Rowell v. Todd

155 P.2d 314, 176 Or. 21, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 95
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 155 P.2d 314 (Rowell v. Todd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowell v. Todd, 155 P.2d 314, 176 Or. 21, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 95 (Or. 1945).

Opinion

KELLY, J.

Error is assigned by defendants in the action of the trial court in overruling the motion of defendants for an order of involuntary nonsuit and in overruling defendants’ motion for a directed verdict in favor of defendants.

*22 In support of their assignment of error, defendants urge that all the elements involved in a malpractice action, including the element of proximate cause, must be established by competent medical testimony, and contend that there is no substantial evidence, medical or otherwise, in the record before us, that anything the defendants did, or failed to do, caused the plaintiff any damage or was the proximate cause of the resultant damage.

The testimony is conflicting with respect to the treatment accorded to plaintiff by defendants.

There is little conflict as to what the defendants should have done and should not have done, except as to the propriety of directing that plaintiff be taken to a hospital, and as to the advisability of using the X-ray machine.

As stated, it is insisted by counsel for defendants that there is no competent testimony of a substantial nature to the effect that defendants’ treatment of plaintiff, or the lack of it, was the proximate cause of the damage sustained by plaintiff. For that reason, we will give an outline of the testimony introduced in behalf of plaintiff.

On the 29th day of August, 1941, while plaintiff, a boy of thirteen years of age, with some companions, was jumping from one tie to another at the railroad tracks in Molalla, Oregon, he fell and fractured both bones of his forearm. The end of the radius penetrated his skin and with the epiphysis protruded into the palm of his hand. Upon being advised of his accident, his mother immediately took him to defendants’ office for professional treatment. Defendants gave plaintiff treatment for approximately eight days, and then plaintiff was taken by his mother to Portland, Oregon, and placed under the care of Dr. Otis F. Akin.

*23 Plaintiff, Ms father and Ms mother testify to a course of treatment which they claim defendants gave plaintiff. In effect, plaintiff’s mother testified that when she and plaintiff came to the building on the upper story of which defendants maintained their office, she went upstairs into defendants’ office alone and told Dr. Todd that her boy had broken his arm and asked the doctor to go down and see if he should be taken to the hospital, or if the doctor could take care of it in his office. Upon examining plaintiff, Dr. Todd told plaintiff’s mother to bring plaintiff upstairs and assured her that he could take care of plaintiff there. Plaintiff’s mother observed dirt at the end of the protruding bone. She further testified that Dr. Todd rinsed his hands in a pan of water and wiped them on a towel and then took a wash pan and got some water in it and Dr. Hume put the boy to sleep. Then Dr. Todd poured something in the wash pan, or the water, that smelled like lysol and turned the water milky looking. He then took a piece of cotton and took his hand and washed the bone off with water. Then Dr. Todd took hold of plaintiff’s hand, put' his thumbs against the end of the bone and pushed with his thumb against the end of the bone and pulled against plaintiff’s hand with the other part of the doctor’s hand and forced the bone back in. Plaintiff’s mother further testified that Dr. Hume held on to plaintiff’s elbow to hold it down while Dr. Todd was pulling at plaintiff’s hand and pressing the protruding bone back. Plaintiff’s mother further testified that nothing was done inside the wound to clean it before the bone was pushed back. She also testified that Dr. Todd told her that only one bone was broken.

It is conceded that in caring for plaintiff, defendants made no use of their X-ray machine.

*24 Plaintiff’s mother further testified that after the protruding bone had been pushed back, Dr. Todd pressed around on plaintiff’s arm, then took a piece of gauze and wiped it off and sewed up the open wound. She further testified that no gauze was put in the wound and that Dr. Todd put seven stitches in plaintiff’s arm when he sewed up the wound. That no opening was left but the wound was sewed up smooth and fast. Then, according to the testimony of plaintiff’s mother, the defendants put a piece of gauze packing over the wound and bound a metal splint on with gauze so it would hold his hand to the splint. The doctors then put plaintiff’s arm in a sling which encircled plaintiff’s neck and told plaintiff’s mother to take.plaintiff home and bring him back the next day.

Before plaintiff and his mother left the defendants’ office, plaintiff’s father arrived and when plaintiff’s father asked Dr. Todd if the doctor thought that plaintiff should be taken to a hospital, Dr. Todd said, no, that wasn’t necessary.

Plaintiff’s mother also testified that the needle used in sewing up plaintiff’s arm Avas not sterilized and that Dr. Todd gave her no medicine for her son or medicinal preparation or prescription of any kind and gave her no advice as to treatment, except to tell her to keep plaintiff quiet.

It also appears from the testimony of plaintiff’s mother that she had acted as a practical nurse and was experienced in taking the temperature of those whom she so attended.

From her testimony, it is disclosed that upon August 30, 1941, she brought the plaintiff back to defendants’ office at which time defendant, Dr. Todd, removed the splint and the gauze pack from over the wound, put *25 a fresh pack upon it and put the arm back in the splint. Dr. Todd told her that plaintiff was getting along fine and asked her to bring plaintiff back next day.

The next day, August 31, according to his mother’s testimony, plaintiff’s temperature was 102 degrees. Dr. Todd ascribed the rise in temperature to the “reaction from the break”. Dr. Todd then put a fresh piece of gauze on the outside of the wound “and tied it back up”.

The fourth day after plaintiff’s accident, September 1, 1941, according to the testimony of plaintiff’s mother, there was some pus around the stitches and plaintiff’s temperature was 103 degrees. Dr. Todd is represented by that witness as saying, in answer to her question as to plaintiff’s progress, “All right, he is doing just fine”.

From her testimony, it appears that on this day, namely, September 1, 1941, plaintiff “was suffering something awful and awful restless and couldn’t sleep or rest at all of a night or day either.” Because of plaintiff’s suffering, his father went to Dr. Todd and, according to the father’s testimony, told Dr. Todd that plaintiff didn’t rest at night, whereupon, Dr. Todd said: “I will give you some morphine tablets and that will make him rest.” The directions were to give plaintiff one to put him to sleep so he could rest, and, if he got restless, to give him another one.

Plaintiff’s mother testified that she gave the tablets to plaintiff to relieve the pain. She also testified that plaintiff’s arm began swelling on the second day and just kept swelling all up. According to the mother, Dr. Todd said it was natural for the arm to swell by reason of its having been broken.

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Bluebook (online)
155 P.2d 314, 176 Or. 21, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowell-v-todd-or-1945.