Lashley v. Koerber

156 P.2d 441, 26 Cal. 2d 83, 1945 Cal. LEXIS 135
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1945
DocketS. F. 17080
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 156 P.2d 441 (Lashley v. Koerber) 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
Lashley v. Koerber, 156 P.2d 441, 26 Cal. 2d 83, 1945 Cal. LEXIS 135 (Cal. 1945).

Opinion

SCHAUER, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of non-suit in a malpractice action. The complaint alleges negligent diagnosis and treatment by defendant physician (by virtue of his failure to have X-ray pictures taken) of a fractured terminal phalanx of one of plaintiff’s fingers, and proximately ensuing damage. We have concluded that the evidence is not as a matter of law insufficient to support the essential averments of the complaint.

Plaintiff, her husband, and the defendant were the only testifying witnesses, Under well-established rules we must, in considering whether the judgment of nonsuit was proper, resolve every conflict in their testimonies in favor of plaintiff, consider every inference which can reasonably be drawn and every presumption which can fairly be deemed to arise in support of plaintiff, and accept as true all evidence *85 adduced, direct and indirect, which tends to sustain plaintiff’s case. The circumstances of plaintiff’s treatment were as follows:

Plaintiff testified that on Saturday, August 30, 1941, her right ring huger was caught and crushed in a folding bed. She bathed the finger in hot salt water and the following day attempted to consult defendant doctor but was unable to reach him. On Tuesday, September 2, the first day plaintiff was able to get in touch with defendant, she went to his office and told him she thought her finger was broken; “he looked at it and said he thought it was too, and I asked him if he didn’t want me to have an X-ray taken and he said no, it would not be necessary.” Plaintiff’s hand was so swollen and painful that defendant could not put splints on the finger until two days later. On Thursday, September 4, when defendant first splinted the finger it was “so swollen still and so crooked that he could not manipulate the finger even yet, but he did put splints on it and left it crooked the way it was at that time. ’ ’ On this occasion plaintiff “asked Dr. Koerber to be sure, if he couldn’t fix my finger, to send me to a bone specialist because I didn’t want a crippled finger the rest of my life.” On several occasions thereafter plaintiff asked defendant about an X-ray picture and defendant stated it would not be necessary to have one taken. Defendant “asked me at one time if I had arthritis and I told him I had never known of it if I did have and I had never been told about having it. . . . He spoke about my large knuckles and I told him that was due to snapping my fingers.” According to plaintiff’s testimony she saw defendant approximately every ten days or two weeks during October and November. Her finger remained swollen and crooked. About October 25 plaintiff “on my own volition” had an X-ray picture made by a Dr. Stein. Dr. Stein did not treat the finger or remove the splint applied by defendant. Defendant did not see this X-ray; “He didn’t ask to see it” although told by plaintiff that she had had it taken. Either “right after I had the X-ray taken” or “around the 20th or 25th” of November plaintiff told defendant “what the X-ray showed, and he told me I could remove the splint for a while and see if it would heal any better without it.” Defendant then removed the splint. Plaintiff asked about an operation on the finger and defendant said “that it wouldn’t do any good to rush an operation if it would help.” About Janu *86 ary 2, 1942, plaintiff and her husband visited defendant and she again inquired “about operating on the finger to remove the bone shown in the X-ray I had taken by Dr. Stein. ’ ’ According to the testimony of plaintiff’s husband defendant then “told her to . . . have an X-ray taken, stating that he should have done it in the beginning; and my wife said, ‘Yes, I know, Doctor, I insisted on that to start with. ’ Dr. Koerber stated, ‘Yes, . . . I know, it is not your fault, Mrs. Lashley, it is all my own.’ ” (Italics added.)

An X-ray picture was taken. It showed, according to the report of the roentgenologist, dated January 2, 1942, a “Fracture of the base of the terminal phalanx whose shaft is markedly displaced” (italics added) and, in defendant’s opinion, evidence of an arthritic process which had prevented healing. After he had examined this X-ray picture defendant ‘ ‘ said he didn’t think after this length of time it would do any good to operate on it.” (Italics added.) On defendant’s advice plaintiff went to Dr. Barnard, an orthopedic specialist who, plaintiff’s counsel admitted, “is one of the best.” Dr. Barnard examined and taped the finger.

The only direct expert testimony was that of defendant. He testified as follows: In case of a fracture of the phalanx a splint is applied “in the position in which healing is most apt to occur, and that it just what I did in this case.” At the time defendant applied the splint, “to the extent of clinically treating a fracture of that phalanx I knew that there was a chip off the posterior surface of the phalanx. . . . Any X-ray that might have been taken on September 2nd would merely have been a confirmation of my clinical judgment regarding that fracture. ... At the time this finger was splinted it was still slightly swollen and inflamed from the crushing force of her injury. The finger was brought up in as full extension as possible, and that is all that anybody can do to reduce that type of fracture. There is no such thing as setting the fracture. What you have to do is to set the main bone as closely as possible to the place that is fractured off,” and that was done in this case.

Defendant further testified: As a general proposition a latent arthritic condition tends to retard healing and calls for additional care on the part of the physician. The defendant “made no laboratory test for arthritis; I depended on my senses, my sight and sense of touch. ’ ’ He believed that plain *87 tiff had a latent tendency toward development of arthritis “but there was absolutely no acute arthritis present. . . . In any event, even if she had had acute arthritis, no material difference could be made in the treatment. The treatment is still to splint the finger and keep it immobilized in a condition in which healing is most likely to take place, which is full extension. ... I knew the finger had to he splinted in full extension, and simply having taken an X-ray would have perhaps added some slight confirmation to what I did but it would not have changed what I did in the slightest, nor would it have changed the eventual result.” (Italics added.)

Defendant testified further that about four weeks after he first treated the injury, at a time just before plaintiff had the X-ray taken by Dr. Stein, ' ‘ I realized that perhaps it was a little slow in healing but I fully expected that fracture would heal and that she would have a good result from it. . . . Even by that time it is extremely doubtful to me if the arthritis would have shown definitely in the X-ray, at four weeks after the injury. ’ ’ His testimony continues:

" “Q. You would have been able to see that the fragment of bone was uniting or out of position, wouldn’t you? A. Yes.
‘ ‘ Q. And it would instantly make you suspicious that something was keeping it from uniting properly, wouldn’t it? A. Yes, I will admit that.
' ‘ Q.

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Bluebook (online)
156 P.2d 441, 26 Cal. 2d 83, 1945 Cal. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lashley-v-koerber-cal-1945.