Piehl v. Dalles General Hospital

571 P.2d 149, 280 Or. 613, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 754
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1977
Docket14264, SC P-2515
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 571 P.2d 149 (Piehl v. Dalles General Hospital) 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
Piehl v. Dalles General Hospital, 571 P.2d 149, 280 Or. 613, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 754 (Or. 1977).

Opinion

*615 HOLMAN, J.

Plaintiff was operated on for stomach ulcers by the defendant Dey, a surgeon. During the operation, which was performed at The Dalles General Hospital, which is also a defendant, a piece of material known as a laparotomy sponge was left in plaintiffs abdomen. Plaintiff brought an action for damages against both defendants, each of whom filed pleadings requesting indemnification from the other for any judgment plaintiff might receive. The trial of the case resulted in a jury verdict in favor of plaintiff against both defendants and in a directed verdict requiring the hospital to indemnify the doctor for any loss he might suffer from the judgment. The hospital appeals. There are no issues between plaintiff and defendants. The only points raised concern the indemnity rights between defendants.

The hospital first claims that the trial court erred in directing a verdict requiring the hospital to indemnify the surgeon. The hospital contends that there was evidence from which the jury could have found that the doctor was personally negligent (as differentiated from being responsible on the basis of respondeat superior because of the negligence of the nurses). If this was the case, the doctor is not entitled to indemnity. 1 This contention requires a detailed synopsis of the facts.

Present in the operating room were the defendant surgeon, a physician who assisted the surgeon, an anesthetist, a circulating nurse, a scrub nurse, and the surgeon’s office nurse, who, because of a shortage of personnel at the hospital on Saturday mornings, was pressed into duty as an aide. The scrub nurse and the circulating nurse were the general employees of the hospital which hired, trained and paid them, and which assigned them to duty in the operating room. The hospital billed the patient for the nurses’ services *616 and for the use of the operating facilities of the hospital. The other participants were not hospital employees.

It was the duty of the circulating nurse and of the scrub nurse to keep track of the sponges which were used in the operation. There were two kinds of sponges used—laparotomy sponges and smaller 4" x 4" sponges. Laparotomy sponges come in packages of five; the 4 by 4’s come in packages of 10. The nurses count the sponges when they prepare the surgery for the operation. There is no count made of the sponges as they are used. After the sponges are used and removed, they are laid out and counted together with the unused sponges in units of five for the laparotomy sponges and in units of 10 for the 4 by 4’s to see whether they are in accord with the number of packages used. This count is made twice—once before the abdomen is closed and once afterwards. It is not the practice of the surgeon to keep track of the number of sponges used; the nurses report to him on whether the sponge counts check out. They reported in this instance that the count did check out and they made the appropriate notation in the medical record.

The sponges are not sponges at all but are made of surgical gauze. A laparotomy sponge is about 14 inches square and is composed of two layers of ribbed gauze sewn together around the edges. At one comer there is a knitted loop attached, which is about three-eighths of an inch in width and about 5 inches long. X-ray opaque material is sewn into one comer of the sponge. The sponge left in plaintiff was discovered by this means in the course of a routine postoperative x-ray. Laparotomy sponges are usually used to pack other organs away from the operative area and to wipe off organs that are covered with blood. 4 by 4’s are usually used to soak up blood. In the present instance the laparotomy sponge in question was used by the defendant doctor to pack the colon away from the operative area which was at the outlet of the stomach. He testified that he used two or three laparotomy *617 sponges in the course of the operation and that the bleeding in the operation was minimal, which, by illustration, was about 200 cc’s or two-fifths of a pint.

The defendant surgeon, who was the only medical witness, testified as follows:

«Q * * *
"Doctor, you said that you were the one that put the sponges in and you were the one that took those out that were taken out of the body cavity; can you explain to the jury how it is that you would not be able to see a sponge or might miss a sponge inside the body cavity after a surgery like this?
"A. Well, as I stated a little beforehand, we use the sponge to pack away the colon so that we can incise into the duodenum to stop the bleeding and do a pyloroplasty so the pylorus didn’t close down. There is brisk bleeding, not enough to transfuse them, but enough bleeding it will soak up a lot of sponges and it can also soak up a sponge that was used away—to pack away the colon, even though it looks big when it is wet and squeezed down it is not that big.
"Q. How big is it?
"A. This sponge, when it is soaked and packed down it is not big at all.
"Q. Is it bigger than a turkey egg?
"A. I’ve never seen a turkey egg.
* * if: *
"Q. * * *. Well, is it something that we could recognize and compare the size of it with when it was in there?
"A. I would say this would be about a third the size it is now as it stands there.
"Q. Now that—see, I am trying to get something in the record.
"A. It’s very hard to describe anything but a soaked sponge.
"Q. Okay, go ahead.
"A. And it gets soft and it gets a thin coating of blood on it that makes it look like a normal organ inside the abdomen so by feeling or by looking at it it may not be possible to tell.
*618 "Q. Well, aren’t you able to dig around there and be sure that you have felt of every place inside the body cavity?
"A. We take out all the sponges we can see or feel, if we can feel them; after a pyloroplasty it’s a potentially infected area and we don’t like to dig around and spread the infection around. We open it to the bowel and the bowel obviously contains bacteria, you don’t want to spread the bacteria into the abdominal cavity. After a normal search we wait for the sponge count, if the sponge count is correct we don’t have any reason to search again. The other thing is that the normal organs inside the abdomen, the less handling we do the quicker they come back. In other words, after any operation the bowels get paralyzed, we call it an ilius, and the less handling of the bowel we do the less protracted the paralysis is. In other words, the patient gets well a little faster.
* * * *
"Q.

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Bluebook (online)
571 P.2d 149, 280 Or. 613, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piehl-v-dalles-general-hospital-or-1977.