Logan v. Field

75 Mo. App. 594, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 477
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 16, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 75 Mo. App. 594 (Logan v. Field) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Logan v. Field, 75 Mo. App. 594, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 477 (Mo. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Smith, P. J. —

The plaintiff, a practicing physician, who made a specialty of treating diseases of the nose, throat and ear, brought a suit against defendant before a justice of the peace, on an account, to recover $160 for medical services.

statement. It is disclosed by the evidence taken at the trial in the circuit court, where the cause had been removed by appeal, that the defendant, who had been suffering from nasal catarrh for some ten years, requested treatment by the plaintiff and was, accordingly, treated for some months, and until his bill therefor amounted to' $122. Experiencing no benefit from the treatment of his ailment he paid the plaintiff’s bill therefor and discontinued the same for something like a year, when -finding his [598]*598condition in no way improved he again visited the plaintiff, when, as he testified, he said to him: “Doctor, I have come back to you with this nose.” He (plaintiff) looked into it and said: “You have a very different nose now from what you had before.” I said to him that, “I don’t want to run a big bill and if you can not cure me I want you to tell me so. I have no money to throw away but am willing to pay you well if I can be cured.” And he said: “I can’t tell you now.” The defendant was treated by the plaintiff during the next ten months sixty-five times and at each treatment the plaintiff would say to him: “Your nose is getting along beautifully, beautifully.”

Defendant further testified that notwithstanding these encouraging assurances he often complained to plaintiff that he was receiving no benefit from his treatment, and that toward the latter end of it the plaintiff said: “I am going to New York and I am going to talk to Dr. Curtis about your case.”

It seems that the plaintiff’s father was likewise a physician, officing with plaintiff: The former said to defendant, in the presence of plaintiff: “When Jim (.plaintiff) goes to New York we will run a free dispensary here. You come over and I will clean out your nose.” After plaintiff went to New York his father treated the defendant, but the defendant testifies that the treatment was so painful that he could not stand it, so that he discontinued it. During one of these treatments the plaintiff’s father said to defendant: “There is no use of your taking treatment. Jim (plaintiff) has long regarded your case as incurable. And the thing for you to do is to get a kettle of hot water and rubber tube and snuff that until you clear your head out.”

Defendant testified further that after the plaintiff had returned from New York he met him on the street when he said: “What is the matter? You haven’t [599]*599been back for treatment,77 and to which the defendant replied: “Doctor, I can’t afford to take your treatment unless you can cure me.” The plaintiff replied: “If you will come back now I can cure you. I can perform an operation in your head. I have had a talk with Dr. Curtis about this, and he says I can cure you.” And toAhis I said: “Doctor, I feel very much discouraged, very much discouraged, and I am going to try taking no treatment for a while.” He further testified that the plaintiff, in the same connection, told him that his trouble was not in his nose but up in his forehead.

The plaintiff testified that the treatment which he had adopted in the defendant’s case consisted in reducing the inflammation in the nose by the use of sprays and such medications as trichloricetic acid, so as to allow a drainage from above as much as possible, and that there was no better treatment than that;' and that this was the best treatment anybody knew; that after his return from New York he had told defendant that he did not think his case would improve unless he went further and submitted to an operation to open up the frontal sinus; that this operation was a dernier resort, practiced only in extreme cases; and that such operations were oftentimes successful but that he could not say that it would have cured defendant.

The defendant further testifies that he received no benefit from the plaintiff’s treatment and that since he had discontinued it his general health had greatly improved, and that his nasal discharges,.were not so profuse.

The evidence adduced by the plaintiff was, we think, sufficient to establish a prima facie right to recover on a quantum meruit.

[600]*600Ins tr uct i ons [599]*599The plaintiff’s instructions submitting the case to the jury are, as far as we can discover, unobjectionable. [600]*600The court, by an instruction requested by the defendant, told the jury that if the plaintiff’s treatment was of no benefit to defendant, ■and if he knew, or by the possession and exercise of ■ordinary judgment and foresight in his profession could have known, that the same would have been of no benefit to defendant, then the verdict should be for defendant, though no guarantee of a cure nor claim pf his ability to cure was made., The court refused two other instructions requested by defendant which were to the effect that the defendant had the right to rely on the superior knowledge of the plaintiff to his own, and if the plaintiff knew, or by the exercise of ordinary skill and judgment, could have known, that he could not cure defendant, or that there was great doubt whether he could successfully treat defendant’s ailment, or that the treatment would probably be of no substantial benefit, he ought to have so informed defendant; and even though defendant received treatment and plaintiff did not guarantee a cure of defendant, yet if the plaintiff, under such circumstances encouraged, or suffered defendant to take treatment without informing him that there could be no cure, or that there was great doubt whether he could be successfully treated, or whether the treatment would be of substantial benefit, and that the defendant, relying upon the superior skill of plaintiff, received such treatment in the hope of a cure but actually received no benefit therefrom, then the plaintiff ought not to recover.

UUt’fPN slcilI: The question thus presented is whether or not defendant was entitled to a submission of’ the case upon the theory outlined by his refused instructions. It is the doctrine of the common law that every person who enters into a learned profession undertakes to bring to the exercise of it a reasonable, fair and competent degree of skill. Lamp[601]*601shire v. Phips, 8 C. & P. 475. A physician is not a warrantor or insurer of a cure and is not to be tried by the result of his remedies. The contract implied by law from his mere employment is to treat the case with reasonable diligence and skill. If more than this is expected it must be expressly stipulated. When he attends for a fee he is liable for such want of ordinary diligence and' skill upon his part as leads to the injury of his patient. He is bound not only to use such skill as he has, but is bound to have a reasonable degree of skill, for the law will not countenance quackery. Shearman & Redfield’s Negligence [5 Ed.], pp. 1076, 1077, and authorities there cited. The rule of liability of physicians for want of professional skill and diligence in practice and for erroneous or negligent advice to those who employ them is the same as that of attorneys. Savings Ass’n v. Friedley, 123 Ind. 143; Waugh v. Shunk, 20 Pa. St. 130; Graham v. Gantior, 21 Tex. 111. The highest degree of fairness and good faith is required of them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 Mo. App. 594, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/logan-v-field-moctapp-1898.