Lacey v. Laird

166 Ohio St. (N.S.) 12
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1956
DocketNo. 34737
StatusPublished

This text of 166 Ohio St. (N.S.) 12 (Lacey v. Laird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lacey v. Laird, 166 Ohio St. (N.S.) 12 (Ohio 1956).

Opinions

Hart, J.,

concurring. The claimed errors upon which the Court of Appeals based its reversal of the judgment will be discussed in the order named by that court in its entry of reversal.

First, it is claimed that the trial court erred in refusing to admit certain evidence offered by Laird. Plaintiff in her petition charges that the operation on her nose was without her permission and consent and over her remonstrance and, in support of those allegations, testified that she protested the treatment and attempted to get out of Laird’s surgical chair. To rebut such allegations and testimony, Laird, testifying in his own defense, was asked the following questions:

“Q. Now, Doctor, did you at any time forcefully and against the will of Martha Lacey perform an operation on her nose?”
“Q. Did you at any time at all perform an operation on Martha Lacey’s nose without her consent?”

Objection to these questions was made by counsel for plaintiff. The trial court sustained the objections and refused to permit Laird to answer. Counsel for plaintiff claim that the court was justified in excluding such rebuttal testimony as being irrelevent and immaterial in the light of three undisputed facts in the ease, namely, that Laird performed a nonemergency operation on the plaintiff; that the plaintiff was a minor at the time of said operation; and that Laird failed to secure the consent of plaintiff’s parents to such operation.

It is apparent that the solution of the question here under discussion is linked up with and perhaps is dependent upon the [16]*16existence or nonexistence of the second error of the trial conrt listed by the Conrt of Appeals, i. e., the charge to the jury that a minor 18 years of age cannot consent to what the conrt designated a “simple” operation. The major issne presented in this case is whether, in the absence of an emergency, an operation performed upon a minor without the consent of the parents or persons standing in loco parentis is a legal wrong or a technical assault? The question has not heretofore been determined by this court.

On this subject the trial court charged the jury as follows:

“Now, the law of this state is that no person, adult or otherwise, may be operated upon without their consent, express or implied. If a person is under the care of a reputable physician or under the care of a physician — and in an emergency your consent that that doctor use his best judgment is implied — this was not an emergency. I think no reasonable mind would disagree upon that subject. It was an operation, a corrective process, whatever you might want to call it, that was not an emergency.
“Now, the general rule is that a minor in cases such as this has no power to consent to such an operation; that the only persons who can consent for a minor, when it is not an emergency, are their parents, one or the other; that no one else in such case has any power to consent that such an operation may be performed. And so I think we must conclude as a matter of law in this case that neither of the parents having consented, expressly or implied, there being no evidence of that in this case, that there was in this case in fact a technical battery upon this plaintiff. ’ ’

Laird strenuously claims that the court erred to his prejudice in so charging on consent. In support of this claim, he cites the case of Bakker v. Welsh, 144 Mich., 632, 108 N. W., 94, 7 L. R. A. (N. S.), 612, wherein the Supreme Court of Michigan stated the rule as follows:

“Where a full grown boy [age 17], accompanied by adult relatives, after several visits to a physician’s office, and after due consideration, submits to the administration of an anaes-thetic preparatory to the performance of a minor surgical operation, and dies during the administration of the anaesthetic, and there is nothing to indicate that his father’s consent to the [17]*17operation would not have been freely given if asked, and nothing to indicate to the physician that the father did not approve, the administrator of the boy’s estate cannot recover damages from the physician for his death nnder the death act because the father’s consent was not obtained.”

But it must be noted that in the later case of Zoski v. Gaines, 271 Mich., 1, 260 N. W., 99, the same court, to some extent, modified the rule stated in the Bakker case, although the court did not expressly overrule it. In the Zoski case, the defendant performed a tonsillectomy on a boy nine and a half years of age without the consent of his parents, although the boy had been taken to the city physician by a visiting nurse and later sent to the hospital. At the same time there was delivered to the hospital a written memorandum from the city physician requesting the removal of the boy’s tonsils and adenoids. At the time of the operation, the boy was accompanied by his 15-year-old brother. Blindness followed the operation. The court held:

“Except in very extreme cases, a surgeon has no legal right to operate upon a child without consent of its parents or guardian, hence, finding of a trial court that unauthorized tonsillectomy amounted to an assault in law is not disturbed.”

The court in that case cited in support of its holding the following cases: Rishworth v. Moss (Tex. Com. App.), 191 S. W., 843; Mohr v. Williams, 95 Minn., 261, 104 N. W., 12, 1 L. R. A. (N. S.), 439, 111 Am. St. Rep., 462, 5 Ann Cas., 303; Browning v. Hoffman, 90 W. Va., 568, 111 S. E., 492.

The term, “consent,” as used herein carries with it the assumption that previous full disclosure of the implications and probable consequences of the proposed conduct to which such consent applies has been given in such terms as may be fully comprehended by the person giving the consent. It necessarily follows that consent requires a reasonable degree of maturity of mind depending upon the intricacies of the subject matter to which the consent is applicable.

A review of a few authorities on this question is appropriate. In the case of In re Hudson, 13 Wash. (2d), 673, 126 P. (2d), 765, the deformed arm of a child 12 years of age and under the jurisdiction of the Juvenile Court was amputated without the express consent of her parents. The court held:

[18]*18“It is a well-established rule that a surgical operation may not be performed on a person until the patient, if sui juris, consents thereto; or, in the ease of an incompetent, no operation may be performed by a surgeon upon such person until the guardian of that incompetent consents to the operation; and, if an infant, no operation may be performed until consent is first obtained of the natural guardian or of one standing in loco par-entis to the infant. Pratt v. Davis, 118 Ill. App., 161; annotation, 76 A. L. R., 562 et seq.”

In the case of Tabor v. Scobee (Ky.), 254 S. W. (2d), 474, the court held:

“In case of an emergency, a surgeon may operate on a child without waiting for authority from parents or person standing in loco parentis where it appears impracticable to secure consent, but in absence of emergency an operation performed without consent of parents or person standing m loco parentis is a legal wrong.”

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Mahoney v. Beatman
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Bishop v. Shurly
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Rogers v. Sells
61 P.2d 1018 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
Rishworth v. Moss
191 S.W. 843 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1916)
In Re the Welfare of Hudson
126 P.2d 765 (Washington Supreme Court, 1942)
Moss v. Rishworth
222 S.W. 225 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1920)
Pratt v. Davis
118 Ill. App. 161 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1905)
Bakker v. Welsh
108 N.W. 94 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1906)
Mohr v. Williams
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Browning v. Hoffman
111 S.E. 492 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
166 Ohio St. (N.S.) 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lacey-v-laird-ohio-1956.