McLennan v. Holder

36 P.2d 448, 1 Cal. App. 2d 305, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1270
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 9, 1934
DocketCiv. 1109
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 36 P.2d 448 (McLennan v. Holder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLennan v. Holder, 36 P.2d 448, 1 Cal. App. 2d 305, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1270 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in the sum of $7,500 rendered by the court sitting without a jury against defendant for negligently losing and leaving a gauze sponge in the pelvic cavity of plaintiff upon whom he performed an operation in a hospital in La Jolla, in the city of San Diego, on March 22, 1932, for the removal of a badly infected tumor.

Plaintiff was a young married woman of large stature. So far as she knew she had been in good health until about six weeks before the operation. Besides herself her household consisted of her husband and two stepchildren. She cared for the members of the family, did all of the housework, including the family washing, took care of some chickens and assisted her husband in the care of some stock. About two weeks before the operation she consulted Dr. Larzalere, a physician of Escondido, who discovered she was suffering from some growth in her pelvic cavity. She was put to bed, given treatments to which she did not respond and the doctor decided that an operation was necessary. Acting for Mrs. McLennan and her husband, he engaged the defendant to perform the operation and give the post-operative care and made arrangements with a hospital to receive her.

The defendant was a well-qualified, successful and very busy physician who specialized in abdominal operations. His skill and qualifications are admitted and it is not questioned that the operation was skilfully performed, other than the losing of the sponge and allowing it to remain in the pelvic cavity of his patient. The hospital at which the operation was performed was one of the best equipped and efficient in California. The sole question of negligence presented on this appeal is the losing of the sponge and leaving it within the operative field.

Plaintiff was taken to the hospital the day before the operation and prepared for it. The operation started at about 11:35 o’clock in the forenoon and the patient was removed from the operating room at about 1:15 o’clock in the afternoon.

*308 The operation and the unfortunate occurrence which gave rise to this suit may be thus briefly described:

There were present in the operating room besides plaintiff, Dr. Larzalere, who assisted in the operation, the anesthetist, experienced, skilful and successful in his profession, the defendant, and two or more trained nurses. Plaintiff was placed on the operating table, which was inclined so that her legs and lower body were elevated above her head. This was done so that the bowels would recede into the upper abdominal cavity and leave the pelvic cavity, which was the operative field, as free and clear as possible. A medial line incision was made extending from the umbilicus to the pubes, which exposed the pelvic cavity and a large tumor which involved both Fallopian tubes and was adherent to the bowels and other organs. The tumor was filled with pus. The bowels were walled off from the pelvic cavity with from three to five large gauze retractor, pads. The lower edges of the pads were placed on the floor of the cavity and were drawn upward across the face of the bowels. These pads had attached to them pieces of tape about fourteen inches long, which were drawn up and left outside of the body and surgical instruments attached to them. The operation was performed by a method known as “blunt dissection” in which the surgeon separated the tumor from the other portions of the body to which it had adhered by the use of his gloved hands. This caused capillary oozing of a considerable quantity of blood. This was stopped by the use of gauze pads similar to the retractor pads, although some of them might have been smaller in size. Each of these pads had sewed onto -it a piece of tape fourteen inches long. For want of a better name we will call these pads sponges. When the bleeding became excessive at the spot where the surgeon was working he would stop it by wadding up sponges and placing them against the bleeding tissue. The tape was wadded up with the rest of the sponge and did not protrude to the outside of the patient’s body. The surgeon would then work on another side of the tumor and when the bleeding became excessive ■the tissues were packed with the sponges. When the surgeon returned to work at a place which had been packed with sponges he would remove them. Sponges were also used to mop up pus that had escaped from the tumor. The used *309 sponges would go into the possession of one known as the “dirty nurse”. At about the time the tumor was ready for removal, or .was removed from the body, the anesthetist warned the defendant that he had better complete the operation as soon as he could as the condition of the patient was not very good, she showing signs of shock. Defendant replied that he was through and proceeded to finish the operation. The position of the patient was changed from inclined to level, the retractor pads were removed, the operative field cleaned, and defendant proceeded to suture the incision. He had completed the suturing of the peritoneum when the nurse informed him that the count of sponges showed that one was missing. The surgeon immediately removed the sutures and for about five minutes made an intensive search for the sponge in the abdominal and pelvic cavities of the patient. The anesthetist informed him that the condition of the patient was bad and she was showing signs of severe shock and should be removed from the operating table as soon as possible. The surgeon ended his search for the missing sponge, packed the operative field with gauze and closed the incision, leaving a gauze and a rubber drain to take care of pus and other fluids in the operative field.

■ The patient was removed from the operating room to her bed and treatment was given to revive her from the operative shock. Her condition for three days was very serious and showed the correctness of the opinion of the anesthetist that she was suffering from severe shock and as a consequence the search for the lost sponge could not be continued.

Between ten days and two weeks after the operation a fecal fistula developed and fecal matter drained through the incision until about August 1, 1932. Such a happening is not unusual in operative cases of this kind where the tumor and bowels adhere. The separation of these adhesions causes a traumatic injury to the walls of the bowels which so weakens them that a fecal fistula often follows.

Plaintiff remained in the hospital about five weeks when she returned to her home in Escondido, remaining there under the care of a nurse. Dr. Larzalere took over her care. Defendant did not visit her, but received several telephone reports of her progress from Dr. Larzalere. Just before June 8, 1932', the condition of plaintiff was so *310 serious that it was thought best to have her return to the hospital with the probabilities of an exploratory operation by defendant. However, on June 8th, she passed the missing sponge through her bowels. The pad as passed was about four and one-half inches long with its other dimensions between two and two and one-half inches in one direction and between one and one and one-half inches in the other. When spread it was found to be four and one-half inches wide and twenty-two inches long with a double tape seven inches long attached. The pad was made, of double thicknesses of gauze. After the sponge passed from her body plaintiff slowly recovered.

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Bluebook (online)
36 P.2d 448, 1 Cal. App. 2d 305, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 1270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclennan-v-holder-calctapp-1934.