McClellan v. French

439 S.W.2d 813, 246 Ark. 728, 1969 Ark. LEXIS 1302
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 21, 1969
Docket5-4776
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 439 S.W.2d 813 (McClellan v. French) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClellan v. French, 439 S.W.2d 813, 246 Ark. 728, 1969 Ark. LEXIS 1302 (Ark. 1969).

Opinion

Conley Byrd, Justice.

Appellant Don H. Me Cien - lan appeals from a jury verdict finding that appellee Dr. James H. French was not guilty of malpractice in his treatment of McClellan’s perirectal wound. For reversal of the judgment, McClellan relies upon the following points:

1. The Court erred in permitting Dr. Buchman to give his opinion as to whether Dr. French was guilty of malpractice.

2. The Court erred in permitting defendant to propound hypothetical questions based on assumed facts which were not in evidence.

The record shows that McClellan suffered his perirectal wound at Lake Ouachita while skiing. He was taken by friends to a hospital in Hot Springs where he was referred to Hr. French. Hr. French observed the wound, cleansed it but did not suture it at that time. McClellan whited in Hr. French’s waiting room for his friends who had returned to Lake Ouachita to pick up a boat and trailer. While waiting, McClellan began bleeding, the blood flowing down his leg and off the chair onto the floor. He was returned to Hr. French’s operating table where his wound was again examined. This time Hr. French sutured the wound and placed McClellan in a Hot Springs hospital for observation. McClellan was released from the hospital the next day. He states that he was released in the afternoon. Hr. French contends that he was released during the morning. Subsequent to McClellan’s release from the Hot Springs hospital, he was seen by Hr. Laurens sometime between 4:00 and 5:00 and placed in a Little Rock hospital. The allegations in the complaint were as follows:

‘ ‘ That said defendant did negligently and carelessly fail to apply with reasonable care the degree of skill and learning ordinarily possessed and used by members of his profession in good standing, engaged in the practice of medicine in the locality in which he practices or in a similar locality in diagnosing and treating him; that as a result of such negligence and carelessness on the part of the defendant a piece of rotten, contaminated and jagged wood remained in plaintiff’s peritoneal cavity causing peritonitis, infection and putrification, requiring an exploratory laparotomy as well as a colostomy, causing great conscious pain and suffering and permanent partial disability.”

• POINT 1. One of tlie pivotal, issues concerning the alleged malpractice of Dr. French was whether he should have packed the would open to permit drainage as testified to by Dr. Laurens or whether it should have been sutured as testified to b3r Dr. French. To support his position that that was the standard medical procedure, Dr. French called Dr. Joseph Buchman who testified as follows:

Q. Is bleeding dangerous to the patient?
A. Certainly is.
Q. Should be controlled?
A. It has to be controlled.
Q. Then I take it, doctor, in your opinion Dr. French was not guilty of malpractice in suturing'?
mil price:
Your Honor, this is a question ...
the court;...
THE WITNESS:
A. That is standard medical procedure in this eommunit3r to suture a bleeding wound.
Q. In your opinion Dr. French was not guilty of malpractice in suturing this wound?
A. He was not.

McClellan argues that Dr. Buchmau should not have been permitted to testify as to whether it was “malpractice” since this was the ultimate question for the jury. He cites as authority Johnston v. Order of United Commercial Travelers, 182 Ark. 964, 33 S.W. 2d 375 (1930). During oral argument counsel cited other authorities such as Hoener v. Koch, 84 Ill. 408 (1877).

In the Johnston case the issue was whether Sam C. Johnston had committed suicide. In holding that it was prejudicial error for a doctor to express an opinion that Johnston died as a result of suicide, we said:

“Opposing counsel have briefed the question of the admissibility of an expert opinion that the death in question resulted from wounds self-inflicted with suicidal intent, and there appears to be several authorities holding such testimony competent. Miller v. State, 9 Okla. Or. 255, 131 Pac. 717, L.R.A. 1915A, 1088. We think, however, that the better rule excludes this expert testimony. This is the point in issue, the decisive fact in the case, the question which the jury was impaneled to decide, and is an inference which one person might draw as well as another. Of course, the trained physician and surgeon might know the depth and character and consequences of cuts and wounds and the manner in which they might have been inflicted, which the lay witness might not have, and testimony of this character may be given by the expert, but, when it has been given, the jury, and not the witness, should say with what intent the wounds were inflicted.”

In the Hoener case, the Supreme Court of Illinois held that it was proper for an expert to give his opinion as to whether or not the treatment the plaintiff received was proper, but that it was error for him to give his opinion as to whether, from all the evidence in the case, the doctor was guilty of malpractice.

However, in the case of Dorr, Gray & Johnston v. Headstream, 173 Ark. 1104, 295 S.W. 16 (1927), we said:

“Appellant’s next contention for a reversal of the judgment is that the trial court erred in allowing appellee’s witnesses, Doctors Ruff and Hill, to state that certain alleged facts constituted negligence on the part of appellants. They were permitted to testify that it would be negligence for an X-ray technician or practitioner to turn an X-ray of 4 milliamperes voltage on a patient for twenty or thirty minutes while absent from the room. The purpose for introducing expert testimony is to get the judgment or conclusion of the witness based upon facts assumed to be true. Expert witnesses could not answer a hypothetical question otherwise than by expressing an opinion or announcing a conclusion. We can see no difference in saying that certain acts or omissions constitute negligence in the treatment of a disease and saying that the acts hypothetically detailed show improper treatment. The court did not err in letting the two expert witnesses testify that, in their opinion, it constituted negligence for appellant to turn an X-ray on appellee of the voltage described for twenty or thirty minutes during the absence of the operator of the machine from the room. This court stated in the case of Durfee v. Dorr, 131 Ark. 376, 190 S.W. 376:
“ ‘Objection is made by appellant also to the action of the court in permitting practicing physicians, who qualified as experts, to testify as to the character of attention a patient should receive in a hospital.

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Bluebook (online)
439 S.W.2d 813, 246 Ark. 728, 1969 Ark. LEXIS 1302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclellan-v-french-ark-1969.