Potter v. Krown Drugs

214 So. 2d 198
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1968
Docket3155
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 214 So. 2d 198 (Potter v. Krown Drugs) 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
Potter v. Krown Drugs, 214 So. 2d 198 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

214 So.2d 198 (1968)

Mr. & Mrs. John Joseph POTTER, natural mother and father of Laurie Potter
v.
KROWN DRUGS, d/b/a Krown Drug Store et al.

No. 3155.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

July 1, 1968.
Rehearing Denied October 7, 1968.

C. Monk Simons, III, and Gano D. Lemoine, Jr., New Orleans, for Wootan, Howcott, Simons & Lemoine, plaintiffs-appellees.

Carl J. Schumacher, Jr. and John William Futrell, of Lemle, Kelleher, Kohlmeyer, Matthews & Schumacher, New Orleans, for Krown Drugs, d/b/a Krown Drug Stores, Reese Dismukes and Insurance Co. of North America, defendants-appellants.

Before YARRUT, CHASEZ and BARNETTE, JJ.

CHASEZ, Judge.

This is a suit in tort in which the plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. John Potter have sued Krown Drugs, its employee, Reese Dismukes, and its insurer, Insurance Company of North America for damages which their child, Laurie Potter, allegedly sustained as a result of the improper dispensing of a prescribed medicine. The named defendants have answered the petition denying liability on several, diverse grounds. The trial on the merits was heard by the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans and judgment was awarded as follows: The plaintiffs were awarded the sum of $850.00 for their minor child's injuries; John Potter, father of the child and head of the community was awarded the sum of $116.00 for medical expenses; and the three named defendants were cast jointly *199 and in solido for these sums. Plaintiffs' claim on behalf of their personal damages was dismissed at their own costs. Expert fees in sums of $100.00 each to Dr. Gerald (Jerry) Casey, Dr. Henry Simon, and Mr. L. A. Wilson and $50.00 to Mr. H. K. Jepsen were taxed to defendants. Expert fee of Dr. G. A. Dildy in the sum of $100.00 to be paid by plaintiffs.

From that judgment defendants have appealed suspensively. Plaintiffs have answered the appeal seeking an increased award for their child and certain expert fees. No further appeal was made for their own personal damages.

The facts as contained in the record developed as follows: Laurie Potter, the three month old child of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Potter, suffered from an illness beginning in September, 1965, which was diagnosed as colic by their pediatrician, Dr. Jerry Casey. Dr. Casey prescribed a liquid pharmaceutical preparation known as Pediatric Piptal with Phenobarbital to be given the child for her colic. He telephoned Krown Drug Store on the night of September 13th, 1965, and spoke with a pharmacist, Reese Dismukes, specifically prescribing Pediatric Piptal with Phenobarbital which was to be administered in .5 cc dosages every eight hours. Mr. Dismukes dispensed a prepackaged drug which he testified was labeled Pediatric Piptal with Phenobarbital by Lakeside Laboratories which prepared it but later investigation proved that the pharmaceutical preparation dispensed was not Pediatric Piptal with Phenobarbital but some other substance which has not yet been positively identified.

It should be noted that the pharmacist in question did not prepare this drug for human consumption. He merely selected the prepackaged preparation from his stock, removed the manufacturer's label, and replaced it with the Krown Drugs' label. It should be further noted that in this situation, the standard of care for the pharmacist is extremely high for he must ascertain that the drug he dispenses is exactly that prescribed by the physician. He is also responsible for any signs of deterioration which might be observed from the prepackaged pharmaceutical.

The drug in question was delivered to plaintiff's house that night, but it wasn't given to the child until September 15th. After that date it was administered on two other occasions until the mother noticed that the child began having black stools around the 17th of September. Mrs. Potter also noticed the child appeared to be more cross than usual and was crying more often. She then called Dr. Casey who suggested she be put on a bland diet. The black colored stools continued and Mrs. Potter called Dr. Casey on the night of September 23rd so that he might examine the child.

Dr. Casey examined the child the night of September 23rd and again according to his records on September 24th. He found nothing abnormal about the child physically, except that the stool which was tested for the presence of occult blood showed a positive result. A blood count was also taken, but it proved to be normal. The doctor then prescribed that the child be taken off the medication and be given a bland diet. He suggested that the parents should observe the child and that they should specifically look for bright red blood in the stools.

Dr. Casey later decided to admit the small child to Southern Baptist Hospital in order that more complete tests might be taken. The tests he prescribed were to determine if Laurie Potter were more susceptible to bleeding than other children. A G. I. series in the small bowel was given and it resulted in a negative finding. The blood tests given resulted in a normal blood count as well as normal clotting and prothrombin time. The Hematest for blood in the stool did, however, show the presence of occult blood.

The final conclusion drawn by Dr. Casey from these tests was that he could not find *200 the specific cause of internal bleeding. There was no evidence of a bleeding point because the tests revealed neither an ulcer nor any gross lesion which could have been detected by X-ray. Thus, the complaint of black stools which showed some trace of blood remained, but the physicians could find no demonstrable cause for this condition. The child was discharged from the hospital on September 29th.

The child was once again brought to Dr. Casey for black stool on October 4th. At this time a slight trace of blood was found, but she had suffered no loss of blood. On October 15th, the grandmother brought the child to Dr. Casey again, but at that time her black stools were traced to her having eaten beets, since the blood test was negative.

The injury then as revealed in the record of facts is that the child had a history of black stools beginning around September 13th and this continued intermittently until October 15th. Because of the evidence of blood in the stool, the child was admitted into the hospital for extensive tests but the tests did not reveal the cause of either the black color or the evidence of blood in the stool.

The expert testimony contained in the record reveals that a black colored stool is not in itself abnormal in infant children and can be caused by a variety of digested matter. Dr. Henry Simon, an expert pediatrician testified that foods containing iron can cause a black stool. For example, beets, spinach, baby's formula milk, the dry milk product Similac, the drugs containing bismuth such as Pepto Bismal can cause a black stool. Blood also can cause a black stool, but Dr. Simon stated that the Hematest given Laurie Potter should have had a higher result in order to identify the blood as the sole cause for the black color of her stool.[1] He further stated that the Hematest is very accurate in determining the presence of blood, but it will not relate the possible presence of iron which could also cause the black color.

Thus the conclusion which is inevitably reached in the analysis of this evidence is that the child had a black stool of some unknown cause and it contained some blood as revealed by the Hematest. The amount of blood in the stool was not enough to cause its black color.

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Related

Perkins v. Brown
236 So. 2d 579 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1970)

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