Morrell v. Lalonde

120 A. 435, 45 R.I. 112, 1923 R.I. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 27, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 120 A. 435 (Morrell v. Lalonde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrell v. Lalonde, 120 A. 435, 45 R.I. 112, 1923 R.I. LEXIS 32 (R.I. 1923).

Opinion

*113 Stearns, J.

These are two actions for negligence and malpractice, one of which is brought by Mary L. Morrell, hereinafter called the plaintiff, and the other by her husband, against Alphonsine J. Lalonde, a physician and surgeon, hereinafter called the defendant. In the first mentioned case the U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co. is joined as a defendant as insurer of the defendant against loss from legal liability in consequence of any negligence or malpractice. (See Morrell v. Lalonde, 44 R. I. 20.) The cases were tried together and resulted in the case of the wife in a verdict for $13,416, and for the husband in a verdict for $2,333. On petitions by defendants for new trials, the trial justice granted a new trial unless the wife remitted all of the verdict in excess of $8,500, and the husband all in excess of $1,500. *114 Each plaintiff refused to remit and the cases are here on exceptions of each of the plaintiffs to the granting of new trials and also on the exceptions of defendants.

At the time of . the acts complained of, April 1920, the plaintiff, á’ married woman, fifty-nine years old, lived in Providence. The defendant conducted a private hospital in the neighboring city of Pawtucket. Both parties were of French ancestry. For a number of years defendant, who was plaintiff’s family physician, had at various times treated plaintiff .for different ailments. For more than three years, prior to April 1920, plaintiff had been suffering from a rupture which finally resulted in strangulated hernia. Defendant had advised plaintiff that an operation was necessary and that any delay was dangerous, but plaintiff failed to take any action until her condition in April became so critical that she was convinced that an operation offered the only chance of saving her life. Defendant, in response to plaintiff’s call, visited plaintiff at her home and advised her that an operation was necessary at once. ‘Plaintiff states that defendant agreed to perform the operation and to call for her that night and take her to his hospital; that defendant did not call for her and that on the following day she went unattended to defendant’s hospital where, defendant later in the day performed an operation upon her. The defendant knew the facts of the case, that the necessary operation was one which required skill, judgment and some • courage. He was under no compulsion to act because of an emergency not anticipated by him. In view of his subsequent conduct it is not easy to understand why he undertook to perform the operation. He made an unskillful opening into the abdomen and without attempting to do anything to relieve the obstructed bowel, after removing an accumulation of pus, sewed up the wound, told his patient she was going to die and that he could do nothing more to help her. Plaintiff’s husband came to the hospital that evening and later in the evening plaintiff was sent to her home, as she says, by the advice of defendant. Defend *115 ant denies this and states that the plaintiff insisted on being carried to her home despite his advice to the contrary. Much stress ife laid on the- means of transportation secured by the defendant, which was*an undertaker’s automobile used generally for the transportation of coffins and the removal of bodies of persons deceased. The vehicle was enclosed and contained a removable stretcher. There is some evidence that this vehicle had before this time occasionally been used as an ambulance. Plaintiff knew the owner of the vehicle and defendant says she and -her husband were willing to use it in order to save expense. In any view of the facts it was the duty of the surgeon to assert his influence and authority to induce and to require his patient to remain in the hospital and thereby avoid the risk to her life incident to any removal. He failed to discharge this ■ duty to his patient in this respect. He also neglected to call on his patient after the operation, his excuse being that he was too busy in his hospital. He did telephone to the District Nursing Association in Providence and as a result a visiting nurse for a short time for several days went to plaintiff’s home and attended to the dressing of the wounds. But in the circumstances this did not relieve the defendant of his duty to look out personally for his patient after the operation. On the third day after the operation, plaintiff was taken from her home to the Rhode Island Hospital, where a second operation was successfully performed and after six weeks’ stay in the hospital plaintiff returned to her home.

The substantial questions raised are two, namely, the question of liability and the amount of the damages. The evidence is ample to sustain the finding of liability. Defendant deliberately; with full knowledge of the seriousness and delicacy of the necessary operation undertook to perform the operation. For some reason, either from lack of judgment or perhaps from a realization of his lack of the necessary skill or from a lack of courage defendant failed properly to perform his duty as a surgeon. In this case *116 it is clear that having begun the operation the.surgeon should have finished it. Although the patient had- but a small chance of escaping death, defendant by failing to relieve the acute condition Of strangulation and by making a useless and unnecessary incision into the abdomen, thereby diminished the chance of his patient’s surviving. For this failure and his subsequent neglect defendant is responsible to plaintiff for such damages as she proves she has suffered as a consequence thereof.

In regard to the amounts of thé damages awarded in the two cases, we think the damages in each case are excessive. The jury were properly instructed in accordance with plaintiff’s request that the plaintiff, the wife, was entitled to recover compensatory damages and in addition, in the discretion of the jury, to .punitive damages and that the husband was entitled to compensatory damages. The record does not sustain the claim of the defendants that the jury were instructed that the husband might also be awarded punitive damages.

As, under the provisions of the statutes (Sec. 12, Chap. 298, Gen. Laws), the verdicts may not be set aside as excessive until the prevailing parties have been given an opportunity to remit so much thereof as the court adjudges excessive the question is, what is a fair assessment of damages. This assessment of the amount of the damages according to the statute is now to be máde on- the judgment of the court.

In the case of the wife, we think the trial justice was correct in his conclusion that a very considerable part of damages in the verdict was given by the jury as punitive damages. At the time of the trial, in January 1922, plaintiff was sixty-one years old. For three years prior to the operation she had suffered from a rupture and during that period her physical condition had steadily grown worse. For three weeks before the operation she had been working outside of her home for $15. a week. Prior to this, for how long a period it does not appear, she had been unable to *117 work outside of her home on account of sickness. She had five people rooming in her house from whom she received an income of $10. a week. She did all of the housework for them, for herself and her husband.

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Bluebook (online)
120 A. 435, 45 R.I. 112, 1923 R.I. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrell-v-lalonde-ri-1923.