Parker v. Pettit

138 P.2d 592, 171 Or. 481, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 56
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 138 P.2d 592 (Parker v. Pettit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Pettit, 138 P.2d 592, 171 Or. 481, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 56 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

*483 BELT, J.

This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained as a result of the alleged negligence of the defendant physician and surgeon, in leaving a piece of gauze packing in plaintiff’s head for approximately five months after a surgical operation. It is charged that defendant’s failure to remove such gauze was the proximate cause of infection resulting in: (1) The loss of her left eye; (2) pus eruptions and deep cavity below left eye socket; and (8) “great pain, mental anguish, and discomfort.” Defendant, in his answer, admits having performed a surgical operation upon plaintiff to remove a growth, but denies generally the other allegations of the complaint.

The cause was submitted to a jury and a verdict returned against defendant in the sum of $20,000, it being specified therein that $10,000 of such award was allowed plaintiff “for loss of sight of her eye.” Thereafter defendant filed a motion for judgment in his favor notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, that judgment be entered eliminating therefrom any damages for loss of the sight of the eye. The trial court, in response to such motion, set aside the judgment against defendant for $20,000 and entered one against him in the sum of $10,000, it being the opinion of the court that there was no evidence tending to show that the alleged negligence was the proximate cause of the loss of the eye. Defendant appeals from such judgment. The plaintiff cross appeals asking that the original judgment of $20,000 be reinstated.

The defendant, Dr. Joseph A. Pettit, is a physician and surgeon who has practiced his profession in the city of Portland for about 35 years. He specializes in surgery and is a member of the staff of surgeons in St. Vincent’s hospital. In July, 1040, the plaintiff, a *484 woman 54 years of age and in apparently good health, consulted him about what she thought was a growth or cyst on the inside of her nose. X-ray pictures taken in July and August showed a tumor in the antrum and indicated that it was slowly growing, but it could not be ascertained from the pictures whether the tumor was malignant or benign. Defendant recommended surgery and, on October 3,1940, an operation was performed in St. Vincent’s hospital to remove the tumor from the interior of the left antrum. During the operation, a specimen of tissue was submitted to Dr. Thomas D. Robertson, pathologist, and his report showed that plaintiff had a basal cell type of cancer — i. e., a low-grade cancer which had invaded the bone or roof of the antrum. The cancer was removed and, in view of the pathological report, the operation was more extensive than had been anticipated, it being necessary to remove much of the channel bone between the antrum and the nose and some of the bone constituting the roof of the antrum which is also the floor of the orbital cavity. The defendant testified in effect that, since the cancerous cells were ascending in the bone of the antrum, he removed some of the bone but did not go into the orbital cavity on account of the serious consequences to the eye and cheek bone. Later it was decided, in view of the type of cancer and its location, to use radium to kill the remainder of the cancer cells. Dr. Pettit admits having used gauze packing in the operation but asserts positively that it was removed when the operation was completed and he is corroborated in this respect by other witnesses who assisted him.

On October 7, 1940, Dr. Otis B. Wight, who for many years has specialized in radium therapy, inserted a .50 milligram radium capsule in plaintiff’s *485 antrum and left it there for a period of 48 hours. Dr. Wight testified that, when this treatment was completed, the capsule and gauze packing surrounding the same were removed in the presence of the defendant. He says the antrum was then free of any gauze packing. Dr. Wight testified at length explaining the nature of radium therapy and stated that its rays would not only kill cancer cells but also other cells and tissue within a certain radius. It was his opinion that the radium treatment would not only damage the bone of the orbital cavity but would probably result in the loss of the eye. The testimony shows that cancer of the antrum is rare and the rate of mortality in such cases is extremely high. It is fair to assume that Dr. Pettit and his assistants were primarily concerned with curing the cancer. If the cancer were not cured, the loss of the eye would be of secondary importance.

Plaintiff left St. Vincent’s hospital on October 11th and, during the remainder of the month and in November, she was treated by the defendant who irrigated the antrum. She was becoming progressively worse and it was decided that such treatment could better be given to her at the Coffey hospital in the city of Portland. She entered that institution on December 3d, 1940, and remained there until January 3d, 1941, when she returned home. While in the Coffey hospital her eye became so swollen and inflamed that, at the defendant’s suggestion, Dr. Ealph A. Fenton, an eye, ear, nose, and throat specialist of many years ’ experience, was called into the case. It was decided that the plaintiff should return to St. Vincent’s hospital for deep X-ray therapy to be administered by Dr. Sherman A. Eees, a radiologist who has been in charge of such work at the hospital since .1928. She was given five X-ray treatments be *486 tween January 8th and January 13th and left the hospital on the 25th of the month. The eye was in a serious condition at this time, necrosis of the bone having progressed rapidly, and there was a profusion of foul pus. The defendant admits that he may have used gauze packing during this period of treatment to aid in drainage of the pus.

After leaving the hospital, plaintiff called regularly at the office of Dr. Fenton for treatment of her eye. On March 1st, he examined the eye and looked into the antrum, which is about the size of a large walnut, “to see whether there were any fragments of bone which might be loose”, as a result of the radium treatment. He discovered a piece of gauze packing one-half inch wide and four or five inches long. It was “wadded up pretty solid, because it was packed in there tight” and was covered with pus having a “terrible odor.” He said that Dr. Pettit had not informed him about the gauze packing and that he was very much surprised to find it. The patient desired the piece of gauze to show Dr. Pettit but Dr. Fenton very properly ordered it destroyed. Plaintiff said that, after the gauze was removed, she was able to again breathe through the left nostril. Dr. Fenton, in response to a hypothetical question, testified that it was not proper practice thus to leave a piece of gauze packing in the operative area for a period of five months, “or thereabouts.”

On March 5th, Dr. Fenton performed an operation at the Coffey hospital, removing plaintiff’s left eye. He said that, at that time, “there was no cancer, it had all been killed.” It was his opinion that the loss of the eye was caused by the radium and not by the infection resulting from the gauze pacldng. His conclusion as to the cause of the loss of the eye is supported *487 by all the other medical experts, with the exception of one who testified on behalf of the plaintiff and whose testimony will be considered later.

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Bluebook (online)
138 P.2d 592, 171 Or. 481, 1943 Ore. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-pettit-or-1943.