Prevey v. Watzke

234 N.W. 470, 182 Minn. 332
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 16, 1931
DocketNo. 28,108.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 234 N.W. 470 (Prevey v. Watzke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prevey v. Watzke, 234 N.W. 470, 182 Minn. 332 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

*333 Hilton, J.

Defendant appeals from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

Plaintiff recovered a verdict of $12,000 against defendant, a licensed dentist, for malpractice. Plaintiff, 33 years of age, Avas a nurse of five years’ experience. On March 5, 1928, suffering with an impacted right upper third molar (wisdom tooth) she Avent to defendant’s office. He advised its extraction and undertook the operation. He Avas not accustomed to the removal of such teeth, usually sending such patients to a specialist for that purpose.

Defendant first administered novoeaine to plaintiff’s gums, and in half an hour, when its effects began to wear off, he injected more. He stated that the work done by him occupied one hour, Avhile evi-. dence on the part of plaintiff placed the time at one and a half to tAvo hours. The impacted tooth was of a medium size with a single straight root. In his work he used a lancet, forceps, an elevator, and a bore driven by an electric engine. He did not get the tooth out although he told plaintiff and her brother that he did. When asked for the tooth, he stated it had been broken up and thrown away. He had removed some pieces of bone. He had felt in the back part of plaintiff’s mouth with his finger and discovered a bony ridge and went in for it, thinking it was the tooth.. He collected two dollars for each of tAvo X-rays taken and five dollars for extracting the tooth.

Suffering great pain and discomfort, plaintiff a few days later went to Dr. Kelley, another licensed dentist practicing in the same locality as the defendant. Dr. Kelley extracted' the tooth easily in about five minutes, prying it out with an elevator. There were no marks on the tooth; it had not been touched by defendant’s instruments. Dr. Kelley found that the flesh had not been cut away from the top of the tooth by defendant, nor was there any opening in it.

He further found in the right rear inside of the roof of the mouth a hole one and one-fourth inches deep and one-half of an inch in diameter. It Avas beyond the immediate area and vicinity of the *334 tooth to he removed. Defendant said he did not remember making the hole, but the jury was more than justified in finding that he did. In making it, bone, muscles, and blood vessels had been crushed and removed, and the palatine nerve severed. The extent of plaintiff’s injuries will be referred to later.

Dr. Kelley made his extraction by taking hold of the tooth from the outside of the jaw. When on the stand for cross-examination under the statute (the first witness) defendant stated that he went after the tooth from the inside and volunteered the statement, not in answer to any question, “I thought that was the proper way, and it was the proper way.”

Later, while Dr. Kelley was testifying as a ivitness for plaintiff, he was asked: “In the removal of impacted wisdom teeth, should the careful practitioner, in the exercise of ordinary care, in general practice in doing that work in this community, attempt to get at the tooth from the inside?” The question was objected to as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, calling for a conclusion of the witness, and not the proper test of negligence. The court overruled the objection, and the witness answered: “He wouldn’t attempt it from the inside.” ,The witness was further asked: “In getting this tooth out, was it necessary, in your judgment and from your experience and knowledge of this case, to do any of that cutting into the bone that he did there?” The same objection was interposed, and the witness was permitted to answer “no.”

Another qualified expert was asked: “From your knowledge of this matter of the removal of impacted teeth, and your knowledge of the anatomy of the mouth and the location of the nerves and the purpose of these nerves, and all conditions involved in this particular case, if we assume that Dr. Watzke made this hole there, as Dr. Kelley testified, was that necessary for- the removal of an impacted wisdom tooth?” This was objected to as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, no proper foundation, and not the proper test of negligence. The objection was overruled, and the witness answered “no.” He was further asked: “Was any part of the making of that hole that Dr. Kelley testified he found there, if we assume *335 that it was made there by Dr. Watzke, necessary?” The same objection was interposed with the same ruling. Other questions of the same nature with the same objections and same rulings followed, resulting in answers to the effect that it was not the proper way to attempt the extraction and that it should have been from the outside.

Defendant when on the stand in his own behalf testified that thebe was no such hole in plaintiff’s mouth when she came to see him; that to make such a hole would have been bad practice; that there would be no sense in the world for a dentist to make such a hole, and other testimony along the same line. He also stated that a hole such as Dr. Kelley says he found could not have been utilized in any way in getting out an impacted tooth. He further stated that it was not necessary to destroy the nerves that were destroyed in order to take out an impacted tooth and that it would be very bad practice.

The trial court was not in error in its rulings on the admission of the evidence of the two experts hereinbefore referred to. The rule announced in Berkholz v. Benepe, 153 Minn. 335, 190 N. W. 800, and approved in Lorenz v. Lerche, 157 Minn. 437, 196 N. W. 564, was in no way violated even if the facts brought this case within the rule.

The defendant had voluntarily stated that going after the tooth from the inside was good practice. He himself raised the practice issue. It practically covered the question of negligence. Plaintiff had the right to introduce evidence to contradict defendant’s original claim of good practice.

Taken in connection- with the other testimony of the defendant when on the stand in his own behalf and also other evidence received without objection, he was in no way prejudiced by the rulings. He had by his own testimony of inexperience shown his incompptency to do the work. None of defendant’s expert witnesses attempted to show that his work was performed properly or in the usual way.

*336 Plaintiff insists with some force that it was not even a question of good practice for it was conceded that the cutting of the hole was not necessary and was wrong.

It might even be, in the absence of any satisfactory explanation, that defendant’s work was so manifestly wrong that intelligent laymen might so find without expert testimony. Defendant was employed to extract a tooth, not to dig a hole in the roof of plaintiff’s mouth with the resultant injuries. Vergeldt v. Hartzell (C. C. A.) 1 F. (2d) 633. The question as.to whether defendant was negligent was clearly for the jury; its finding of negligence was overwhelmingly established by the evidence.

Plaintiff’s loss of hearing was one of the elements of damage. The complaint alleged loss of hearing in her right ear only. The evidence on the part of both plaintiff and defendant established practically a total loss. There was evidence developed on both sides as to some loss of hearing in the left ear, all without objection.

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Bluebook (online)
234 N.W. 470, 182 Minn. 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prevey-v-watzke-minn-1931.