Link v. . Sheldon

32 N.E. 696, 136 N.Y. 1, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 820, 91 Sickels 1, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1709
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 29, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 32 N.E. 696 (Link v. . Sheldon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Link v. . Sheldon, 32 N.E. 696, 136 N.Y. 1, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 820, 91 Sickels 1, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1709 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

Gray, J.

The action was brought against certain physicians to recover damages for their unskillfulness, or their negligence, in the treatment of the plaintiff for a fracture of the bones of his right forearm; whereby his hand was permanently deformed, in part, and a verdict was recovered of $4,000 ; which recovery the General Term has affirmed. The apparent severity of the verdict, the nature of the issue which involved the question of the competency of defendants as medical practitioners, and the earnestness with which the appellants have insisted upon the commission of errors upon the trial, have caused us to carefully examine and consider this record and its questions.

Although the plaintiff had shown that he may permanently *5 suffer from a crippled hand, we, nevertheless, think that there was enough before the trial judge and the court at General Term, in the nature of the accident, in the conflict of professional opinions as to the treatment, and in the possible doubt which overhung the case that the distortion of the hand was not wholly due to the malpractice charged against defendants, but might have resulted in any event, as to have justified an interference with the verdict on the ground of its excessiveness. There was latitude for the entertainment of a doubt concerning the treatment of the case and the final result coinplained of, which would not have subjected a reduction of the recovery by the General Term to criticism as being without adequate grounds. The practice of surgery must always admit of some doubt as to ulterior complete success. But, however that may be, the decision of the tribunals below in that respect is final; the doubt was resolved adversely to defendants and this court is without power to review the determination as to the amount of the damages awarded. (Oldfield v. N. Y. & H. R. R. Co, 14 N. Y. 310, 321; Gale v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 76 id. 594.)

The defendant moved upon several grounds for a nonsuit, which may be, in effect, resumed in the statement that the plaintiff had failed to show that his crippled condition is the result of want of knowledge, or skill, or of any negligence on the part of the defendants; or that it was not caused by either his own neglect, or that of his parents; or that it was not attributable to the subsequent mismanagement of the case by the physician called in to take charge of it.

Briefly stated, the facts were that plaintiff, a lad of thirteen years of age, while playing in a hay loft, fell through an opening and upon the barn floor; striking with such force upon his hand and forearm as to produce what is known by the surgical term of a Colles’ fracture of the large bone of the arm near the wrist joint, with a dislocation of the smaller bone. The defendants, one of whom had long attended upon the lad’s family, wrere called in. They dressed the wounded parts and placed a splint to hold the bones in place. The accident *6 occurred on a Friday and the management of the case by the defendants continued from that day until the following Monday evening; Dr. Doyle, another physician, being called in by the lad’s parents on Tuesday morning.

Over the methods of the defendants, in treating the wound and in bandaging the arm and hand, a severe controversy was waged; it being claimed by the plaintiff that the treatment was unskillful and grossly negligent, while for the defense it was claimed that the treatment ivas such as the peculiar nature of the wound called for, and that the bad condition into which the plaintiff fell on Monday and Tuesday was due to a refusal on the part of his parents to permit defendants to seasonably redress the hand on Monday evening. It appears that the plaintiff’s parents became dissatisfied with the defendants’ treatment of the case, and, hearing of Dr. Doyle’s success, in the case of some acquaintance, dismissed the defendants on Tuesday morning and called in Dr. Doyle.

The points made for the plaintiff were that the accident having caused an ordinary Colies’ fracture, a certain metallic splint used should have been adjusted to the palmar surface of the hand, instead of upon its back, and that the bandaging of hand and arm had been so tight as, by such ignorant and neglectful treatment, to cause an inflammation and resultant suppuration, which, in the healing, drew in the thumb and permanently deformed the hand. The defendants testified that the fracture, though similar to that known as Colies’ fracture, had so reversed the position of the bones, that the splint had to be used as it was placed by tliém ; that the physical condition of the patient, in addition, was bad from feverishness j that the bandages were rightly adjusted; that the great inflammation, discovered when Dr. Doyle was called in, was due to their having been prevented from redressing the wound for many hours,' and, finally, that had the succeeding physician properly treated the hand in its inflamed and swollen condition by lancing instead of by poulticing, no distorted condition of the hand would have resulted.

Medical experts were examined in support of the plaintiff’s *7 and defendants’ positions, and, when the evidence was all in, the case was such as to present purely questions of fact for the determination of the jury. If they believed that it was an ordinary Colies’ fracture, then the weight of the skilled evidence, if not all of it, showed that the metallic splint used upon the occasion was wrongly adjusted and not fitted for use in the particular way adopted by defendants. If they believed that the defendants ignorantly and unskillfully used this splint and neglected to bandage and to compress the parts in such Avise as to permit of circulation and to prevent inflammatory action, and that the maimed condition of the hand was due to such unskillful, or neglectful treatment of the case, and Avas not caused by the subsequent treatment by Dr. Doyle, then the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict. If they believed that the defendants understood and properly managed the case and that the resultant distortion was due either to some interference Avith their treatment, or to the malpractice of the succeeding physician, the defendants were entitled to a verdict. The evidence upon the material points was conflicting. There was more or less disagreement among the doctors; but it is impossible to say that there was not evidence tending to establish a lack of skill, or some neglect, on the part of the defendants. It was not necessary, in order to sustain the action, that there should have been proof of gross culpability upon the part of the defendants. It Avas sufficient, to warrant a verdict against them, that there was evidence of any failure on their part to exercise proper care, or of any neglect in the discharge of the duty they had assumed towards the plaintiff. (Carpenter v. Blake, 75 N. Y. 12.)

' The recovery, therefore, must stand; unless there were any such errors committed upon the trial as Avould justify us in aAvarding to plaintiff a new trial of the action.

The charge itself Avas so fair as to call for the approval of the defendants’ counsel; but he presented requests to charge, some of Avhich were refused and the refusals were excepted to.

The only ruling Ave deem it necessary to advert to, in that connection, is upon a request to charge

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.E. 696, 136 N.Y. 1, 48 N.Y. St. Rep. 820, 91 Sickels 1, 1892 N.Y. LEXIS 1709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/link-v-sheldon-ny-1892.