Rule v. Cheeseman

317 P.2d 472, 181 Kan. 957, 1957 Kan. LEXIS 436
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 9, 1957
Docket40,611
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 317 P.2d 472 (Rule v. Cheeseman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rule v. Cheeseman, 317 P.2d 472, 181 Kan. 957, 1957 Kan. LEXIS 436 (kan 1957).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Robb, J.:

A petition was filed and a malpractice action commenced by plaintiff against defendant, as personal representative of her deceased husband’s estate, in the probate court where decedent’s estate was being probated. The probate court transferred the case to the district court for trial. At the conclusion of the evidence, which was principally by depositions, a motion by defendant for a directed verdict was sustained and the jury so returned its verdict for defendant. Plaintiff appeals from the order sustaining defendant’s motion for a directed verdict and from the order overruling her motion for new trial.

After the transfer to the district court no additional pleadings were filed and there was no request to amend them except that the words “servant and employee” were stricken from the petition. The petition substantially alleged that Doctor William B. Cheeseman, a resident of Johnson county, died on January 11, 1955, and that the administration of his estate was pending in the probate court; that on May 4, 1954, Doctor Cheeseman and his agent, Doctor Weaver, acting under and in the scope of the direction of Doctor Cheeseman, negligently and carelessly performed a gall stone operation on plaintiff whereby a gauze pad or surgical sponge was left within her body. This caused plaintiff pain, mental and physical anguish, and suffering. Other allegations involved damages totaling $20,000 including the expense of removing the foreign body.

Defendant, as executrix, filed her answer which was a general denial and also a specific denial of any negligence on the part of decedent in connection with plaintiff’s operation.

The cause was submitted to a jury and, as before mentioned, the evidence consisted principally of depositions.

The first deposition offered by plaintiff was that of Doctor B. I. Burns, commissioner of hospitals of Kansas City, Missouri, which included General Hospital No. 1 where plaintiff’s operation was [959]*959performed; the deposition showed the hospital notes and records of plaintiff while she was a patient in and also an outpatient of the hospital; that Doctor Cheeseman was a staff physician at the hospital and staff physician on plaintiff’s case and as such he was the active physician on the visiting or voting staff who supervised the work of residents and internes in the care of patients and who participated in teaching the residents and internes; plaintiff, as were most of the patients, was a charity patient cleared through a welfare agency and Doctor Cheeseman received no pay for his services; a resident is a trainee, not a qualified specialist, but he would be specializing in his field; Doctor Weaver was a resident in surgery, was associated with and assisted Doctor Cheeseman, a qualified specialist in surgery, in the operation on plaintiff; Doctor Weaver was a resident, he was paid for his services from tax money and it was quite probable that he took the lead in the operation because he was far enough along in his training to have been entrusted therewith; the staff man stood over the resident when the resident was permitted to operate; Doctor Weaver was not the surgeon in charge, he was the assistant, although he may have actually done the operating; regardless of a resident’s training, the staff member to whom he is assigned is supposed to be present at anything as serious as a gall bladder operation. Doctor Weaver was graduated in June, 1955.

Plaintiff testified that Doctor Cheeseman conversed with her the previous November about the operation and about two or three days before the operation Doctor Weaver and Doctor Cheeseman examined her in the hospital; Doctor Weaver and Doctor Cheeseman were both with her when she was wheeled into the operating room and Doctor Cheeseman had on operating clothes and a mask; throughout plaintiff’s stay in the hospital she suffered severe pain and pressure at one end of the incision and she had complained of this to the internes and to Doctor Cheeseman; on December 17,1954, she had a second operation by Doctor Pollock, whose deposition shows that X-rays had disclosed an opaque mass in the abdomen and the operation had revealed a surgical tape (a pad of gauze) twelve inches square. It is not customary to find such a situation long after surgery.

Plaintiff’s sister, who was in plaintiff’s room after the operation, testified that during her presence there Doctor Cheeseman was the only doctor who came to plaintiff’s room and he was in surgical clothes.

[960]*960Doctor Weaver’s deposition was then introduced by plaintiff. He had not quite finished his third year of residency in general surgery at the time of the operation; Doctor Cheeseman was advisor and teacher to the residents and as such it was not necessary or customary for him to be in the operating room at all times; the witness doubted that Doctor Cheeseman was in the operating room; Doctor Cheeseman was advisor and not employer of Doctor Weaver; Doctor Cheeseman supervised or observed the witness in surgery; witness signed his own name and by authority from common usage at the hospital, also signed Doctor Cheesemans name to many of the reports; Doctor Cheeseman was witness’s advisor in a student-teacher relationship; the welfare of the patients was their joint responsibility.

At this point in the record plaintiff rested her case, defendant demurred to the evidence, and the demurrer was overruled by the trial court.

Defendant’s first witness was Doctor Harry C. Lapp, chief surgeon on the staff of the hospital, who testified to the effect that a gall bladder operation is a major operation and the visiting staff member is usually in attendance or available in the operating room; this depended upon the resident’s training and ability as determined by the visiting staff surgeon; the following question and answer were a part of Doctor Lapp’s testimony on cross-examination:

“Q. ... If the visiting staff surgeon is in there and he sees that the resident surgeon in training is doing something wrong, or perhaps not doing it the right way, does he have the authority to take over? A. Well, he would have the authority to take over, yes.”

Doctor Marvin Roberts, another resident, testified he was first assistant, Doctor Cheeseman was second assistant, and Doctor Weaver was the surgeon in charge of the operation. The duty of the first and second assistants is to provide exposure in the operating field — to provide an opening by hands or retractors through which the operating surgeon can see the area of the operation.

There was testimony from the witnesses that the nurses, as was the custom, counted the sponges before the operation commenced and a tabulation was made. Before the body cavity was closed the nurses made another count and if it was the same as before, they notified the surgeon to that effect and the opening was closed.

The trial court sustained the motion of defendant for a directed verdict in favor of defendant, directed the jury to bring in its ver[961]*961diet for defendant, discharged the jury and entered judgment for' defendant for costs. Plaintiff filed a motion for new trial which was overruled. Plaintiff appealed.

The trial comb in sustaining the motion for a directed verdict made quite an extensive statement and we believe it will simplify our discussion if we include the statement here in its entirety:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
317 P.2d 472, 181 Kan. 957, 1957 Kan. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rule-v-cheeseman-kan-1957.