Osburn v. Saltz

169 So. 2d 687
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 16, 1964
Docket5623
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 So. 2d 687 (Osburn v. Saltz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osburn v. Saltz, 169 So. 2d 687 (La. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

169 So.2d 687 (1964)

Eris R. OSBURN et al.
v.
I. H. SALTZ.

No. 5623.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

November 16, 1964.
Rehearing Denied December 21, 1964.

*688 Farrell A. Blanchard, Donaldsonville, for appellants.

Sessions, Fishman, Rosenson & Snellings, New Orleans, for appellee.

Before ELLIS, LOTTINGER, HERGET, LANDRY and REID, JJ.

LANDRY, Judge.

This is a medical malpractice action wherein plaintiffs, Eris R. and Alice Osburn (husband and wife), seek damages from defendant, Dr. I. H. Saltz, for alleged negligent performance by defendant of a hysterectomy upon Mrs. Osburn and failure to accord his said patient proper post-operative care. Plaintiffs maintain defendant's reputed professional carelessness resulted in complications causing his said patient considerable pain, discomfort, inconvenience and loss of earnings and necessitated the incurrence of medical expense by plaintiff husband in the treatment thereof. The learned trial court concluded plaintiffs failed to establish their allegations of negligence by a preponderance of evidence and to that degree of certainty required by law and rejected petitioners' demands, hence this appeal.

Viewed in its entirety, plaintiffs' petition specifically charges defendant negligently punctured Mrs. Osburn's bladder during the course of the aforementioned surgical procedure and thereafter left her virtually unattended in Lakewood Hospital, Morgan City, Louisiana, as a consequence of which the abdominal incision made in the course of the operation became infected and eventually turned gangrenous. It is further contended the post-operative complication seriously endangered plaintiff's life, necessitated additional surgery and has caused permanent, irreparable damage to her nervous system.

It is conceded defendant, assisted by Dr. S. J. Russo, performed a hysterectomy on plaintiff on October 29, 1957, and approximately seven days thereafter plaintiff began developing complications which subsequently led to her removal from the hospital in Morgan City to Touro Infirmary, New Orleans, Louisiana, to which latter institution she was taken by ambulance November 7, 1957. It is further acknowledged plaintiff's post-operative condition was eventually diagnosed as a vesicovaginal fistula which in lay terminology means a connection between the bladder and vagina. In this regard the record reflects the condition ultimately found means there was an abnormal hole, puncture, or rupture of plaintiff's bladder with resulting leakage of urine therefrom and the passage of such excretion through an unnatural channel into the vagina instead of normally through the urethra.

The salient feature of this case is whether the puncture of plaintiff's bladder occurred during the operation or subsequently due to infection caused by defendant's alleged negligent post-operative care of the patient (as contended by appellants) or whether it occurred by infection which resulted notwithstanding defendant's care and treatment of plaintiff following the operation and due to circumstances beyond appellee's control as contended by defendant.

It now appears learned counsel for appellants has abandoned the contention that *689 defendant negligently caused the injury during the course of the operation. In the specification of errors contained in his brief filed before this Court esteemed counsel for plaintiffs charges the trial court with error in the following respects only:

"ERRORS OF THE TRIAL COURT:

"We believe that the Trial Court was overly impressed by the testimony of the several Doctors who testified on behalf of the defendant to the effect that they had examined the record in the case and were of the opinion that defendant had acted according to the standard prevailing in the community, and in a manner in which they would have acted in similar circumstances, to the extent that he overlooked the fact that the defendant, neither by his testimony, nor by anything in the hospital record, ever explained or justified or justified (sic) his lack of care and negligence in permitting the plaintiff Alice Osburn to steadily deterioate (sic) and become grossly infected in and around her surgical wound to such a degree that gangrene was prevelent (sic) and manifest before he ever discovered it. That the Trial Court should have found for plaintiffs and granted them judgment as prayed for."

Assuming arguendo, the issue of defendant's alleged negligence during the course of the operation is before us on this appeal, it suffices to say the record is devoid of evidence to establish defendant's asserted carelessness in this regard. In detailed testimony, defendant (and the physician who assisted him in performing the surgery in question) explained each step of the operative process and the care and precautions taken to avoid injury or damage to organs adjacent to those portions of plaintiff's anatomy removed in the operation. It appears from their testimony that if the bladder had been unintentionally punctured in the course of the operation, such circumstance would have immediately been known and corrective steps taken to repair the damage before the operation would have been allowed to proceed to its conclusion. By an overwhelming preponderance of medical testimony (which it is unnecessary to detail herein), it further appears if such a mishap should have occurred and gone undetected by the operating team, plaintiff would have exhibited certain unmistakable symptoms within a minimum of approximately 24 hours and a maximum of 72 hours following the operation and no such symptoms were shown by plaintiff until well after this crucial period.

Our careful consideration of the briefs filed herein and the voluminous record compiled on the trial of this matter reveals that, except as hereinafter otherwise noted, the events and circumstances giving rise to this litigation are virtually without dispute. The chief contention between the parties appears to concern the applicable rules of law with respect to the burden of proof in medical malpractice actions.

In September, 1957, Dr. Saltz recommended a complete hysterectomy for Mrs. Osburn predicated upon an examination and laboratory report which indicated she was suffering from a non-malignant, pre-cancerous condition of the cervix. The patient was admitted to Lakewood Hospital October 28, 1957, where the surgery was performed the following day by defendant with the assistance of a colleague, Dr. S. J. Russo.

Upon incising the patient's lower abdominal cavity and exposing to view the organs adjacent to the part of plaintiff's anatomy to be removed in the operation, it was immediately noted Mrs. Osburn had massive adhesions to the extent she was deemed to have a 90% "frozen pelvis". According to the expert testimony of record, adhesions are banks of abnormal fibrous types of tissues between bodily organs resulting from either inflammation, disease or prior surgery. In plaintiff's case it is not clear from the record whether the adhesions noted resulted from prior infection or previous surgery (it being conceded *690 she had previously undergone surgery for a female complaint). By accepted medical technique, the adhesions encountered were separated, the various organs freed of their abnormal connecting fibrous masses, removal of the affected organs was accomplished, the necessary closures were made and the incision in plaintiff's lower abdomen was sutured and surgically dressed thus completing the entire operative process.

On the third day following the operation, November 1, 1957, Mrs.

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Related

Bell v. Faris
304 So. 2d 686 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1974)

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