Sinz v. Owens

205 P.2d 3, 33 Cal. 2d 749, 8 A.L.R. 2d 757, 1949 Cal. LEXIS 237
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1949
DocketSac. 5982
StatusPublished
Cited by123 cases

This text of 205 P.2d 3 (Sinz v. Owens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sinz v. Owens, 205 P.2d 3, 33 Cal. 2d 749, 8 A.L.R. 2d 757, 1949 Cal. LEXIS 237 (Cal. 1949).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

A jury returned a verdict for $17,500 in favor of Rudy Sinz for damages occasioned by the medical treatment of Dr. Raymond L. Owens. Subsequently, the physician’s motion for a new trial was denied upon condition that Sinz consent to a reduction in the amount of damages to $10,000. Sinz refused to accept the reduction and a new trial was granted on the issue of damages alone. Dr. Owens has appealed from the judgment and Sinz has filed a cross-appeal from the order granting a new trial.

*752 As the result of a traffic accident, Sinz sustained a double comminuted fracture of the tibia and fibula of his left leg. The breaks were just below the knee and above the ankle. He was taken to a hospital in Lodi and, at his request, Dr. Owens was called to treat his injuries. The controversy centers around the treatment given by Dr. Owens upon the basis of a series of X-ray photographs and other evidence tending to show the patient’s progress.

The first photographs were taken shortly after Sinz reached the hospital. According to Dr. Owens, because they showed good bone alignment, he applied a plaster cast. The photographs taken immediately after the cast was applied disclosed some angulation, but the doctor stated that he was satisfied with the results as shown by them. Photographs taken about 12 days later indicated further angulation and the absence of callus formation. When the cast was taken off, three months after the injury, the angulation was approximately 12 degrees and the callus formation still soft.

By the end of another two months, X-ray pictures showed that the angulation had increased to 19 degrees at the upper fracture and 5 degrees at the lower one. At the time of trial, the angulation was 30 degrees at the upper fracture and the same amount as before at the lower break.

To prove malpractice, Sinz called Dr. Allen F. Morrison as an expert. Dr. Morrison testified that the standard of practice in California is to use skeletal traction on a double comminuted fracture. He also declared that, regardless of the choice of treatment made by Dr. Owens when he first saw his patient, the X-ray photographs subsequently taken showed the need for some form of traction, and traction would have been feasible as late as the time when the cast was removed. Other evidence in the record is to the effect that, at the time of the accident, it was the general custom of physicians practicing in Lodi to refer cases requiring skeletal traction to a specialist in Stockton, about 12 miles away.

As grounds for reversal of the judgment, Dr. Owens contends that Dr. Morrison was not qualified to testify as to the standards of medical practice in Lodi. He also relies upon error in the instructions to the jury, and asserts that he was prejudiced by the submission of the X-ray photographs to the jurors for their inspection. In his appeal from the order conditionally denying a new trial, Sinz takes the position that because insufficiency of the evidence was not specified as a *753 ground for the ruling, the court had no authority to set aside the jury’s determination fixing the amount of the damages.

The voir dire examination of Dr. Morrison shows that he was then practicing medicine in the town of Oakdale, about 27 miles south of Stockton. He testified that his practice was a general one and extended to Turlock, Modesto, and Escalón, the farthest of these places being approximately 40 miles south of Stockton. Lodi, where Dr. Owens had his offices, is about 12 miles north of Stockton. Oakdale and Turlock are smaller than Lodi; Modesto is somewhat larger.

The standard of care against which the acts of a physician are to be measured is a matter peculiarly within the knowledge of experts; it presents the basic issue in a malpractice action and can only be proved by their testimony (Trindle v. Wheeler, 23 Cal.2d 330, 333 [143 P.2d 932]; Pearson v. Crabtree, 70 Cal.App. 52 [232 P. 715], noted in 14 Cal.L.Rev. 70; 7 Wigmore on Evidence § 2090 [a], p. 453), unless the conduct required by the particular circumstances is within the common knowledge of the layman. (Engelking v. Carlson, 13 Cal.2d 216 [88 P.2d 695].) And competency of an expert “is in every case a relative one, i. e. relative to the topic about which the person is asked to make his statement. ” (2 Wigmore on Evidence [3d ed.] § 555, p. 634.)

The criterion in this regard is not the highest skill medical science knows; “the law exacts of physicians and surgeons in the practice of their profession only that they possess and exercise that reasonable degree of skill, knowledge, and care ordinarily possessed and exercised by members of their profession under similar circumstances” (41 Am.Jur. [Phys. & Surg., § 82] p. 201). The proof of that standard is made by the testimony of a physician qualified to speak as an expert and having in addition, what Wigmore has classified as “occupational experience—the kind which is obtained casually and incidentally, yet steadily and adequately, in the course of some occupation or livelihood.” (2 Wigmore on Evidence [3d ed.] § 556, p. 635.) He must have had basic educational and professional training as a general foundation for his testimony, but it is a practical knowledge of what is usually and customarily done by physicians under circumstances similar to those which confronted the defendant charged with malpractice that is of controlling importance in determining competency of the expert to testify to the degree of care against which the treatment given is to be measured.

*754 The courts have encountered some difficulties in stating a general rule by which to measure the qualifications of a physician to testify on the issue of standard of care. As developed by succeeding decisions, it has not been uniformly phrased either in language or in substance, but originally, and for reasons of practical necessity, it was based upon geographical considerations which stemmed from the variations in facilities in various communities. ' '

In California the standard has been variously limited to general medical custom in the “same locality”' or “vicinity” (Trindle v. Wheeler, 23 Cal.2d 330 [143 P.2d 932]; McGuire v. Baird, 9 Cal.2d 353 [70 P.2d 915]; Taylor v. Fishbaugh, 26 Cal.App.2d 300 [79 P.2d 174]; Rasmussen v. Shickle, 4 Cal. App.2d 426 [41 P.2d 184]; Howe v. McCoy, 113 Cal.App. 468 [298 P. 530]; Hopkins v. Heller, 59 Cal.App. 447 [210 P. 975]), or “the same or similar community” or “locality” (Thomason v. Hethcock,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
205 P.2d 3, 33 Cal. 2d 749, 8 A.L.R. 2d 757, 1949 Cal. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sinz-v-owens-cal-1949.