Poling v. San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Co.

75 S.W. 69, 32 Tex. Civ. App. 487, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 315
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 20, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 75 S.W. 69 (Poling v. San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Poling v. San Antonio & Aransas Pass Railway Co., 75 S.W. 69, 32 Tex. Civ. App. 487, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 315 (Tex. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

—This suit was brought by appellant against appellee to recover $20,000 damages for the loss of sight in his left eye, alleged to have been occasioned by the negligence of the defendant company. The substance of the allegations of plaintiff’s cause of action is that on or about April 17, 1897, while he was in the employ of the defendant as its station agent at Kerrville, he was, against his will, required by the company to sign an agreement, the purport of *488 which was to authorize the defendant to deduct' from his wages 50 cents per month to be appropriated by the company as a hospital fee to be used in the care and treatment of its servants for personal injuries or siclmess incurred by them while in its service. That at or about the time stated, defendant had in its service, as physician at Kerrville, one E. Palmer, whose duty it then was to furnish medical attention to plaintiff as an employe of the company, and its other employes when such attention was needed; that Palmer was not a competent physician, or legally qualified as such to practice medicine; that this was known to the defendant when it employed him as a physician and retained him in its service with such knowledge of his incompetency; that on or about the date aforesaid some foreign substance got in plaintiff’s eye, and he applied to Palmer, as the company’s physician, to remove the substance, and treat his eye for the injuries inflicted by it, and that Palmer, on account of his incompetency, so negligently treated his eye as to cause plaintiff the loss of its sight therefrom. It was also alleged that the defendant exercised no care in the selection of Palmer as its physician, and negligently and carelessly retained him in its service as such after knowledge had been brought hame to it of his incompetency.

The defendant, after answering by a general denial, plead that plaintiff was not treated for his injured eye by Palmer, as the physician of the company, but that plaintiff employed him to minister such treatment as his private physician; that when plaintiff applied to Palmer for treatment, he, having lived in Kerrville for a long time where Palmer was engaged in the general practice of medicine, knew, if Palmer was incompetent, of his incompetency to practice his profession; and that the defendant exercised ordinary care in employing Palmer as physician in its service, and to ascertain his- efficiency during the time of his employment to practice medicine, and that if plaintiff was injured by the negligence of Palmer, the company was not liable for the consequences of such negligence.

The case was tried before a jury, and the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, from which the plaintiff has appealed.

The evidence developed upon the trial shows the following facts: That, ás alleged by the plaintiff, the defendant exacted from him and its other employes 50 cents each per month, to be taken from their wages, as a hospital fee to be used in the treatment of the company’s servants for siclmess and personal injuries received while in its employment. This fee, however, was not exacted or appropriated by the company for its profit, but simply for the benefit of its employes from whom it was collected. The fund realized from its collection was not sufficient to defray the expenses for hospital and physician’s services for which it was designed, and the deficit was made up and paid by the company itself. At the time plaintiff alleges the injury to his eye, Dr. Palmer was in the employment of the defendant at Kerrville as its physician *489 for the treatment of its employes in sickness and for personal injuries. Before employing him the company, through its medical director, made diligent inquiry of responsible and intelligent citizens in and around Kerrville, where Palmer had been engaged in the practice of medicine for nearly twenty years, as to his competency. The information received by the company in response to such inquiries was that Palmer was a competent physician and skilled surgeon, and fully capacitated to discharge the duties for which he was employed by the company. His general reputation in and around Kerrville as a competent physician and surgeon was good, and such reputation continued until this case was tried. Palmer, according to his own testimony, never had a diploma to practice medicine. On the 15th of August, 1892, the board of medical examiners of the Thirty-eighth judicial district of the State of Texas issued Palmer a certificate that he was duly qualified to practice as a physician and surgeon in accordance with the laws of the State of Texas. This certificate was signed by the president and secretary of the board, and on the 7th day of November, 1892, was handed by Palmer to A. E. McFarland, who, the testimony shows, was at that time the clerk of the district and county courts of Kerr County, for record, and was on that day filed by him for record, but by mistake, instead of being recorded in the office of the district clerk, was recorded in that of the county clerk, and was never recorded in the office of the district clerk until August 27, 1900.

On or about April 17, 1897, the plaintiff got some foreign substance in his eye, and applied to Dr. Palmer to remove it. Hpon examination the doctor found nothing in his eye, but discovered its lid was granulated, and treated it for the granulation. His treatment, according to the testimony of the physicians, was such as is ordinarily given by competent physicians in such cases. However, Dr. Palmer, finding in the progress of his treatment that the disease of the lid was more aggravated than he thought upon his first examination, sent plaintiff to San Antonio to a skilled oculist for examination and treatment. The diagnosis of the oculist in San Antonio was the same as Dr. Palmer’s, and he pronounced the treatment that had been given by Palmer as the proper remedy to be administered for the disease, and sent the patient back to Kerrville, telling him that Dr. Palmer could treat him as well as he could. It finally developed upon further examination and treatment that plaintiff’s eyeball was injured in some way to the extent that the sight in his left eye was practically lost.

As to whether Dr. Palmer treated plaintiff in his capacity as a physician and surgeon for the defendant or as plaintiff’s private physician, the testimony is conflicting; and upon this issue we conclude as a fact that the treatment given was not as the physician of the" company, but as plaintiff’s private physician. We also conclude that the defendant used ordinary care in the selection of Dr. Palmer as its physician. and surgeon; that he was a competent physician and surgeon, and fully *490 qualified to discharge the duties of his employment; and that the loss of sight in plaintiff’s eye was not caused either by the negligence of defendant or of Dr. Palmer.

Conclusions of Law.—1. The plaintiff was not prejudiced by the refusal of the court to permit the witness Everett’s testimony, that “E. Palmer was not a graduate of a medical college because he did not possess a diploma,” to be introduced in evidence, for the reason that Dr. Palmer himself testified that he had no diploma. The testimony of Palmer settled the fact that he had no diploma, and the additional reason given by the witness in the answer for his conclusion that Dr. Palmer had no diploma, is immaterial.

2. As to whether Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.W. 69, 32 Tex. Civ. App. 487, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poling-v-san-antonio-aransas-pass-railway-co-texapp-1903.