Rahn v. United States

222 F. Supp. 775, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6653
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedFebruary 11, 1963
DocketCiv. A. 1310
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 222 F. Supp. 775 (Rahn v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rahn v. United States, 222 F. Supp. 775, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6653 (S.D. Ga. 1963).

Opinion

SCARLETT, District Judge.

Statement of the Case

This is a ease based on a complaint filed by the plaintiff alleging that the defend *777 ant, the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, permanently injured her as the result of the malpractice of government physicians during the treatment of a broken arm she sustained on March 20, 1959. It was undisputed that the plaintiff was entitled to treatment at the United States Air Force Hospital, at Hunter Air Force Base, Savannah, Georgia, as a military dependant. The plaintiff filed her action on November 24, 1961, alleging that she sustained a fracture of both bones in her right arm at the wrist on the foregoing date and she was treated for this injury at Hunter Air Force Base Hospital. She alleged that by reason of her not being able to receive her hospital records from the government until July 18, 1961, after they had been retired to the Military Personal Records Center at St. Louis, Missouri, for storage, she was not able to learn that the government’s agents negligently reduced and set her fractures and improperly cared for her arm and that this accounted for the fracture of one of the bones in her arm not being united and the fracture of the other bone being improperly united with a ten degree tilt thereby causing deformities.

The government moved to dismiss the plaintiff’s complaint on the ground that it wasn’t filed within the two year Statute of Limitations. This motion was denied in view of the allegation that the delay was caused by the government concealing facts upon which the plaintiff’s claim arose.

The issues were tried before this Court on January 31, 1963, following a detailed statement by counsel for the plaintiff as to what the plaintiff expected to prove. The government made no statement as to its defense; such statement being waived by announcement from gov-, ernment counsel. The plaintiff thereupon proceeded by testifying that she was admitted to the emergency room of Hunter Air Force Base Hospital at approximately noon on March 20, 1959, and her arm was x-rayed. She was told by the attending physician after examination, that due to the swelling in her arm, it could not be reduced or set at that time. She was given some pain pills and told to go home and keep her arm packed in ice and return three days later, the following Monday. The plaintiff testified that she returned as directed and there was another unsuccessful attempt to reduce her fractured arm, even though local anesthetic was used. She was sent home again with the same instructions and told to return the next day, Tuesday, for admittance. That Tuesday afternoon the plaintiff was admitted to the Hospital and on the next morning, Wednesday, she was placed under a general anesthetic and a cast applied. The next day, Thursday, March 26th, the plaintiff was discharged from the hospital and thereafter returned for treatment as an out-patient, as instructed, two weeks later. The plaintiff testified that she returned as instructed on every occasion thereafter. She testified that when the cast was removed a number of weeks after her arm had been set under general anesthetic, she noticed a protrusion at the wrist and that she was unable to use her hand, and upon making inquiry about the condition of her hand and wrist, she was told that her condition would clear up with exercise after the smaller cast which was then placed on her arm was removed. When the smaller cast was removed, the doctor in charge of the plaintiff’s case told her that the arm was well-healed and that she was progressing satisfactorily; that all she needed was physiotherapy and exercise and everything would be all right in time. The plaintiff reported for therapy treatment at all times scheduled and she was subsequently discharged on September 15, 1959.

The plaintiff said she had no knowledge what caused her injuries until July 18, 1961, as she relied upon the assurances given her by the government doctors that her arm was well-healed and would be all right in time, and consequently, she had no reason to think that her arm had been improperly treated until her attorney received the original medical records which showed to the contrary. In fact, the plaintiff stated that she had no idea *778 of bringing an action, or that she even had an action against the government until after receiving these records which were obtained for the sole purpose of proving a claim that she had filed against the parties responsible for her arm being broken in the first place, and that was the reason that she requested the records center to send these records to her. The plaintiff testified that she is still unable to use her hand or rotate her wrist, and that she is suffering pains in her hand and arm continuously, with these pains radiating up into and throughout her shoulder from time to time. She testified that she was unable to perform her normal duties as a landlady of several boarding houses, which includes cleaning and making beds. The plaintiff also testified that she felt that the sum of Seventy-five Thousand ($75,000.00) Dollars would reasonably compensate her for her pain and suffering as the result of her arm being improperly set and for the permanent loss of use and disfigurement of her arm and hand.

Next, plaintiff introduced a series of letters from her attorney to the Commanding Officer of the Hunter Air Force Base Hospital repeatedly requesting the original medical reports on the plaintiff and the official narrative summary of treatment rendered by the attending physician of plaintiff. These letters were introduced without objection from the government. Then the plaintiff introduced a series of letters from the Commanding Officer Hunter Air Force Base Hospital replying to her counsel’s inquiries and requests, which stated that plaintiff’s arm was well-healed. None of these letters indicated that there had been any difficulty in the treatment of plaintiff’s arm other than stating that plaintiff was supposed to be receiving physiotherapy treatment but that she had not been keeping her appointments. They did not reply to the numerous requests for the original hospital records.

The plaintiff then put a local registered photographer on the stand who testified that he had been employed by plaintiff’s counsel to take pictures of her arm while in the hospital at Hunter Air Force Base but the hospital denied him this privilege when he attempted to do so, although he testified that he had, through the years, taken many, many pictures of other patients at this installation with the consent of the hospital authorities, and this was the first time he has ever been refused.

The plaintiff continued by introducing without objection the original hospital records which were finally received from the Records Center in St. Louis, Missouri, by plaintiff’s counsel on July 18, 1961, as an enclosure to a letter dated July 17, 1961. These records reflect that the government doctors were unable to properly align the bones in plaintiff’s arm at the time she was placed under general anesthetic and that they knew this from x-rays taken at the time. The records further showed that when the plaintiff returned three weeks after she had broken her arm, x-rays showed her arm was still inadequately reduced resulting in an upward tilting of the distal fragment, and these records contained the notation that it was too late to reduce her arm. Two weeks later the records show that there still was a completely inadequate result, with the notation that much future arthritic changes and symptoms could be expected.

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Bluebook (online)
222 F. Supp. 775, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rahn-v-united-states-gasd-1963.