Marlowe v. Patrick

44 P.2d 776, 181 Wash. 647, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 592
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1935
DocketNo. 25293. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 44 P.2d 776 (Marlowe v. Patrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marlowe v. Patrick, 44 P.2d 776, 181 Wash. 647, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 592 (Wash. 1935).

Opinion

*648 Beals, J.

Defendant is a physician and surgeon, specializing in diseases of the ear, nose and throat, and performed a mastoid operation on plaintiff, during the course of which it appears that the facial nerve suffered some injury, which resulted in a degree of facial paralysis.

Plaintiff sued defendant, alleging that, in the course of the operation, defendant penetrated the mastoid without first locating the exact position of the facial nerve, and negligently injured the nerve, to her permanent injury and damage. Defendant answered, denying all negligence on his part. The trial resulted in a verdict in plaintiff’s favor in the sum of four thousand dollars, pursuant to which judgment was entered, from which defendant appeals; assigning error upon the denial of his challenge as to the sufficiency of the evidence, upon the denial of his motion for judgment in his favor notwithstanding the verdict, upon the denial of a new trial, and upon the entry of judgment in plaintiff’s favor. Appellant also assigns error upon the denial by the trial court of his motion to discharge the jury because of misconduct of respondent’s counsel, and upon the refusal of the trial court to give an instruction requested by appellant.

From the evidence, it appears that respondent, finding that she was suffering from a cold and pain in one of her ears, consulted her family physician, who sent her to appellant, who specialized in such diseases. February 4, 1932, appellant, upon examination, found respondent’s ear infected and punctured the ear drum, from which pus was immediately discharged, indicating, of course, infection. No definite diagnosis was immediately made. X-rays were taken, respondent was observed, and four days later appellant diagnosed the difficulty as mastoiditis and sent respondent to a *649 hospital, where, Febrary 9th, he performed upon respondent a mastoid operation.

Very soon thereafter, the right side of respondent’s face became paralyzed. She testified that, upon consulting appellant about this difficulty, he at first told her that the matter would probably clear up in a few days, which it failed to do. Respondent testified that appellant then stated that he feared he had cut the nerve, and that it might become necessary for him to perform another operation and sew the nerve together. Respondent consulted another physician and finally went to San Francisco, where an operation was performed, which disclosed that the nerve had been injured, although not severed, and from which operation respondent experienced great benefit, although it is improbable that she will ever completely recover.

The California surgeon who performed the second operation testified that, in an average case of mas-toiditis, it required from two weeks to a month for an infection in the middle ear to spread into the mastoid and produce necrosis of the cells and of the bone constituting the cover which protects, the facial nerve, and that bone necrosis would not occur in less than eight days. Appellant testified that necrosis could set in within four days after infection, but no medical authority was produced as authority for this statement.

Appellant described the operation and testified that, during the same, he had uncovered the facial nerve, due to the fact that the bony structure protecting the same had become diseased and was soft and crumbled away during the operation. This crumbling of that portion of the gutter which forms the wall of the canal exposed the nerve, which somehow suffered injury. It was, of course, necessary that all infected bone be removed, and only that left which was healthy.

*650 Appellant argues that there was no evidence sufficient to take the case to the jury upon the matter of appellant’s alleged negligence in performing the operation, and contends that judgment should have been entered in appellant’s favor as matter of law.

A mastoid operation is, of course, a delicate one, but is apparently not dangerous if performed before the infection has spread too far. Appellant, in this instance, told respondent before the operation that, as the appellant’s case had been promptly submitted to him, the operation would not be serious. The San Francisco surgeon testified that he had performed approximately one hundred seventy-five such operations, and in no case had injured the facial nerve. Appellant testified that he had performed approximately two hundred such operations. Another surgeon, called as a witness, testified that he had performed the operation around four hundred times.

Respondent contends that, under the evidence, the infection had not existed for a time sufficiently long to have caused the bony structure protecting the nerve to have become necrosed, and that, consequently, if the operation had been performed with skill, this process would not have been interfered with, and the nerve would not have been injured. There can be no question but that the facial nerve was injured, to respondent’s very considerable damage. Appellant based his defense upon the ground that the necrosis of the bone caused the same to crumble, and that this was the reason the nerve became exposed and subjected to injury.

There is testimony in the record from which the jury may have found that sufficient time had not elapsed after the infection was first noticed to have permitted the bone to have become necrosed by the date of the operation. Respondent testified that, when she first called appellant’s attention to the facial par *651 alysis from, which she was suffering, he told her it was the result of swelling and would disappear, and that, when it persisted after the swelling went down, he told her that he had made a mistake and had cut the nerve, saying nothing at that time about any necrosis or crumbling of the bone.

The ability and skill of the California doctor who performed the second operation is not disputed, and from his testimony the jury might well have believed that, if the diseased condition of the mastoid had progressed far enough to have caused necrosis of the bone protecting the nerve, appellant would have discovered the diseased condition earlier, and that, if the cold which resulted in the infection originated as respondent testified, necrosis could not have set in, as testified to by appellant, by February 9th, when he performed the operation.

Appellant denied that he had told respondent that he had made a mistake, then testifying:

“I told her that during the operation I had accidentally uncovered the facial nerve, and that I did the best I could under the circumstances I had to deal with, and that was what had happened. I told her that in my office after she left the hospital.”

The jury were not required to believe appellant’s uncorroborated testimony to the effect that the bone protecting the nerve had become necrosed and crumbled away during the operation, exposing the nerve to inadvertent injury.

It is not contended that appellant adopted an erroneous method of operating, or that the operation which he performed was not proper and, indeed, necessary. Respondent contends that appellant performed the operation in a negligent manner.

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Bluebook (online)
44 P.2d 776, 181 Wash. 647, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marlowe-v-patrick-wash-1935.