Shannon v. Ramsey

193 N.E. 235, 288 Mass. 543, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1315
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 193 N.E. 235 (Shannon v. Ramsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shannon v. Ramsey, 193 N.E. 235, 288 Mass. 543, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1315 (Mass. 1934).

Opinion

Field, J.

These two actions of tort, each against a physician for malpractice in treating the plaintiff’s broken leg, were tried together. The jury returned a verdict for the defendant Ramsey and, by direction of the judge, a verdict for the defendant Dolan. The cases come before us on the plaintiff’s exceptions to the direction of a verdict for the defendant Dolan, to the exclusion and admission of evidence and to the charge of the judge in the action against the defendant Ramsey.

There was evidence of the following facts: The plaintiff’s leg was broken August 30, 1926. Two days later Dr. Ramsey, a general practitioner, came to the plaintiff’s home, put the plaintiff’s leg in the fold of a pillow, tied it with a clothes line, and said that he could not set the leg but would be back the next day with another doctor. The next day he returned with Dr. Dolan, a specialist in surgery, who, with Dr. Ramsey’s assistance, put the leg in a cast. Dr. Dolan did not see nor talk with the plaintiff or his wife again. The evidence was conflicting as to whether the defendant Ramsey was treating or purporting to treat the plaintiff except as above stated. But it could have been found that he saw the plaintiff at his home about twice a day for two or three weeks and once a day for two weeks, being paid each time for his visit, and then stopped coming to see the plaintiff. Another physician saw the plaintiff October 29 when the cast was still on the leg. An X-ray photograph was made October 30. None had been made before. The plaintiff was admitted to a hospital November 2. The outcome of the case was unfavorable.

[547]*5471. The verdict for the defendant Dolan was directed rightly.

The plaintiff contends that the jury could have found this defendant negligent in (a) failing “to use proper skill in performing the operation,” (b) “treating the plaintiff at home,” (c) failing “to advise the plaintiff that hospitalization was necessary,” (d) “putting on a temporary cast without advising the plaintiff that it was only temporary and that a later reduction of the fracture would be necessary,” (e) “failing to have X-rays taken,” and (f) “failing to continue to attend the plaintiff after putting on the cast.” The evidence, however, did not warrant a finding of negligence or other malpractice.

The duty of this defendant to the plaintiff was determined by the nature of his employment by the plaintiff, particularly whether it was a general employment to take charge of the case or an employment only for the specific occasion when he went to the plaintiff’s home. There was no evidence of employment in express terms, and the nature of the employment must be implied from the circumstances. There was evidence that this defendant was asked by Dr. Ramsey to see a “broken leg case” which he had as a general practitioner, and that this defendant saw the plaintiff at his home, once only, in consultation with Dr. Ramsey, diagnosed the case, gave advice, made an incomplete reduction and put a temporary plaster cast on the plaintiff’s leg to prevent it from getting worse. The plaintiff testified, without contradiction, to a conversation in his presence between this defendant and Dr. Ramsey tending to show that as between Dr. Ramsey and this defendant the former was then in charge of the case and the latter a consultant. There was no evidence that the treatment given by this defendant was more than temporary and in the nature of an emergency treatment, or that any arrangement was made by the plaintiff or Dr. Ramsey for this defendant to continue to attend the plaintiff or tó see him again — except as the plaintiff testified that this defendant said that he would come the next day and bring a pair of crutches — or to take over the charge of the case from Dr. Ramsey. This [548]*548evidence, with other evidence not recited, did not warrant the finding of an implied general employment of this defendant to take charge of the case which would impose on him the duty to continue to attend the plaintiff. See Nelson v. Farrish, 143 Minn. 368, 371-372. See also Cross v. Albee, 250 Mass. 170, 175.

It follows from what has been said that the liability of this defendant, if any, must be based on his conduct on the one occasion when he attended the plaintiff and the necessary incidents thereof. There was no evidence that this defendant did not have proper professional skill or use such skill on this occasion unless in the specific respects relied on by the plaintiff and hereinafter considered. No inference to the contrary can be drawn from the plaintiff’s testimony that the defendant “looked at the leg and started putting the cast on and that is all he did in the way of examining.” There was no evidence of inadequacy of such an examination and the matter was not within the field of common knowledge possessed by the jury. Nor could an inference of lack of, or failure to use, proper skill be drawn from the unfavorable outcome of the case. Semerjian v. Stetson, 284 Mass. 510, 514.

There was no evidence that this defendant was negligent in “treating the plaintiff at home.” It is true that this defendant, on cross-examination by plaintiff’s counsel, testified “that this was no case to treat at home, that it was a case for hospitalization from the beginning to the end,” but it is obvious in the light of the witness’s other testimony that this statement was not an expression of his opinion in respect to the temporary emergency treatment which he gave the plaintiff. Kettleman v. Atkins, 229 Mass. 89, 91. See Lowell v. Boston Storage Warehouse Co. 280 Mass. 234, 237. And the somewhat similar testimony of Dr. Ramsey goes no further. Furthermore there was no evidence that this defendant did not use proper skill because he gave such temporary treatment without an X-ray photograph. Such evidence as was introduced was to the contrary, though there was evidence of the necessity of an X-ray photograph in the treatment of a broken leg. The [549]*549other contentions of the plaintiff bear upon the treatment of the case after the temporary treatment. There was no evidence that this defendant was responsible for such later treatment except as his being called in consultation by the physician in charge of the case and his giving temporary treatment imposed upon him the duty to advise with respect to future treatment. And, whatever was the actual connection of Dr. Ramsey with the case, there was no evidence that this defendant was not justified in dealing with him as the physician in charge. Consequently it could not have been found that this defendant failed to use proper skill because he did not advise the plaintiff that the cast “was only temporary and that a later reduction of the fracture would be necessary.” The jury could not have found, in the absence, as here, of evidence on the subject, that the consulting surgeon, in the exercise of proper skill, could not reasonably rely on those facts being known to the physician in charge, present when the temporary treatment was given, without his being told them, and on such knowledge being adequate notice to the plaintiff of the future requirements of the case. Similarly it could not have been found that this defendant failed to use proper skill in failing to advise that an X-ray photograph be made and that the plaintiff be treated in a hospital, for there is no evidence that this defendant did not seasonably advise Dr. Ramsey to this effect, and, moreover, the plaintiff’s testimony, in this respect uncontradicted, shows that he knew that both this defendant and Dr. Ramsey contemplated that an X-ray photograph should be made.

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Bluebook (online)
193 N.E. 235, 288 Mass. 543, 1934 Mass. LEXIS 1315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shannon-v-ramsey-mass-1934.