Langford v. Jones

22 P. 1064, 18 Or. 307, 1890 Ore. LEXIS 124
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 22 P. 1064 (Langford v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langford v. Jones, 22 P. 1064, 18 Or. 307, 1890 Ore. LEXIS 124 (Or. 1890).

Opinion

Thayer, C. J.

The grounds upon which, the appellant claims a reversal of the judgment appealed from are mainly that the circuit court erred in its refusal to non-suit the respondent upon motion of appellant’s counsel, made at the trial; that it erred in permitting the respondent's counsel to inquire of their own witness, Dr. W. E. Rinehart, at the trial, if, at a certain time and place, in the presence of J. Y. Bridges and wife, he did not say, in reference to an operation performed by appellant upon respondent, in which a growth had been removed from the neck of the womb, “It was a bad job. Mrs. Langford had no cancer; it was a growth on the womb, prevalent in the case of pregnant women, and she could have been operated upon on his table in the doctor’s office for a small fee, and have gone about her business at once, ” or words to that effect, and in allowing the testimony of said witness to be contradicted upon that point, and the said J. V. Bridges to testify that the witness made such statement. And that the court also erred in giving certain instructions to the jury, which are hereafter more particularly referred to. The first and most important question to be considered is the one arising upon the motion for a non-suit.

It appears from the pleadings in the case, and the bill of exceptions contained in the transcript, that the respondent, on the twenty-second day of November, 1887, applied to appellant as a surgeon and physician for medical treatment. The respondent was a married lady, was the wife of Mr. George Langford, who has been a resident of the city of Portland for a number of year’s past; that she had given birth to three children, two of whom were then living, and she had also had two miscarriages. It appears that she had been suffering more or less for a long time from an affection of the womb; that the neck of it had been lacerated in giving birth to her eldest child, a boy, who at the time of her application to the appellant for treatment was about sixteen years of age; that the difficulty at times had occasioned excessive hemorrhage, and been a source of great annoyance and suffering; that some six or seven [310]*310years prior to her application to the appellant she had been treated by another physician, Mrs. Dr. Owens Adair, for some trouble of the stomach; that said physician examined her, and, as she testified upon the trial, found a lacerated and torn condition of the neck of the womb, presenting what doctors call a granulated surface, which looked raw and sore. The witness testified: “I treated that, and found that she had repeated hemorrhages. I do not remember that they occurred excepting at her regular periods of menstruation. I treated her for that. I do not remember that I gave her any medicine for it, but I do remember that I considered it due to some enlarged condition of the body of the womb, and applied tincture of iodine on what we call an applicatpr, and that month she missed her regular flow, and improved very rapidly from not having lost any blood. The next month she had her regular menstrual flow, and considered herself well, and that is the last I ever knew of Mrs. Langford, professionally. ”

Another physician, Mrs. Dr. Hunt, had treated respondent from February, 1887, until in April of that year, and had called in as consultant Dr. Kenneth McKenzie. Mrs. Dr. Hunt testified as a witness upon the stand that the respondent came to her office in February, 1887, complaining of frequent, irregular, profuse hemorrhage, exhaustion and pain, and that she found, upon a digital examination, a growth on the side of the uterus about the size of a dollar; that the most gentle touch of it gave pain and caused great hemorrhage, so much so that it filled the wit ness’s hand and ran down her arm when she made the examination; that she called in counsel, at the request of the respondent, to know whether it was really malignant growth or benign growth, and with a view to an operation; that respondent was twice in her office, once the last of March, and once, she thought, about the seventh or eighth of April; that they gave her an anaesthetic and removed a small piece of the growth, which was sent to Dr. Kelley for microscopical examination; that they found one-third [311]*311of the posterior lip of the uterus, and involving the anterior also somewhat, with that papular mass, dark colored, a sort of blue, red bluish color, then a lighter yellowish tint; that she had heard the testimony of' Dr. Jones and Mrs. Young, and taking into consideration their testimony upon the subject,' and what she knew personally of the condition of the disease, she was of the opinion that it was cancerous; that she told respondent the same and advised an operation as soon as possible; that the respondent came to her office making ready to go East; that it was the great hemorrhage which gave her alarm; that all witness was trying to do was to relieve and check that, so that respondent might go East and there have an operation performed; that witness gave that advice to her and to her husband.

Dr. McKenzie, the consultant with Mrs. Dr. Hunt, gave testimony as a witness in the case which fully corroborated the testimony of the latter in regard to the condition of the respondent and the extent and severity of her affliction at the time. He testified: “We made a careful examination and found a large excrescence, or growth, projecting from the posterior lip of the womb, the surface of which was soft and friable, readily broken down, and bled at the slightest touch. ” This seems to have been the condition the respondent was in six months prior to her application to appellant for treatment, and, in all human probability, the disease had made alarming progress during that time, although the respondent appears to have been inclined to represent her general health as favorable as possible. The turdor, however, was there, still developing and exhibiting more marked indications that it was of a malignant type. ■ The respondent testified that the appellant, when he examined her, pronounced it a cancer, and said that an operation was necessary, and the sooner performed the better.

The appellant himself téstified that she then looked weak and feeble, was short of breath, complained of pains at the lower part of the abdomen, of tenderness when she [312]*312stepped down or up quickly, or received a jar or rub; that on coming up stairs was easily tired out and palpitation of the heart ensued; that frequent hemorrhages had occurred for a year and a half or two years, irregular and profuse, so much so that at times she had fainted from loss of blood, and that she had been in her bed nearly ten days before coming to see appellant. Upon the following day the appellant made a digital examination and found, as he testified, a tumor, which came within an inch of the surface, completely filling the cavity of the vagina, but could not determine by touch its attachments; that it filled up the whole back part of the vagina to the back and to her right side; that within a few days thereafter he removed it, and found that it was a large papular outgrowth springing from the neck of the uterus, and the diseased surface was well marked. Portions of it were of a yellowish tint, others more of a yellowish red or pinkish; that it bled profusely by simply introducing the speculum; that it was the size of a good-sized orange; was not round like an orange, but was soft and papular and adapted itself to the sack or tube; and that in removing it he removed a part of the neck of the uterus.

Down to this point in the history of the case, as shown by the testimony, there is no proof whatever which would authorize a recovery in favor of the respondent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 P. 1064, 18 Or. 307, 1890 Ore. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langford-v-jones-or-1890.