Ross v. Sher

483 S.W.2d 297, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 5, 1972
Docket633
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 483 S.W.2d 297 (Ross v. Sher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross v. Sher, 483 S.W.2d 297, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2477 (Tex. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

SAM D. JOHNSON, Justice.

This is a medical malpractice suit brought by George M. Ross, appellant, against two physicians, Dr. Malcolm Sher and Dr. M. F. Gottlieb. At the close of evidence, the trial court granted a motion for instructed verdict as to Dr. Gottlieb. Special Issues were submitted to the jury as to Dr. Sher. The jury’s findings on both negligence and damages were favorable to Dr. Sher. Based on the jury’s findings the trial court rendered a take-nothing judgment against the plaintiff, Ross. The instant appeal is therefore from an instructed verdict as to one defendant, Dr. Gottlieb, and a take-nothing judgment based upon a jury’s verdict as to the other defendant, Dr. Sher.

The plaintiff Ross had trouble with his perirectal tissues since he received a gunshot wound in that area in 1933. In 1940, he was operated on for a fistula and had recurrent difficulties. In August of 1964, Ross went to Dr. Gottlieb, a general practitioner, who hospitalized the plaintiff for a rectal abscess and incised and drained the perirectal area. Dr. Gottlieb determined that the patient suffered from a rectal fistula and referred him to Dr. Sher, a general surgeon. Dr. Sher also diagnosed the underlying cause of much of Ross’s problem as a fistula. As used here a fistula is a medical term for an abnormal passage or tunnel which starts in the colon and comes out the skin or body surface. Treatment or repair of a fistula is made by inserting a small wire through the tunnel until it comes within the colon. The wire serves as a guide to the surgeon who attempts to repair the fistula by excising the infected tissue and converting the tunnel or passage into a trough. The trough is then expected to heal and close in from the bottom or interior.

Dr. Sher performed a fistulectomy on the plaintiff on September 8, 1964. Plaintiff contends that the operation brought on incontinence, an inability to control bowel movement. It was plaintiff’s contention in the trial court that the incontinence was occasioned by Dr. Sher’s negligently severing the spliincter and levator muscles in the process of the operation. These are muscles by which bowel movement is controlled.

Following the operation Dr. Sher followed the plaintiff in the hospital to September 17, 1964, and at the time he saw him last the wounds seemed to be healing. Ross was discharged from the hospital and Dr. Gottlieb followed him for some time thereafter. It was after the hospitalization that the plaintiff developed incontinence. In December of 1964, he was operated on by a Dr. Melton in an effort to cure the incontinence. He regained continence for an abbreviated period of time but the surgery was unsuccessful because the patient developed a myocin diarrhea, causing the surgery to break down. Later a colostomy was performed to allow optimum conditions for another attempted repair of the muscles.

The trial court submitted twelve Special Issues to the jury. Special Issue No. 1 was an informed consent issue. It asked if Dr. Sher failed to make a reasonable disclosure of the nature and extent of the contemplated surgical procedure, to which the jury answered “we do not”. Predicated Special Issue No. 2 was appropriately not answered. Special Issue No. 3 asked if Dr. Sher incised the plaintiff’s sphincter muscles, to which the jury answered “we do”. Predicated Special Issue No. 4, the negligence issue, asked if Dr. Sher failed to exercise proper care and skill in so doing, to which the jury answered “we do not”. Predicated Special Issue No. S was appro *299 priately not answered. Special Issue No. 6 asked if Dr. Sher incised the plaintiffs levator muscle, to which the jury answered “we do”. Predicated Special Issue No. 7, the negligence issue, asked if Dr. Sher failed to exercise proper care and skill in so doing, to which the jury answered “we do not”. Predicated Special Issue No. 8 was appropriately not answered. Special Issue No. 9 asked if Dr. Sher, in performing the fistulectomy in one procedure instead of multiple procedures, failed to exercise proper care, to which the jury answered “we do not”. Predicated Special Issue No. 10 was appropriately not answered. Special Issues No. 11 and No. 12 asked the expenses incurred for necessary medical care, and the sum necessary to compensate plaintiff for physical pain, mental anguish and loss of earnings. Both of these issues were answered “none”.

Appellant urges fourteen points of error. The first nine of such points assert that the jury responses recounted above are supported by “no evidence” or “insufficient evidence”, or that they are “against the overwhelming great weight and preponderance of the evidence”. An examination of the issues reveals that Special Issue No. 1, the informed consent issue, is factual in nature. It is one on which the plaintiff had the burden of securing a favorable finding and failed to do so. In Special Issues No. 3 and No. 6 the jury found that the sphincter muscles and levator muscle were incised. In Special Issues Nos. 4 and 7, however, the jury failed to find that such action was negligence. Plaintiff again had the burden of securing a favorable finding and failed to do so. In Special Issue No. 9 the jury answered “we do not” to the question inquiring whether proper care was used by Dr. Sher in performing the operation in one procedure, rather than multiple procedures. Once again the plaintiff had the burden of securing a favorable finding and failed to do so. It is to be observed that in each instance the plaintiff is confronted with his failure to obtain an affirmative response on issues wherein the burden is clearly upon him to do so. C. & R. Transport, Inc. v. Campbell, 406 S.W.2d 191 (Tex.Sup.1966). The jury was not, in any instance, persuaded by a preponderance of the evidence.

“In situations such as this where a jury returns a negative answer to an issue upon which the proponent has the burden of proof, the jury’s negative answer need not be supported by affirmative evidence. Therefore, it avails the complaining party nothing to assert that a negative answer is without support in the evidence or is not supported by factually sufficient evidence. Under these circumstances, the complaining party is placed in the position of having to contend that the evidence establishes an injury as a matter of law. See Calvert, ‘No Evidence’ and ‘Insufficient Evidence’ Points of Error, 38 Texas Law Review, 361, 363, (I960).” Smith v. Safeway Stores, Inc., 433 S.W.2d 217, 218 (Tex.Civ.App.—Tyler 1968, writ ref’d n. r. e.). Appellant’s no evidence points of error are overruled.

Appellant’s other points of error nevertheless require a review of all the evidence in the record. Such review is made to determine whether an affirmative response to any of the enumerated Special Issues (1, 4, 7 or 9) was established as a matter of law or whether the jury’s negative answer is so against the greater weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly wrong. We do not so conclude.

Other than what has been heretofore recited, the record reveals that in 1933 the plaintiff was shot twice during a robbery, one bullet exiting just below his tailbone. In 1940, he was admitted to the hospital, after a fall, for drainage of a bad bruise some three or four inches from his tailbone and during this time he was operated on for a fistula. In 1961, he was admitted to the hospital for something similar to a heart attack.

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Bluebook (online)
483 S.W.2d 297, 1972 Tex. App. LEXIS 2477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-sher-texapp-1972.