Osborn v. Cary

152 P. 473, 28 Idaho 89, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 107
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 152 P. 473 (Osborn v. Cary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborn v. Cary, 152 P. 473, 28 Idaho 89, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 107 (Idaho 1915).

Opinion

MORGAN, J.

This action was commenced by the appellant, who is an infant and who appears by guardian ad litem, against the respondent, who is a physician and surgeon, to recover damages because, as is alleged in, the complaint, respondent, having been employed in his professional capacity to treat appellant, negligently and unskillfully diagnosed his disease and prescribed and administered wrong treatment for the ailment from which he was suffering.

It is appellant’s contention that on or about the 14th of November, 1911, he was sick and afflicted with a disease known to the medical profession as osteomyelitis of the tibia of the right leg, and that from the last-named date until on [93]*93or about March 12, 1912, the respondent, having been employed to treat him, by reason of negligence and unskillful diagnosis of his ailment, treated him for septicemia, greatly to his injury and damage.

The contention of respondent, as it appears from the transcript, is that he was employed to attend appellant on or about the 14th of November, 1911; that he correctly diagnosed appellant’s disease to be septicemia and administered the proper treatment therefor and that his employment ended on or about February 10, 1912.

This case has been before the court heretofore and the further facts necessary to the present consideration of it will be found in case of Osborn v. Carey, 24 Ida. 158, 132 Pac. 967.

The trial of the present case resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, from which this appeal is taken.

Appellant relies upon 23 assignments of error, only a part of which present questions worthy of discussion, and these will be grouped in order that they may be more readily disposed of.

Certain of these assignments are based upon the action of the court is sustaining respondent’s objections to questions propounded to a witness who had qualified as a medical expert ; these questions are similar and one of them is as follows:

“Do the symptoms of the disease of osteomyelitis in either one of its two stages bear such resemblance to the disease of septicemia that a physician of ordinary skill and learning, treating a patient suffering with osteomyelitis, would be misled into the belief that the patient was suffering with septicemia ? ’ ’

It appears from the transcript that respondent was called as the first witness for appellant and was examined pursuant to the provisions of a law enacted by the legislature of 1909 (Sess. Laws 1909, p. 334), providing for the examination as a witness of a party to an action on behalf of the adverse party, and that in the course of his examination he testified that he knew the difference in the symptoms of osteomyelitis and septicemia; that the patient, during the time he treated him, was not afflicted with the former, but was suffering from the latter disease and that he treated him for it.

[94]*94The only possible purpose of the questions to which the objections were sustained was to show that a physician of ordinary skill and ability could readily distinguish one of these diseases from the other, and that therefore respondent ought to have been able to distinguish them. Since respondent had testified that he was able to distinguish them and that he diagnosed appellant’s ailment to be septicemia and not osteomyelitis, the evidence sought to be adduced by the questions was immaterial, and, while the objections were not made upon that ground, no injury resulted to appellant by their being sustained.

Assignments of error numbered 4 and 12 may be treated together.. They call into question the action of the court in sustaining objections to certain questions propounded to some of appellant’s expert witnesses. One of these questions is, in substance: “What would have been the result and effect on Elton Osborn if the treatment administered as described and assumed in the previous hypothetical question had been continued without further or different treatment?” The other is: “Now, assuming the same state of facts and treatment as were enumerated in the previous question, what, in your opinion, might reasonably have been done by the attending physician, that is, what treatment would a reasonably skillful physician have attempted in that case?” These questions were objectionable because one of the hypothetical questions therein referred to assumed that during the entire period of the treatment the patient was suffering from and being treated for osteomyelitis, while the testimony of respondent shows that he diagnosed his ailment as and treated him, not for that disease, but for septicemia, and since the treatment for septicemia was not continued, it does not appear to be material what the result of its continuance would have been, nor does it appear to be material what the correct treatment for osteomyelitis is, since the respondent testified that he did not administer that treatment. The cause of action in this case, if one exists, arises, not out of improper treatment for septicemia, but out of the negligence of respondent in fail[95]*95ing to correctly diagnose appellant’s ailment and to treat it as osteomyelitis.

The action of the court in permitting counsel for respondent, in the cross-examination of certain of appellant’s expert witnesses, to read from a medical and surgical text-book which was admitted by the witnesses to be a standard authority upon the subject about which they were testifying is assigned as error. Excerpts were read from the book; it was passed to the witnesses and they were asked whether they agreed or disagreed with it. This course, of cross-examination was objected to by counsel for appellant and the objection was overruled. We find no error in the ruling of the trial court in this particular.

While it is the general rule that books upon scientific subjects are not admissible in evidence, except after an expert witness has referred to a particular work to sustain his opinion, in which case only such work may be admitted to contradict him in that opinion, it is also a well-established rule that when a witness is testifying as an expert, it is competent to test his knowledge and accuracy upon cross-examination by reading to him or having him read extracts from standard authorities upon the subject of his examination and by asking him whether he agrees or disagrees with them. This is in no sense the introduction of the contents of the books in evidence.

In a note to the text in 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, see. 440, p. 579 (15th ed.), it is said: “Moreover, it is a proper method of cross-examination, in order to test the learning of a witness who testifies as an expert, to refer to books of approved authority upon the subjects under investigation, and question him in regard to them.” (See, also, Underhill on Evidence, sec. 189; 3 Jones on Evidence, sec. 579, p. 745; Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Ellis, 89 Ill. 516; Hess v. Lowrey, 122 Ind. 225, 17 Am. St. 355, 23 N. E. 156, 7 L. R. A. 90; Louisville etc. Ry. Co. v. Howell, 147 Ind. 266, 45 N. E. 584; Fisher v. Southern Pac. R. Co., 89 Cal. 399, 26 Pac. 894; Clukey v. Seattle Elec. Co., 27 Wash. 70, 67 Pac. 379; Pinney v. Cahill, 48 Mich. 584, 12 N. W. 862; Egan v. Dry Dock etc. Ry. Co., [96]*9612 App. Div. 556, 42 N. Y. Supp. 188; Byers v. Nashville etc. R. Co., 94 Tenn. 345, 29 S. W. 128; Sale v. Eichberg, 105 Tenn. 333, 59 S. W. 1020, 52 L. R. A. 894; Williams v. Nally, 20 Ky. Law, 244, 45 S. W. 874;

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Bluebook (online)
152 P. 473, 28 Idaho 89, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborn-v-cary-idaho-1915.