Kuehnemann v. Boyd

214 N.W. 326, 193 Wis. 588, 1927 Wisc. LEXIS 268
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 214 N.W. 326 (Kuehnemann v. Boyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kuehnemann v. Boyd, 214 N.W. 326, 193 Wis. 588, 1927 Wisc. LEXIS 268 (Wis. 1927).

Opinions

Physicians and surgeons: Malpractice: Degree of skill required: Experttestimony: Patient burned by X-ray treatments: Doctrine of res ipsaloquitur not applicable.

1. In an action by a patient against a physician for malpractice causing an X-ray burn, the burden is on the patient to prove negligence by the physician in administering the X-ray treatments. p. 591.

2. Evidence that a treatment by a machine using two filters did not produce a burn, while a subsequent treatment with one filter removed did produce one, did not prove that the dosage with one filter removed was an overdosage, or that a treatment with two filters was a normal dosage, but left the question whether the burn resulted from an overdosage or a hypersensitive skin to speculation. p. 591.

3. It is the duty of a physician to exercise that degree of care, diligence, judgment, and skill which physicians in good standing in the same school of medicine usually exercise in the same or similar localities under like circumstances, having regard to the advanced state of medical or surgical science at the time he discharges his legal duty to his patient; and to be liable for malpractice he must be shown to have failed in the requisite degree of care and skill. p. 591.

4. The degree of care and skill which a physician must exercise in treating a patient can only be proved by the testimony of experts, and without such testimony the jury cannot determine whether he failed to exercise the required skill. p. 592.

5. The doctrine of res ipsa loquitur is not applicable to mal-practice cases between patient and physician, though the injury arises from X-ray treatments. p. 592.

6. Where a physician gives X-ray treatments to patients for *Page 589 curative or healing purposes, proof of a bad result from such treatments should not constitute proof of negligence by the physician, any more than any other agency applied for curative purposes. p. 592.

7. Undisputed testimony by the physician that the technique and formula used by him conformed to medical standards in the locality must be accepted as the standard of care and skill required of him, and in the absence of evidence to show that he did not meet such degree of care and skill no recovery could be had by the patient. p. 594.

8. Withdrawal of one filter from the machine, if bad practice, could not be defended on the ground that the physician was advised to do so by other doctors; but if proper practice, it is immaterial who induced the physician to pursue such practice. His ignorance is immaterial if his practice is right. p. 594.

9. An instruction that the fact that the patient was burned may be considered as evidence that the physician did not use due care, skill, and judgment in administering the X-ray is erroneous. p. 594.

On rehearing:

10. Where the case was tried on the theory that the doctrine ofres ipsa loquitur applied, and no attempt was made to show that the injury was a result of an overdosage of the X-ray, and plaintiff claims that evidence can be supplied on a retrial that the dosage was excessive, a new trial is granted. p. 595. The defendant is a physician and surgeon in the practice of his profession in the city of Fond du Lac. *Page 590 Early in the spring of 1925 he undertook the treatment of a toxic goiter from which plaintiff was suffering. He gave her alternate treatments of the X-ray and the actinic ray. He gave a treatment of each ray once a week for a period of five weeks, when he went to Europe and was absent for about ten weeks. During the period of treatment her condition improved steadily and satisfactorily, and no untoward results of the application of the treatments were observed. No burn resulted and there was nothing to indicate that her skin was hypersensitive to the rays. While in London attending a meeting of a medical society the defendant was told by a doctor that if he would remove one filter from the X-ray machine he would secure quicker results. Upon his return from Europe he renewed the treatments in exactly the same manner that he had administered them prior to his departure for Europe, except that in administering the X-ray he used but one filter in the machine instead of two. His first treatment after returning from Europe was administered on July-21st, in the evening. During that night the patient noticed a soreness and burning at the side of her neck along where the treatment had been administered, and in the morning it was still swollen. During the day the swelling went down, and it seemed to feel better, and she paid no further attention to it. This treatment was given on Tuesday. On Friday night she called on the defendant, told him about the soreness of her neck, that it had swollen and "kind of burned," but that the swelling had gone down. He said he thought perhaps she had taken a cold. On that night he gave her an application of the actinic ray. She noticed no ill effect from that treatment. On the following Tuesday, the 28th, she returned to him for an X-ray treatment. At that time nothing was said about the soreness of her neck. During the treatment on the 28th she noticed a sort of pricking sensation, but "it wasn't bad;" that was all she noticed while she was in the office, but during the night she woke up and there was "a terrible soreness and burning" *Page 591 on her neck. Next morning she went to his office and asked him what had happened to her neck. He told her she had an X-ray burn, which he treated with the actinic ray. He continued to treat the burn with the actinic ray until October 5th, after which she consulted another physician.

It appears uncontradicted by the expert testimony in this case that an X-ray burn is due either to an overdosage or to a hypersensitive skin, and that there is no way of diagnosing in advance whether the skin of any individual is hypersensitive to the X-ray. It is fundamental that in order to recover in this case the burden is upon the plaintiff to prove negligence on the part of the defendant in administering the X-ray treatments. In order to support the conclusion that the burn was the result of defendant's negligence, it is first claimed that the treatment given prior to the defendant's departure for Europe resulted in no burn, and disproves the fact that the plaintiff had a hypersensitive skin. The defendant admits that in administering the treatment upon his return from Europe he used but one filter in his X-ray ma-chine instead of two, and that this resulted in a greater dos-age; but this does not prove that the dosage given after his return was an overdosage, or that the dosage given prior to his departure was a normal dosage. It simply proves that the dosage given in his first treatment did not, while the dosage given in the latter treatments did, burn the skin. It leaves entirely to speculation whether the burn was the result of an overdosage or whether it was due to the hyper-sensitiveness of the skin. There is no evidence in the case to establish the fact that the dosage from which the burn resulted was an overdosage.

It was the defendant's duty to exercise that degree of care, diligence, judgment, and skill which physicians in good standing in the same school of medicine usually exercise in the same or similar localities under like or similar circum-stances, having regard to the advanced state of medical or surgical science at the time he has discharged his legal duty *Page 592 to his patient. In order to hold him liable the burden is upon the plaintiff to show that he failed in the requisite degree of care and skill. That degree of care and skill can only be proved by the testimony of experts.

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Bluebook (online)
214 N.W. 326, 193 Wis. 588, 1927 Wisc. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuehnemann-v-boyd-wis-1927.