Reynolds v. Struble

18 P.2d 690, 128 Cal. App. 716, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1208
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 18, 1933
DocketDocket No. 8079.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 18 P.2d 690 (Reynolds v. Struble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Struble, 18 P.2d 690, 128 Cal. App. 716, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1208 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

PARKER, J., pro tem.

This is an action wherein plaintiff sought to recover damages from defendant, a practicing physician and surgeon, for and on account of alleged negligent diagnosis and treatment of plaintiff while the latter was a patient under the care of the said defendant. The case was tried in the court below by a jury and a verdict returned in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $20,000, upon which verdict judgment was entered. Thereafter defendant moved the court for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, which motion was denied. Defendant appeals from the judgment entered pursuant to the verdict and from the order and judgment denying the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

A reversal is sought by appellant upon numerous grounds, which may be detailed as follows: 1. The evidence in the case is insufficient to justify or sustain the verdict. 2. The trial court committed reversible error in denying the motion of defendant for a directed verdict and also in denying the motion of defendant for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. 3. Error of the trial court in its rulings on the admission and rejection of evidence. 4. Error in the instructions to the jury. 5. The verdict is excessive. The first two grounds urged necessarily involve the same points, both going to the sufficiency of the evidence.

Before outlining the facts the contention of appellant on this phase of the case may be noted. He contends that in a case such as this two things are essential to a recovery by plaintiff. The alleged negligence must be shown and also there must be evidence sufficient to connect the negligence with the claimed damage.

Plaintiff was, on November 27, 1929, a structural steel worker, following his occupation and employed upon a building being erected in Alameda County. On that date, toward the close of the day, plaintiff was repairing or closing up a hole on- the fourth floor when he lost his balance and fell *720 through. In his fall he dropped to the second floor, going practically two stories, crashing through timbers on the way and landing against a steel column. He was a man weighing approximately two hundred pounds. Fellow workmen came to his assistance and within approximately thirty minutes the injured man was in the hospital at Hayward. His clothing was removed by a nurse, aided by the men who had accompanied him. In a short time after his arrival at the hospital the defendant doctor appeared and took charge of the case. In discussing the diagnosis and treatment up to the time the plaintiff left the hospital the defendant and appellant will be designated and referred to as the doctor. As soon as the doctor arrived he began an examination of the patient, during which he received the history of the accident and the nature of the fall. The condition of the patient, a heavy man as stated, was that of a person in extreme pain, with a severe bruise extending over almost the entire back and the left shoulder was badly contused and abrased with black and blue areas over the left shoulder blade. The patient was unable to move his left arm or lift it at all and protested with emphasis when attempts were made by the doctor to manipulate that member.

It will be unnecessary to detail the steps of the attempted diagnosis, inasmuch as it is not strenuously contended that the doctor failed in any degree of care in as far as the clinical steps went. Suffice it to say that the doctor went through all of the ordinary and recognized procedure. He tested the chest and lungs to ascertain the probability or possibility of injury or congestion; he tested the blood pressure to determine if head injury had been sustained; and he tested the urine to ascertain the reaction of the kidneys or other organs that might, disclose any ill effects from the fall. Thereupon the doctor determined that it was necessary to make use of the X-ray. The touch had revealed no' fractures and the swollen condition of the surface had obscured all anatomical landmarks. Accordingly a portable X-ray machine was brought to the bedside and the patient placed in a position permitting the taking of the picture. A picture was taken and the film developed and studied by the doctor. Upon the completion of the examination, including the X-ray, the doctor stated to the patient *721 and to his friends who were present that there were no fractured bones nor were there any broken bones. The doctor had detected some lung symptoms and stated to the patient that he should be kept in bed for a few days, about one week; the idea being to forestall an onset of pneumonia, which is frequently an aftermath of an injury such as that sustained by the patient. After two days in bed the patient regained normality in every particular save in the injured area. His temperature, respiration, lung action and general condition, aside from the locality of the afflicted area, gave normal reaction, save for a slight cough. After these two days the patient was able to attend to his natural needs and on the eighth day left the hospital. He left in an automobile in which he sat upright in the front seat, being able to walk to and from the auto. From the time of his departure from the hospital to the time of trial he had never returned to the hospital nor received further treatment from the doctor.

The fact is, as disclosed by the evidence, that at the time the injured man was brought to the hospital he was suffering with and from a series of fractures involving almost the entire structure of the left shoulder and its inclusive processes. It will not be necessary here to detail with anatomical accuracy the exact nature of the injury. The structure of the shoulder includes the cavity wherein, rests the head of the humerus (being the long bone of the upper arm) and likewise includes the acromion process which is the highest point of the bony structure commonly referred to as the shoulder tip. Attached to the structure or adjacent thereto and being a part of the functional mechanism is the clavicle or collar-bone and the scapula or shoulder-blade. Lying somewhat under the acromion process is the coracoid process. The negligence and lack of skill charged to the doctor rests upon his alleged failure to discover the true condition existing. It is, as indicated hereinbefore, not claimed that any lack of skill was shown up to the time of the X-ray picture, though plaintiff does not admit there would have been a skilful diagnosis without the use of this agency. But we may pass the questions arising under this head. Whether or not a skilful diagnosis required the use of the X-ray, the undisputed fact is that such a picture was taken.

*722 While the doctor, after reading the developed film of the X-ray picture, decided that there was no fracture present, the X-ray picture discloses a fracture of the neck of the scapula, with an inward and downward displacement. Much medical testimony was adduced by both sides on the subject of this X-ray picture. It seemed to be almost the unanimous conclusion of the experts that the picture was not of the highest type in clarity and detail and likewise it seemed agreed that such a picture would not be accepted as a basis of diagnosis by a doctor possessed of ordinary skill practicing in the community wherein the case arose.

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Bluebook (online)
18 P.2d 690, 128 Cal. App. 716, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 1208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-struble-calctapp-1933.