Shoemaker v. Friedberg

183 P.2d 318, 80 Cal. App. 2d 911, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1412
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 21, 1947
DocketCiv. 3658
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 183 P.2d 318 (Shoemaker v. Friedberg) 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
Shoemaker v. Friedberg, 183 P.2d 318, 80 Cal. App. 2d 911, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1412 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

This is an appeal from an order granting defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict and from the judgment thereafter entered in favor of defendant.

The action was brought for damages for slander alleged to have been published by defendant on August- 25, 1945, consisting of a statement by him to the effect that plaintiff was suffering from a venereal disease. The answer denied malice and alleged qualified privilege under the provisions of subdivision 3 of section 47 and of section 48 of the Civil Code.

Plaintiff was a married woman whose husband was serving overseas in the Marine Corps at the times involved here. She lived in Bast San Diego and was employed in a drugstore where food was served. She resided with Mrs. Rene Burke, her friend and landlady, and Mrs. Adelaide Bradley, her mother. Defendant was a physician duly licensed to practice medicine in California with offices in the city of La Mesa.

Except as to some details the evidence is not conflicting. Plaintiff called at the office of defendant on Monday, August 20, 1945, for treatment for injuries received in a fall down an embankment while on a picnic. Her condition was such that defendant deemed it necessary to give her a thorough physical examination including tests for venereal disease. A sample of urine and a smear were taken by defendant and sent to a reputable laboratory in San Diego for examination. On the following Wednesday he received a report from the laboratory to the effect that the microscopic examinations of both specimens indicated the existence of the venereal disease which defendant had suspected as a result of the physical examination.

On Tuesday evening, in response to a telephone message, defendant made a professional call on plaintiff at her home, and made an appointment for her to call at his office the following morning, which appointment she did not keep.

On receipt of the report from the laboratory, and plaintiff’s failure to keep the appointment, defendant caused a letter, dated August 23, 1945, to be sent to her which contained the following:

*913 “Your laboratory report arrived this morning. It shows you are suffering from a venereal disease.

“Under the law, we are compelled to report this to the health authorities, and to advise you against working in any establishment handling foods.

“We are anxious to assist you, and we will hold up this report for 24 hours to give you a chance to step in and discuss your problem.”

As plaintiff did not appear at defendant’s office he had one of his nurses attempt to telephone her at the drugstore where she worked. This call was made either on Thursday or Friday. Plaintiff was not at the drugstore but her mother was there taking her place. According to the version of the nurse she merely requested Mrs. Bradley to urge plaintiff to call at defendant’s office for further advice and did not mention the disease from which plaintiff was supposed to be suffering. Mrs. Bradley testified that the nurse told her that plaintiff was suffering from a venereal disease. Under the circumstances of this case we will have to accept this version as true.

On the afternoon of Saturday, August 25th, Mrs. Burke telephoned to defendant’s office. She testified that she asked that the defendant stop bothering plaintiff as the phone calls created commotion at the drugstore. The secretary who took the message testified that she understood it to be a request for defendant to make a house call on plaintiff and so informed the doctor.

He called on plaintiff about twenty minutes later and the conversation occurred that forms the basis of this action. Plaintiff detailed the happenings at that time as follows:

“He came into the living room and asked — came to the door and asked if I had called him, and I answered him, ‘No,’ because I hadn’t and didn’t have any knowledge that he was even to be there. I was sitting at the dinette table and got up and came into the living room and sat down in the chair — in a chair, and the conversation between — Mrs. Burke went to the door, the lady that I was staying with, and she said that she had called him. And he wanted to know why. She said, ‘You should know the reason why, because of the letter that Mrs. Shoemaker has received from you.’ And he asked her, ‘What letter?’ And she said, ‘Do you mean to say that a letter like that would come out of your office without your knowledge?’ And he said, ‘If you are talking about any letter, you will have *914 to take that up with my office nurse. ’ And then he asked her, ‘What letter?’, and could he see the letter; and she said the letter was in a physician’s hands and would be in a lawyer’s hands. So he turned to me and asked what I was suing for, and I said, ‘Who said I was suing?’ Then he shook-his finger in my face and said very loud, ‘Young lady, you are suffering from a severe case of gonorrhea.’ And I said, ‘Dr. Friedberg, I don’t see how you can say that when I have negative reports from a laboratory saying that I don’t have it.’ And he said, ‘I too have laboratory reports from a reliable laboratory that you have a positive smear and are suffering from a severe case of gonorrhea, and if you don’t do something about it and come to my office I intend to take drastic charges against you,’ He turned and walked out the door and said I would pay for the house call.”

The testimony of other witnesses concerning this conversation did not differ materially from that of plaintiff except in minor details and except that defendant testified that plaintiff did not participate in it and that it was between Mrs. Burke and himself.

Plaintiff testified that she received the letter we have quoted on the morning of August 24th; that a neighbor, Mrs. Burgomaster, was helping care for her and received the letter from the postman; that she told Mrs. Burgomaster the contents of the letter and that perhaps she read it; that she disclosed the contents of the letter to Mrs. Burke and Mrs. Bradley prior to August 25, 1945.

Plaintiff consulted another physician who sent her to another laboratory in San Diego for further examination on August 25, 1945. A slide smear was made and examined microscopically and a culture was made, both with negative results. There is evidence in the record that when an examination and tests show the existence of a venereal disease more than one negative test should be made before error in a prior positive test is demonstrated; that such tests should be made from smears taken at different times. However, it is not now affirmatively contended that plaintiff was actually suffering from such a disease.

During the conversation of August 25th, which we have detailed, plaintiff and Mrs. Burke were in the living room of the home. A dinette is next to this living room and connected with it by an arched opening about 5 feet wide. Mrs. Bradley was seated at a table in the dinette. A neighbor, Mrs. Rice, entered the back door of the house during the *915 early part of the conversation and stood by the chair occupied by Mrs. Bradley during the statements made by defendant to plaintiff to the effect that she had a venereal disease. Both Mrs. Bice and Mrs. Bradley heard those statements. Defendant testified that he did not see either Mrs. Bice or Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
183 P.2d 318, 80 Cal. App. 2d 911, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shoemaker-v-friedberg-calctapp-1947.