Nations v. Ludington, Wells & Van Schaick Lumber Co.

63 So. 257, 133 La. 657, 1913 La. LEXIS 2083
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 30, 1913
DocketNo. 19,480
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 63 So. 257 (Nations v. Ludington, Wells & Van Schaick Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nations v. Ludington, Wells & Van Schaick Lumber Co., 63 So. 257, 133 La. 657, 1913 La. LEXIS 2083 (La. 1913).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

Plaintiff’s husband received an injury to his hand while at his work as an employe of the defendant company in its sawmill. He died an hour or so later on the operating table, while chloroform was being administered to him preparatory to an operation upon the injured hand. Plaintiff brings this suit in damages in her own behalf and that of her minor children, issue of her marriage with the decedent, charging that both the injury to the hand and the death were caused by the negligence of the defendant company.

[1] The former clearly was not. The work to which plaintiff’s husband was put was very simple. He and another man stood at the side of a roller carrier conveying pieces of sawn timber, and as these came to them they shoved them to one side onto another roller carrier, moving at right angles to the first. For doing this the workman is furnished a pick with a handle to it like that of an ax. He sticks this pick into the piece of timber and pulls it aside. Instead of doing this, the husband of plaintiff took hold of the timber with his hand, and the piece that followed bumped against it and bruised and lacerated it, and, for all the record shows, may have crushed some part of the bone. The extent of the injury is not known because the man died before the physician had made an examination.

He was told by the workman he was with to go to the filing room, where something would be done for him. He started off to go as thus directed, but must have been in great pain, for when met by another witness he was going in the wrong direction, to the lower story of the mill, instead of to the upper story. He was holding the injured hand with the other hand. The witness asked him what was the matter, and he said his hand had been mashed. The witness told him to come and go to the filing room, where some temporary dressing would be done until he could have the attention of the doctor. Instead of immediately following the witness, he stepped down one step on the stairs and sat down holding his hand, showing that his pain must have been very great. Our reason for mentioning these indications of his pain having been intense is that the contention of the defendant company is that his death was caused, not by the unscientific administration of the chloroform, but by nervous shock in combination with the ordinary effect of chloroform. Not finding any one in the filing room who could be of any assistance, they went downstairs, and there came across the foreman, who accompanied the wounded man to the hospital; they going there in a wagon.

How much time was consumed in these perambulations, or elapsed, before the chloroform was begun to be administered, or while being administered, until it was discovered [661]*661that the patient had stopped breathing the record does not show. The' witnesses make approximative estimates by minutes, but every one knows how unreliable such estimates are. Before going upon the operating table he had sat in a chair waiting until water could be procured that had been sterilized by boiling to wash the wound with, and also until the instruments had been sterilized.

The physician was assisted by his wife, who had graduated as a trained nurse, and by the saw filer of the mill. The latter administered the chloroform. It seems that it was he who usually filled that function on such occasions at this mill. The physician says that the patient had taken the chloroform and gone under complete anesthesia nicely, and that:

“I watched him as much as I could, considering the position I occupied; and so did my wife. I tried to keep an eye on him all the time as near as possible. I had started to wash and clear up the hand, preparatory to the work, and he quit breathing, and at once I turned everything loose and turned my attention to him in a restorative way, and instituted artificial respiration by extending the arms in this manner, and then drawing them up in this manner, etc. Q. Then I understand you to say the first warning of danger you had was when you suddenly noticed he had stopped breathing? A. Yes. Q. Are you sure that you noticed that almost at the instant he stopped breathing? A. I can’t say. It was noticed by my wife and by the anaesthetist. I couldn’t say whether I noticed it first or not, but it was observed at least.”

The physician gives it as his opinion that the man died from nervous shock and the ordinary effect of chloroform. But he says that when he examined him with a view to ascertain whether he was in a fit condition to be anaesthetized, his condition and heart action were normal, and he exhibited no symptoms of shock. An entirely disinterested physician, of whose testimony there is no criticism, on the part of defendant, testified as follows:

“Q. A man who has -been injured in the way designated and a while after the injury, say an hour afterwards, bearing in. mind that the man had walked upstairs and downstairs and his pulse and heart are examined and found to be normal, please state whether or not that would indicate at that time a shock from the injury received to the hand. A. It would indicate that the man was not shocked. A man suffering from a shock would show it by his heart and respiration before any other way, by pulse and respiration. There would be no shock without the pulse showing it.”

The expert' evidence shows that the man exhibited none of the symptoms of shock. On the other hand, the operating physician who naturally puts upon the situation the interpretation least disparaging to himself, admits as follows:

“Q. Did you notice the color of the patient after he died? Was he purple or dark blue? A. He was cyanosed at his death. Q. The col- or is usually caused by what? A. The— Yes, that man had a paralyzed respiration, his respiratory center was paralyzed, and that left the blood in circulation and left the blood in the venous system.”

The man was 38 years -old, healthy and strong. We must conclude that his death was caused by the chloroform.

[2] Was it negligence to allow a layman to administer it? The physicians who testified in the case agree that it was an unsafe thing to do; that for the relief of pain it might be done, perhaps, by a layman with safety under the observation of a physician, but not for full surgical ancesthesia. The physician who operated testified that he him-' self would not have taken an anaesthetic from any of those who were present.

“Q. As a physician you recognized even in this case that it was not safe for a layman to administer chloroform? A. I certainly did. Q. And because of the fact you requested that a physician as an assistant be provided to administer the chloroform? A. I demanded it.”

We do not think there can be any serious question but that this allowing a layman to administer the chloroform was the taking of a very grea.t risk, and constitutes negligence if it was avoidable.

[663]*663In the first place, nothing shows that it was not avoidable in the sense that, rather than take the risk of a layman administering the chloroform, it would have been better not to make the operation at all, but simply to assuage the pain by sedatives.

But, granting that an operation was necessary, and that the ansestlietization was advisable, nothing shows that it was not possible to secure an assistant physician.

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Bluebook (online)
63 So. 257, 133 La. 657, 1913 La. LEXIS 2083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nations-v-ludington-wells-van-schaick-lumber-co-la-1913.