Moehlman v. Ransohoff

17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 241
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedOctober 15, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 241 (Moehlman v. Ransohoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moehlman v. Ransohoff, 17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 241 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Nippert, J.

Opinion on motion for a new trial.

[242]*242On November 13th, the court, upon motion of the defendant, directed th,e jury to return a verdict for the defendant in this action. The plaintiff, through his' attorney, thereupon filed a motion for a new trial claiming that the court erred in directing a verdict as stated and in refusing to submit the case to the jury.

This is an action in which the plaintiff, Fred Moehlman, a carpenter of about fifty-eight years of age, filed his amended petition against Dr. .Joseph Pansohoff, the defendant, setting out the following particulars, to-wit:

“That on the 12th day. of April, 1912, he broke and fractured the bones of his right arm, and on the 20th day of April, 1912, the defendant holding himself out as a surgeon, plaintiff employed him, the said defendant, as such surgeon, to set said broken bones in their proper place and to attend on plaintiff until he should be cured.
“Said defendant thereupon entered upon said employment, but was negligent and unskillful in setting said bones in this, to-wit — that instead of making a proper and continuous1 conneettion between said broken bones, they were not set in their proper place, but were set together in such a way as to form an angle at the place of union of said bones, so that the bones could not and did not properly unite. Said defendant was negligent and unskillful in attending and dressing said arm, in this, to-wit— that at the place of union of said broken bones, defendant placed an iron Lane plate, which he fastened to the bones, on either side of said union, by iron screws, so as to hold the parts of said broken bones together, but because of said angle so formed and because of its weakness, said plate broke at one of the screws, and the flesh, tissue and bone of said arm, grew over and about the broken end of said plate. Said defendant permitted said iron plate to so remain for a long period of time, causing suppuration and the discharge of pus and matter.
“Plaintiff further says that because of said negligence and want of skill, by reason of the acts above related, said arm became and is sore, maimed and permanently crippled, causing plaintiff much pain and suffering.
“Plaintiff further alleges that he is permanently injured and is crippled in said arm and said arm is now useless to him, all because of the negligence and unskillfulness of the defendant.
“By reason whereof said plaintiff has been unable to be employed at his usual vocation or at any vocation or employment since said operation, and has lost the wages that he would have [243]*243earned and lias been obliged to incur an expense of $500 in endeavoring to be cured of said injury, tbe same having been aggravated and prolonged by said negligence and want of skill of the defendant.
“To plaintiff’s damage in all in the sum of fifteen thousand ($15,000) dollars, for which he asks judgment.”
To this petition of plaintiff the defendant answers and says:
‘ ‘ That he is a surgeon, and was so at the time complained of, and that on or about the 20th day of April, 1912, he was called upon to examine and treat a fracture of the bones of the right arm of this plaintiff.
“Defendant denies that he was negligent or unskillful in setting the bones of said arm, and denies that he was negligent or i’nshillful in attending and dressing said arm, and further denies all carelessness and negligence on his part, and says that he at all times exercised due and proper care and skill, and gave the plaintiff due and proper care, and says that he is not responsible or to blame for any deformity or condition of the arm of the plaintiff.
“Further answering, the defendant denies each and every averment of fact contained in the amended petition of the plaintiff not herein expressly admitted.
“Wherefore, having fully answered herein, the defendant prays to be dismissed hence with his costs. ’ ’

The testimony showed that Moehlman, the plaintiff in this ease, was badly injured on the afternoon of April 12, 1912, while in the employ of a local contractor, suffering a severe fracture of the bone in the upper right arm, called the humerus. In this action against 'Dr. Ransohoff we are called upon to pass upon alleged subsequent damage to Moehlman due to the alleged negligence of the doctor, who is charged by the plaintiff, not only with unskillfulness in setting of the bones, but also with unskillful treatment of the fracture after the same had been set. .

If the plaintiff can establish, even by a scintilla of evidence, either of these two allegations of negligence, it would be the court’s duty to submit the case to the jury for its consideration, and if the plaintiff had established either of these two allegations of negligence by a preponderance of the evidence it would have been the duty of the jury to return a verdict in plaintiff’s favor.

[244]*244Now the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to show, first, that the surgeon was negligent and unskillful in the treatment which he gave the fractured arm, that is, that the surgeon failed to exercise the proper care in setting the bone: and, second, that the surgeon was negligent and unskillful in the performance of his duty towards the plaintiff in the care and attention bestowed upon him during the further treatment of the injury, and that in this respect he failed in the duty which a physician owes his patient and therefore was liable to the patient in damages.

This is a somewhat difficult case, in this respect, viz., that in complaints of this kind, that is, in cases where malpractice is charged, the jury must be largely guided by the testimony of expert witnesses and can not disregard the testimony of such experts in this class of cases the same as they might disregard expert testimony in other cases where the members of the jury themselves may have some peculiar knowledge of the things in controversy, for instance, as to land values', as to building contracts, condition of the weather, etc.; but in malpractice cases of this nature where it requires the study and knowledge of a science as complicated and as difficult as the science of medicine, the court and jury must necessarily be guided by the testimony of experts — experts in this special science. We can not be guided in our deliberations as to the treatment given to the patient by the opinion of laymen, because what maj^ appear to a layman as the proper thing to do in the treatment of his injury may be the very thing which a doctor would abstain from doing, because it might endanger the life and health of the patient. In other words, when a patient places himself in the hands of a surgeon or doctor, he must rely on that doctor to use his knowledge and to bring his skill and experience and the best there is in him to bear upon the particular ailment or injury from which his patient is suffering and for the treatment of which the patient has engaged his- expert services.

In the case at bar, the plaintiff, as stated above, did receive serious injury, a fracture of the upper right arm, which was aggravated by reason of the fact that this man had an unusually strong muscular development in that part of his arm, that is, [245]

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moehlman-v-ransohoff-ohctcomplhamilt-1914.