Rosenburg v. State Ex Rel. Ambrose

99 A. 680, 129 Md. 418, 1916 Md. LEXIS 172
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 13, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 99 A. 680 (Rosenburg v. State Ex Rel. Ambrose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosenburg v. State Ex Rel. Ambrose, 99 A. 680, 129 Md. 418, 1916 Md. LEXIS 172 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered against the appellant in favor of the appellee for injuries sustained by J. Herbert Ambrose, the husband of the equitable plaintiff, 'which resulted in his death, and which it is alleged were caused by the negligence and want of care on the part of the defendant (appellant) in operating an automobile. Mr. Ambrose was riding on the back seat of a motorcycle, owned and operated by Clarence Erey, which it is alleged in the nurr, collided with and was struck by an automobile being driven by the defendant. The accident occurred on the 22nd day of August, 1914, and Mr. Ambrose died on May 22nd, 1915.

At the beginning of the trial below it was “stipulated and agreed that the death of J. Herbert Ambrose resulted from sarcoma, leaving the cause of the sarcoma open for determination under the evidence in this case.” The appellee claims that it was the result of the injury, while the appellant contends: First, that there was no legally, sufficient evidence of any negligent act- or omission by her causing tho accident; and second, that there was not- sufficient legal evi *420 deuce from which a jury could have properly, found that the injury caused sarcoma.

There are seven hills of exception relating to the admissibility of evidence; and an eighth which presents the rulings on the prayers. The plaintiff offered two prayers, which were granted, and the defendant offered twenty; the ninth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, sevententh and eighteenth of which were granted, and the others rejected. The defendant also filed special exceptions to the granting of the plaintiff’s, first prayer, which were overruled. The' first exception was to allowing a hypothetical question to be asked and answered by Dr. John S. Manger, and the second was to overruling a motion to strike out his answer to that question. The question was1 as follows: “Row, then, it has been testified that J. Herbert Ambrose, prior to August 22, 1914, was a young man of apparently good health and physical condition and apparently had no trouble with his left leg; that in a collision that occurred on that day between an automobile and a motorcycle; upon which he was riding, he was hurled with great force either against the automobile or upon the- ground, and badly jarred and shaken up and bruised upon the left knee; that he was confined to his house for several days, and then resumed work; that shortly thereafter he began to experience trouble with his left leg which caused him to limp; that the condition of his leg gradually grew worse and the leg began to swell between the knee and the thigh; in the latter part of Rovember, 1914, the leg was opened and it was discovered that he was. suffering from osteoid sarcoma. Assuming' all these facts to be correct, will you state what, in your opinion, was the cause of the osteoid sarcoma ?”

The answer Avas: “It was due to traumatism.” Without deeming it necessary to discuss separately the ruling in the first exception, we are forced to the conclusion that there was error in not striking out the answer to the hypothetical question. Dr. Manger had testified in chief that sometime prior to Christmas of 1914, J. Herbert Ambrose called at his office *421 and asked him to examine Ms leg—stating that he had been injured. Two or three weeks after he first examined Mm he had him taken to the hospital, where an exploratory incision was made, and Ms leg opened up for examination. He was present when the leg was opened and he described the conditions that, were found, and said that “there was a culture made of it and the growth was found to be malignant.” He further testified that: “The diagnosis, when I first seen it, was a probably simple periostitis. We mean by that an inflammation of the tissues surrounding the bone, the periosteum, the covering, and we sometimes have that with an ordinary injury, a blow or anything of that kind. After the leg was opened up, and the culture made, it was determined to be a form, of sarcoma. There is a difference in sarcomas; some of them we do not know where they come from. They are malignant growths that appear at certain ages and places. Susceptibility probably has something to do with it, and there is another kind called osteoid cancer, which is a. cancer produced by a blow' or an injury more frequently than any other way. There are a few cases where they can come without- an injury, but these are the ones that develop1 the most rapidly. In this case I diagnosed it as osteoid cancer. * * * Osteoid sarcoma is a malignant growth which develops very raj) idly— one of the most rapid developments- we have where .there is an injury received.”

He also said: “Traumatism is an injury—the coming together of the limb or bone wit-b anything, any bard substance'—rock, iron, stone or anything. It was due to the injury. Sarcoma is more progressive when produced by an injury. It is very much more rapid.” Then on'cross-examination he said: “Sarcoma is perfectly painless at times. There is no way to determine its presence until the swelling begins. It varies in rapidity of growth with the conditions and the persons, developing slowly sometimes and rapidly sometimes. In the same person it may start slowly and then develop rapidly. We cannot tell by examination when *422 the sarcoma really began.” In his cross-examination the following also appears: “Q. How, the ordinary history of sarcoma of the great—the vast majority of ’the oases of sarcoma, has no reference to any traumatism at all, has it? A. Ho. * * * Sarcoma is occasionally associated with an accident, in my mind. The cause of sarcoma is not definitely known. It is caused by an injury at times. We know that, but other conditions we do not know. Accident does not always cause sarcoma. Q. The form of sarcoma that Mr. Ambrose died from could have developed in a purely natural manner—that is, without the connection of any traumatism or injury, could it not? I do not mean in this case, but just taking another case, that type of sarcoma could have developed without any accident at all? A. Oh, yes, yes. It would not have had as rapid a termination, of course. When you asked me the question, I was bound to say they are not all due to traumatism, not all caused by injury; but as I say, they can come without any injury at all to any parts of the body, the legs, arms, mouth, anywhere. Q. (Mr. Poe) : But you say they would not have had such a rapid termination as in this case? A. Ho, not usually. The rapidity of the growth of sarcoma, even where it comes without traumatism varies, and varies in the same patient sometimes. As with every disease, it may start slowly,. and later become rapid. Time does not play an important part, except where there is an injury, and then the time is very much less. Q. Doctor, in order to assume that a previous traumatism has any bearing on the development of a sarcoma, I would have to state to you the time when the traumatism occurred, or the accident occurred, the place where the accident occurred, and the extent of the injury, would I not? A. Yes. Q. So in order for you to, especially in this class of sarcoma of the periosteum, say, you would have to know the injury to the periosteum in order to decide whether that sarcoma had anything to do with the accident, would you not? A. Yes. Age is a great factor there. * * * There must be an

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Presley v. Pepersack
228 F. Supp. 95 (D. Maryland, 1964)
Industrial Service Co. v. State Ex Rel. Bryant
6 A.2d 372 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1939)
Bruins v. Brandon Canning Co.
257 N.W. 35 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1934)
Wilson v. Blaustein
124 A. 886 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1924)
Leland v. Empire Engineering Co.
108 A. 570 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 A. 680, 129 Md. 418, 1916 Md. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenburg-v-state-ex-rel-ambrose-md-1916.