Stephens v. Williams

147 So. 608, 226 Ala. 534, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 368
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMarch 9, 1933
Docket6 Div. 242.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 147 So. 608 (Stephens v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephens v. Williams, 147 So. 608, 226 Ala. 534, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 368 (Ala. 1933).

Opinion

BOULDIN, Justice.

The suit is under the homicide statute. Code, § 5696.

The cause was tried on counts 2, 3, and 4 of the complaint as amended.

Count 2 alleged that defendant, J. H. Stephens, a practicing physician and surgeon, “undertook to perform an operation upon plaintiff’s intestate, L. Williams, which said operation consisted in the removal of the tonsils of plaintiff’s said intestate,” and that defendant “so negligently performed said operation” that, as a proximate consequence, the intestate lost his life.

Count 3 avers, as in count 2, that defendant undertook to perform the operation “and to treat and care for plaintiff’s said intestate after said operation was performed,” and defendant “so negligently conducted himself in that regard” that death ensued as a proximate result.

Count 4 follows count 2, adding that the undertaking was “for reward.”

These several counts were good against demurrer. Peck v. Henderson, 218 Ala. 233, 118 So. 262; Horn v. Pope, 205 Ala. 127, 87 So. 161.

It appears in evidence that Dr. Stephens, the defendant, was under contract with the Brotherhood Insurance Company to do the surgical work for those holding proper identification cards; that it was contemplated such services should be rendered at Wood-lawn Infirmary, an incorporated hospital, of which Dr. Stephens was president and operating surgeon, but open to other physicians and surgeons.

Plaintiff’s intestate, the holder of a card, and entitled to surgical services, drove in an automobile from Randolph, Ala., to this infirmary for the purpose of having his tonsils removed. Dr. Stephens performed the operation. The patient died some four to five hours thereafter.

“ ‘A civil action for malpractice against a physician and surgeon may be sustained on proof of a failure to exercise reasonable and ordinary care, diligence and skill in respect to the duty so assumed and undertaken as physician and surgeon — such care and skill as physicians and surgeons in the same general neighborhood, pursuing the same general line of practice, ordinarily employ and exercise in a like case.’ ” Moore v. Smith, 215 Ala. 592, 595, 111 So. 918, 920, and authorities there cited.

The burden of proof was on plaintiff, to show negligence, failure to exercise the degree of care thus accurately defined.

Appellant insists he was due the affirmative charge as to the several counts for failure to prove negligence as charged.

Mrs. Williams testified she accompanied her husband, the deceased, on the trip to the hospital; was with him at all times before he went into the operating room, except for a few minutes while he was dressing, when she was near and in sight of the door of his room; that no one entered the room during that time; that no pre-operative examination was made by any one; that she accompanied her husband into the operating room, where, before the anaesthetic was administered, Mr. Williams said to Dr. Stephens: “Say, Doc, aren’t you going to take a blood test or a heart test?” To which the doctor replied: “You are in fine shape. * * * You came up here to have your tonsils taken out?” Mr. Williams answered: “Yes.” The doctor said: ' “That is what- I am going to do.” Mrs. Williams further testified that at the same time she told Dr. Stephens the patient had only been up from the “flu” about *538 a month, and suggested he better take a heart test.

We here observe there was no error in admitting this evidence, the declarations of the deceased, because of incompetence of the witness. The witness was not incompetent under Code, § 7721. This court has decided that section does not apply to parties to a civil action under the homicide statute. This, for the reason that the estate of the decedent is not interested in the result of the suit. The administratrix is a statutory representative, suing for the sole benefit of beneficiaries named in the statute. True, this plaintiff, as widow, has a pecuniary interest in the result; so has the defendant. But the statute removes all disqualification because of such interest. Both are competent witnesses in this action to any statements by or transactions with the deceased, which are admissible under general rules of evidence. Kuykendall v. Edmondson, 205 Ala. 265, 87 So. 882; Lewis v. Martin, 210 Ala. 401, 410, 98 So. 635.

Evidence of physicians and surgeons, and from text-writings of recognized authority, tended to show that reasonable care requires a pre-operative examination in eases of the removal of tonsils by an operation, known to the profession as “tonsillectomy”; that this includes examination of the heart, the lungs, the kidneys, and a coagulation test of the blood; that such practice prevails among the profession in Birmingham, the general neighborhood of this operation.

The death certificate made by Dr. Stephens, and in evidence, stated as the cause of death: “Acute dilation of heart following anaesthetic for tonsil operation.” Further evidence on the trial tended to show “cyanosis,” a turning ulue of the skin, indicating bad breathing, want of sufficient oxygen, after the operation, and for some time, variously estimated, before his death.

Plaintiff further testified to copious and long-continued bleeding; that Dr. Stephens said at the time: “He was a bleeder. * * * lie bled to death.” This statement was denied.

Dealing with the affirmative charge, and without enlarging on the evidence, we conclude it was a jury question as to whether any pre-operative examination was made; and whether such examination would have disclosed the patient not in condition for an operation by the use of a general amesthetic, at least without preparatory treatment indicated by the professional witnesses.

We fully recognize that professional testimony alone should be looked to for matters of fact or opinion peculiarly within their professional learning and experience. Such evidence is to be taken in connection with other evidence of facts within the knowledge of witnesses testifying thereto. Thus considered, the tendencies of the evidence supported an inference of negligence and its causal connection with the death of the patient.

It is not essential that the evidence reasonably satisfy the jury whether the fatal result was due to heart trouble, lung-trouble, or bad condition of the blood as to coagulation. If the evidence supported a reasonable inference that death was due to any one or more of’ these causes, and would have been avoided by such pre-operative examination as, by the common practice of surgeons in that general neighborhood, are ordinarily made as a reasonable precaution in such cases, and no such examination was made, this was sufficient.

All this, however, is subject to further inquiries. Among them, appellant argues the complaint does not cover any charge of negligence in the matter of a pre-operative examination, that the negligence charge is limited to the actual operation on the operating table, and after treatment under count 3.

Reliance is had on Abridge v. Noble, 114 Ga. 949, 41 S. E. 78, 81, where the negligence charged was allowing a sponge used as a pad in the operation to remain in the wound, and be sewed up inside the body.

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 608, 226 Ala. 534, 1933 Ala. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephens-v-williams-ala-1933.