Purcell v. Zimbelman

500 P.2d 335, 18 Ariz. App. 75, 1972 Ariz. App. LEXIS 785
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedJuly 20, 1972
Docket2 CA-CIV 1130
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 500 P.2d 335 (Purcell v. Zimbelman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purcell v. Zimbelman, 500 P.2d 335, 18 Ariz. App. 75, 1972 Ariz. App. LEXIS 785 (Ark. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

HOWARD, Judge.

This was an action for negligence against a hospital and several doctors. Prior to submission to the jury, all doctors were dismissed from the action except Dr. Purcell.

The jury returned a $150,000 verdict against both the hospital and Dr. Purcell. In this appeal the hospital presents the following questions:

“1. In order to prove a prima facie case, must the plaintiff prove that defendant’s alleged negligence caused injury to the plaintiff? Specifically, in this case, was the plaintiff required to prove that the hospital’s alleged negligence in failing to restrict or supervise Dr. Purcell after the Blickley and Hill cases resulted in the injury to the plaintiff ?
2. Even though it may be proper to introduce into evidence the fact that a doctor has been sued on two previous occasions for malpractice on the issue of whether or not a hospital had notice of the doctor’s possible incompetency, is it proper to advise the jury of every fact and circumstance of those lawsuits including the judgments rendered, and is it further proper to introduce into evidence two other lawsuits which have nothing to do with the disease or treatment at issue in the instant case, and in which there is no evidence that the doctor was guilty of professional negligence?
3. If a physician called to testify as an expert witness about the standard of practice of hospitals testifies that a hospital should restrict or supervise anyone who is proven guilty of malpractice on two occasions, and that his hospital does so, is it error to restrict the cross-examination of that witness so as to prevent the introduction of evidence of the fact that many doctors at that hospital have been adjudged guilty of negligence on more than two occasions, and have not been restricted in any manner?
4. May a medical treatise or article be used substantively, in light of the fact that the article is hearsay and there is no opportunity to cross-examine the writer ?
5. When one of the primary issues in the trial is the location of an obstruction in the plaintiff’s bowel, is it error to deny the defendants the right to call a radiologist as a witness who can testify as to the location of the obstruction by reading a barium enema x-ray in evidence ?
6. Was it error to deny a motion for mistrial when a witness who was called to testify to alleged prior malpractice by Dr. Purcell inaccurately said, T won my case’ (against Dr. Purcell) shortly before her counsel advised the jury that she had sued for ‘6 figures or more,’ since such evidence would indicate the erroneous concept that Mrs. Hill, the witness, had sued Dr. Purcell and had successfully recovered ‘6 figures or more?’
7. What is the duty of a hospital toward its patients? Is it liable for the negligence of physicians who are not employees but are on its staff, and acting as staff members or committee members ? Is a hospital liable for the failures of its *79 surgical staff if it does not have reason to know that the surgical staff is not policing itself properly?”

Dr. Purcell presents the following questions for review:

“1. Where this appellant [Dr. Purcell] was charged with negligence in the management of a single patient, was the trial court in error in refusing to grant this appellant’s motion for severance when the jury heard substantial testimony concerning four other units of litigation?
2. Where an entire hospital file is in evidence, did the court abuse its discretion in refusing to allow this defendant to call a witness to interpret the x-rays of the plaintiff?
3. Did the court commit error in the giving of plaintiff’s instruction number 3, ‘Error in Judgment’ and the refusal to give defendant’s instructions 6, 7 and 8?”

The facts considered in the light most favorable to support the verdict are as follows.

In April of 1969, Henry Zimbelman, 62 years of age, began having trouble with his bowels. He went to an osteopathic general surgeon who found an obstruction in the descending colon and admitted Zimbelman to Tucson General Hospital on April 14, 1969. Dr. Coy Purcell, a general surgeon, was asked to consult. Purcell’s initial diagnosis was that Zimbelman had either cancer or diverticulitis 1 of the lower large bowel. The trouble in Zimbelman’s case was located above the peritoneal reflection. 2 A barium enema x-ray report showed a complete obstruction in the area of the rectosigmoid junction. 3

Zimbelman was also given a sigmoidscopic examination by Purcell which consists of the insertion of a tube-like instrument called a sigmoidscope through the anus, up the rectum and into the colon. According to the testimony of Purcell the sigmoidscope passed 17 cm. from the outlet of the anus, which meant that it passed through the entire rectum, through the peritoneal reflection and into the rectosigmoid junction. This meant that the diseased portion of the bowel was located at least 17 cm. above the outlet of the anus.

On April 18, 1969, Purcell operated on Zimbelman and found a lesion running circularly around the rectosigmoid colon. Since Purcell could not tell by sight whether the lesion was cancerous he had a pathologist come into the operating room to look at the tissue. Although surgical standards require the surgeon to obtain a frozen section 4 , relying on the pathologist who said the lesion looked like cancer, Purcell performed a “cancer operation” called a “Babcock-Bacon proctosigmoidectomy.” 5 This procedure was first described by and is named after Drs. Babcock and Bacon and is also called a “pull-through” operation.

In doing the “pull-through” Purcell first opened the abdomen and removed a piece of the bowel. The uppermost portion of what was removed was three inches above the point of the lesion. Purcell then took the end of the remaining bowel (called the proximal end) and “pulled it through” the peritoneal reflection into the rectum, where he attached it at the anus. All of the bowel and rectum below the proximal end of the resection were thus discarded. Purcell did not first institute a temporary colostomy 6 because he did not think it was necessary, *80 even though there had been contamination of this proximal end before he pulled it through into the rectal area and attached it to the anal outlet and even though he knew there had been an infectious process in the abdomen.

Purcell testified that he could not have performed an anterior resection 7 on Zimbelman because the lesion was low down in a cylindrical pelvis, he had an inadequate cuff and had no room to work.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
500 P.2d 335, 18 Ariz. App. 75, 1972 Ariz. App. LEXIS 785, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purcell-v-zimbelman-arizctapp-1972.