Simon v. Kaplan

52 N.E.2d 832, 321 Ill. App. 203, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 568
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 24, 1944
DocketGen. No. 42,750
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 52 N.E.2d 832 (Simon v. Kaplan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simon v. Kaplan, 52 N.E.2d 832, 321 Ill. App. 203, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 568 (Ill. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice O’Connor

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought an action against defendant to recover damages claimed to have been sustained by him through the negligence of defendant, a physician, in the use of an x-ray machine on plaintiff’s face in an endeavor to cure barber’s itch. There was a verdict and judgment in plaintiff’s favor for $4,500 and defendant appeals.

The record discloses that defendant is a physician licensed to practice in Illinois since 1913, and for a number of years has been associate professor at the Chicago Medical School where he teaches radiology two days a week and where he holds a clinic Friday afternoons for a group of students; that since 1922 his practice has been limited to the use of x-ray in the diagnosis and treatment of ailments; that plaintiff, who was about 45 years of age, had been employed for a number of years as a shoe salesman and was troubled with what is commonly known as “barber’s itch” which developed about February, 1941. May 17, 1941 he went to the clinic at the Chicago Medical School, and after an examination was referred to defendant because the clinic had no x-ray machine, and on May 29 defendant treated plaintiff’s face using an x-ray machine.

The evidence is further to the effect that at and before the time plaintiff went to the clinic his face was swollen, many pustules were exuding pus, the skin on his face was cracked and bleeding and there were some scabs.

Defendant’s testimony is to the effect that he used the machine 3% minutes on each side of plaintiff’s face where it was affected; that the machine was automatically shut off by a time mechanism at the end of 3% minutes, while plaintiff’s testimony is to the effect that each side of the face was treated about 10 minutes. After the treatment the doctor told plaintiff to return in about 10 days but he did not return until about two weeks, at which time his face was red and at that time defendant gave him some salve and told him to return in about a week or ten days, when defendant would give him another x-ray treatment. Plaintiff did not retufn and did not see any doctor until June 19, when he saw Dr. Caro, a skin specialist, who thereafter treated him two or three times a week at first, later about twice a month and then saw him about once a month to the time of the trial which began January 4, 1943.

Dr. Caro, a licensed physician, called by plaintiff, gave testimony to the effect that he had many years of experience in the field of diseases of the skin — dermatology — and had been engaged in the treatment of skin diseases for a number of years. He described the condition of plaintiff’s face when he first treated him on June 19, 1941; that plaintiff was troubled, with the so-called barber’s itch; that he diagnosed plaintiff’s condition as “an acute dermatitis, produced, probably, by radiation. That is x-ray. ’ ’ That he treated plaintiff a number of times after that day and his condition improved in September or October, 1941. That “At the present time he shows the effects that we usually see in chronic x-ray burn;” that “I use x-ray in my work and have used it since 1928, for fourteen years. I use it in my work only in treating skin conditions. I have had occasion to treat x-ray burns in my practice . . . I have treated at least ten or fifteen cases of x-ray burns in a year.” And he gave as Ms opinion that if proper dosages of x-ray were applied the hair of the face should not fall out permanently, that “atrophy of the skin with discoloration and enlargement of the veins should never follow with the dosages that are ordinarily used.”

Dr. Uhlmann (called by plaintiff) a licensed physician for many years, who appears to have been qualified, testified that he specialized “in radio-therapy, x-ray, diagnostic and therapeutic:” that he had used x-ray in his work since 1925; that he was familiar with the customary use of x-ray in the treatment of barber’s itch; that he had had experience with x-ray burns for the past 14 years; that he saw plaintiff a few days before the trial and observed in his face several signs of disease which he proceeded to mention; that the condition he found on the upper part of the face “could not be due to barber’s itch or the after effects of barber’s itch.” In answer to a hypothetical question he testified: “The logical conclusion is that the patient received more x-ray to the upper part than he received in the lower part of his cheeks;” that in his opinion, the treatment mentioned in the hypothetical question “would not be usual and customary for a specialist to apply enough x-ray to bring about a condition of atrophy of the skin, thinning of the skin, with erosions.”

Defendant in his own behalf testified that he had been a licensed physician since 1913, and mentioned further facts to show that he was qualified to treat patients for barber’s itch. “In 1914 I began to do x-ray work and gradually went into that until about 1922, when I quit general practice and went into x-ray work exclusively. In 1917 or ’18 I became the head of the x-ray department of the Mt. Sinai Hospital of Chicago and maintained that position until 1934.” During that period he had taken courses at Johns Hopkins, the Mayo Clinic and Washington University. “Since 1922 I have limited my practice entirely to radiology, and that is the practice of x-ray diagnosis and x-ray therapy.” That he maintains an office in Chicago and for 10 or 12 years has been associate professor at the Chicago Medical School. “I teach the seniors radiology, and on Friday afternoons I hold a clinic there where I have groups of students. ‘Radiology’ is the science of x-ray.” That he treated plaintiff on May 29, 1941, plaintiff having been sent to the doctor from the clinic, and found “numerous pustules with a redness all over his face including his lips, . . . His face was quite swollen. Many of these pustules were exuding pus. There were many areas that were cracked and they were bleeding, and the incrustations on the face were caused by the exudation of the serum together with the pus and blood, and they were vari-colored from pink to a greenish yellow.” That plaintiff was suffering from what was commonly known as “barber’s itch.” That he applied the x-ray machine 3% minutes to each side of plaintiff’s face. That “It is common after an x-ray exposure on an inflamed surface, that the skin becomes red, and after that redness or erythema subsides, then another x-ray exposure is given. That is the common practice and I have been practicing on patients right along for the last thirty years.” He further testified that he had been treating cases of barber’s itch, about 200 of them, before he treated plaintiff and that he had treated many cases since that time. That “The treatment that I gave the plaintiff on May 29,1941, was the same kind of treatment ordinarily and customarily given by me to patients suffering from the barber’s itch. In fact, he received a less number of R units than I have given to quite a number of others.”

On cross-examination he testified he gave plaintiff 217 R units on each side of the face making a total of 434. Defendant produced a card which he had prepared as a part of his office record at the.

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Bluebook (online)
52 N.E.2d 832, 321 Ill. App. 203, 1944 Ill. App. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simon-v-kaplan-illappct-1944.