass. 1936).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

This is an action of tort, tried to a jury, against a physician to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been sustained through his negligence. The declaration charged in general terms that during an operation upon the plaintiff the “defendant so negligently administered said ether that he caused the plaintiff severe injury to her great damage.” The defendant’s answer contained a general denial and a further answer “that the plaintiff’s negligence caused the injury and damage in her declaration alleged.” In response to the defendant’s motion that the plaintiff specify “in what particular the defendant was negligent in the administration of ether as alleged” the plaintiff specified as follows: “The defendant administered ether or other anaesthetics to the plaintiff while she was being operated on for a throat ailment and administered said anaesthetic so negligently that the plaintiff’s eyes were badly burned and otherwise injured, the membrane or covering surrounding her eyes being burned or destroyed and her vision seriously impaired.” At the close of all the evidence material to the issues presented, the defendant duly presented a motion that on the pleadings, the evidence and the specifications the judge direct a verdict for the defendant. This motion was denied and the defendant duly excepted. At the close of the judge’s charge, the defendant excepted to certain portions thereof relating to the question of damages.

[547]*547There were present at the operation the plaintiff herself who gave no testimony as to what took place, the plaintiff’s family physician who operated, a nurse provided by the hospital, and the defendant, employed by the plaintiff through her physician, Dr. Day, to anaesthetize her. There is nothing in the evidence printed in the record to show that the apparatus used by the defendant during the anaesthetization was or should have been furnished by him, or that there was anything wrong or improper about the equipment which was used by the defendant.

The plaintiff testified that the operation for a thyroid cyst was at the New England Hospital for Women on Saturday, April 12, 1930; that the defendant was the anaesthetist and that he was assisted by a nurse, Evelyn Sylvia, in the employ of the hospital; that after the operation, she realized that she could not open her eyes and when she left the hospital she could barely see anything. On Sunday she asked Dr. Day why she had such trouble in her right eye and understood from what he said that ether got into her eye. Some days after the operation Dr. Johns, called in by Dr. Day, treated her, and after she left the-hospital continued treating her for approximately five weeks. It was about four weeks after she left the hospital before she returned to work. “She experienced very much pain with her eyes while in the hospital, which continued for two days and until Dr. Johns treated the eyes she had gnawing nervous headaches after the operation all the time that she was in the hospital and at intervals after she left the hospital. She had no similar headaches before the operation. In April, 1930, she was employed by B. F. Sturtevant Company at a weekly wage of $25.00. The records of the New England Hospital for Women state under date of April 14, 1930, that the plaintiff had ‘conjunctivitis from ether in the right eye/'and under date of April 30, 1930, that she was still under treatment for conjunctivitis by Dr. Johns. There was evidence that this condition is known as denuded corneal epithelium. Dr. Day testified that she did not have a denuded corneal epithelium in the right eye prior to the operation.”

[548]*548The defendant, called as a witness by the plaintiff, testified, in substance, that he had been a physician for over seven years and had specialized in surgery and obstetrics for about five years; that a part of his specialized work was in the administration of ether; that he had administered ether probably over one thousand times in five years and had the skill of the ordinary practitioner in and around Boston accustomed to giving ether. The only testimony as to the qualifications of the nurse came from the nurse herself, who was called as a witness by the defendant. This testimony disclosed that she had been in charge of the operating room of the New England Hospital for Women for about seven and one half years, had had special training in the management of an operating room, and had assisted in giving ether approximately fifty times a month over a period of seven and one half years. It was in evidence that the defendant was assisted by the nurse, Miss Sylvia, and that in this case it was necessary that the defendant have such assistance.

The only testimony as to the actual administration of the ether came from the defendant and the nurse. The defendant testified that at the start the anaesthetic was administered through a Gwathmey machine (which was described); and that “this apparatus is used to bring -the patient to the state of anaesthesia known as induction, and then to be carried into the stage known as moderately deep anaesthesia.” In the instant case, after this apparatus had been used the defendant changed to a cone, because it was easier to handle the cone than to use the gas mask, and the defendant could keep the plaintiff sleeping in quiet at a certain level of sleep. The cone consisted of cardboard rolled into a cylinder, open at both ends, covered by a heavy towel and filled in the upper third with gauze. At one end the cardboard was cut so as to fit the face more closely. The purpose of the towel was to protect the face from the cutting edge of the cardboard and to absorb ether which might run out of the gauze. In using the cone ether was poured in by hand in liquid form from a metal container, [549]*549the amount of ether entering the cone being controlled by the person pouring it. Ether is a liquid substance which vaporizes readily at room or body temperature; vaporization starts when ether is poured on the gauze in the cone and vapor keeps coming off the gauze until the ether is dissolved. The defendant testified that the cone fitted to the plaintiff did not fit over the eyes at all and, if ether got into her eyes, it came from outside the cone; and that it could be determined by the person administering the ether whether the ether was leaking from the bottom of the cone or dropping down from outside the cone. The plaintiff then asked the defendant the questions, and received the answers, which follow: "Q. If any ether got into her eyes it came from outside the cone or leaked from the bottom of the cone into her eyes? A. If it got into her eyes it would have to come from an outside source, yes. — Q. And if that were done by the ordinary anaesthetist you would say that that was improper, wouldn’t you, if it got into her eyes in that way? A. To my mind, I wouldn’t say it was improper. — Q. But you wouldn’t expect the ordinary anaesthetist to permit it to get into the eyes of the patient under those circumstances, would you? A. I wouldn’t, no.”

The defendant then testified that in this particular case the plaintiff was draped with towels and had a sterile sheet covering her so that it came over the shoulder of the defendant who stood behind her. Her face was covered with towels, with two towels over her eyes. The defendant "determined in part the amount of anaesthesia by observing the size of the pupils of the patient’s eyes.” (For this purpose it is obvious the towels would have to be lifted.) He held her chin with his left hand and the ether cone with his right hand. He would remove the ether cone from her face with his right hand and hold it upside down.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 N.E. 566, 293 Mass. 545, 1936 Mass. LEXIS 1157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klucken-v-levi-mass-1936.