Scott v. Sciaroni

226 P. 827, 66 Cal. App. 577, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 492
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 16, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 2672.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 226 P. 827 (Scott v. Sciaroni) 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
Scott v. Sciaroni, 226 P. 827, 66 Cal. App. 577, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 492 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

FINCH, P. J.

At all times mentioned in the complaint the defendant was a physician and surgeon, engaged in practice in the city of Fresno. During June and July, 1920, he prescribed and applied radium treatment for fibrous tissue growths upon the hands, knees and Achilles tendons of plaintiff Hazel Scott. The complaint alleges that the defendant “did so carelessly, negligently and unskillfully give and apply said radium treatment ... as to cause burns and sores upon the ankles, hands, knees and Achilles tendons of both legs of said plaintiff; . . . that by reason of said negligence . . . the said plaintiff, Hazel Sc.ott, has during all of the times herein mentioned, suffered, and does now suffer, great pain and anguish, and is permanently disfigured and injured, and will continue to suffer great pain and anguish in the future; that by reason of said negligence on the part of the said defendant and said injuries so caused thereby, the said plaintiff, Hazel Scott, was confined to her bed for a period of about six months; that the said injuries . . . have at all of the times herein mentioned interfered with the work, and does now interfere with the work, of the said Hazel Scott, and that she is unable to move about without great pain and suffering.” The answer admits the application of the alleged radium treatment; admits, by failure to deny, the alleged injuries; but denies that such injuries were the result of any negligence on the part of the defendant. For example, in the second paragraph of the answer appears the following: “Defendant . . . denies that by reason of any negligence of the defendant, plaintiff Hazel Scott is permanently disfigured and injured, or disfigured, or injured at all.” This is not a denial of the alleged permanent injury and disfigurement, or that the same were caused by the alleged treatment, but only a denial that they resulted from any negligence of defendant. At the close of plaintiff’s case, on motion of defendant, the court entered a judgment of nonsuit.

*580 The case was tried in April, 19-22. Dr. Mott, who is a particular friend of defendant and occupied offices with him, testified as follows concerning the condition of Mrs. -Scott’s injuries at the time of the trial: “The bums over the Achilles tendon, it is a raw sore, it is an ulcer, sore that weeps. I mean, there is a serum or exudate that comes from it more or less continuously and tender to the touch. . . . The bum has been painful and has been sloughing. '. . . I think time will effect a recovery. . . . One leg is .shorter than the other. Q. To what do you attribute that shortness? A. To the destruction of the Achilles tendon. Q. . . . Is there any possibility of it ever being remedied? A. Some time it may. . . . Q. Did he (defendant) say anything about the nurse having followed directions? A. I believe he told me that she left the radium on too long. ... I couldn’t swear whether he told me that himself or not. I said I thought he had.” The defendant testified that on one occasion he prescribed an application of radium for three hours and that his. technician, referred to by other witnesses as his nurse, applied it for four hours and twenty minutes and that if radium is applied “considerably too long . . . the healing is all the more difficult.” Mrs. Scott testified that the excessive application was made to the tendon of the left leg, the one on which it is claimed the permament injury was inflicted; that she suffered intense pain from the injury continuously for nearly a year, and that she still suffered therefrom at the time of the trial. Relative to the effect of the treament, she testified that the defendant said “that he considered it was his fault, not exactly his fault, but the fault of his nurse, and him not applying it. . . . He said that he should have been more careful with letting his nurse handle it, and he should have applied it himself.” Plaintiff Charles Scott testified that defendant “said he was very sorry she had been burned and he realized it was his fault and while he didn’t have anything to do with applying the radium any more than directing his nurse, that he was responsible for everything she did in that office.” Ernest Klette, one of plaintiffs’ attorneys, testified that defendant said that “it was Ms fault that she was in the condition she was, that he had written to the insurance company to that effect.” The defendant testified: “Radium has a peculiar effect on tissues of the body and *581 especially so in diseased tissues. In the application of radium to a diseased area it causes a destruction of the cells. . . . Now that is nothing more or less than you might call it, a form of burn, though it is quite different than a burn where you apply hot iron. ... In applying a hot iron to the tissue you immediately destroy the tissue but in the application of radium you so disturb the cell that it dies after a certain period of time . . . varying from a few days to a week or three or four weeks. ... It requires sometimes six weeks and maybe two months for these things to heal.” In this case radium was applied to the abnormal growths on both hands, both knees and the tendons of both legs. Healing seems to have followed in the usual time and manner except in the case of the left leg, where the application was made for a longer time than was prescribed, and at that place there continued to be “a raw sore, ... an ulcer, sore that weeps,” at the time of the trial, nearly two years after the treatment.

Evidence in conflict with the foregoing is purposely omitted because it cannot be considered in determining whether the defendant was entitled to a judgment of non-suit. A court “may grant a nonsuit only when, disregarding conflicting evidence and giving the plaintiff’s evidence all the value to which it is legally entitled, herein indulging in every legitimate inference which may be drawn from the evidence, the result is a determination that there is no evidence of sufficient substantiality to support a verdict in favor of plaintiff.” (Estate of Caspar, 172 Cal. 147, 150 [155 Pac. 634].)

Respondent contends that the judgment of nonsuit was properly entered on the ground of insufficiency of the complaint in various particulars. There are two answers to this contention. First, the grounds now urged were not stated in the motion for a nonsuit and, second, insufficiency of the complaint is not a statutory ground for granting a nonsuit. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 581, subd. 5; Keefe v. Keefe, 19 Cal. App. 310 [125 Pac. 929]; Pacific Paving Co. v. Vizelich, 141 Cal. 4 [74 Pac. 352].)

Respondent urges that a physician and surgeon is not a warrantor of cures; that the result of the treatment alone is not sufficient proof of negligence or want of skill; that “whether or not a defendant physician and surgeon has *582 been negligent or careless can only be tested, ascertained and determined from testimony given by physicians and surgeons practicing the same methods as the defendant”; and that in this case “there is no such indispensable expert evidence that the treatment of plaintiff Hazel Scott by defendant was in any way responsible for the injuries of which plaintiffs complain.” For the purposes of this ease, at least, all the foregoing propositions except the last may be conceded. The defendant himself is an expert in the methods of treatment employed by him.

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Bluebook (online)
226 P. 827, 66 Cal. App. 577, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-sciaroni-calctapp-1924.