Stevenson v. Yates

208 S.W. 820, 183 Ky. 196, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 459
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 7, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 208 S.W. 820 (Stevenson v. Yates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevenson v. Yates, 208 S.W. 820, 183 Ky. 196, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 459 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion or the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The appellee and defendant below, S. Annie Tates, is a physician and maintains an office in the city of Cincinnati, Ohio. The appellant and plaintiff below, Mrs. Louise Stevenson, is a married woman living in Covington, and at the time of the matters herein complained of she was about forty-two years of age, having been married about fifteen years and had never borne children.

Defendant had been plaintiff’s physician for some ten years or more, but it had been some time prior to February, 1915, since defendant administered, in any way to plaintiff. On that day plaintiff visited defendant’s office and stated to her certain symptoms which plaintiff had experienced and was experiencing, and at the time requested defendant to take charge of her case and submitted herself to defendant for proper treatment. This,, of course, required as a prerequisite a proper diagnosis of plaintiff’s affliction. Defendant made no physical examination but stood behind the plaintiff while she was seated in a chair and held plaintiff’s hands for about ten minutes when she told plaintiff that she was suffering with kidney trouble. The symptoms which [198]*198plaintiff related to defendant were that she was suffering with shortness of breath, with pains in her back and stomach and perhaps some others. At that time defendant prescribed for plaintiff and gave her different kinds of medicines, to be taken at prescribed times, sufficient to last for three weeks, during which time plaintiff was required to and .did report to defendant her condition. Plaintiff continued to visit defendant’s office at periods of about three weeks apart, each time reporting her condition and symptoms as well as the effect of the medicines until some time in June, when, not having been improved, and having experienced, as she says, a crawling sensation in the lower part of her abdomen, which she at that time reported to defendant and asked her if it could be possible that she was pregnant. Defendant told her that she was not pregnant but that she was suffering with stomach and kidney trouble, and that her condition was approaching near Bright’s disease.

Another quantity of medicine was prescribed and plaintiff commenced to visit defendant’s office more frequently and continued to do so until the 15th day of October in that year. Throughout the whole time plaintiff had no periods of menstruation, they being entirely suppressed, a fact which defendant also knew.

On the 19th day of October, four days after plaintiff’s last visit to defendant’s office, there appeared a slight hemorrhage from plaintiff’s privates of which defendant was notified by telephone as well as notified of other conditions and symptoms of plaintiff; and defendant expressed satisfaction over what she said was a return of plaintiff’s menses, and asked plaintiff to visit her office on the following Saturday, which was the 23rd of October.

Plaintiff continued to take defendant’s treatment although suffering considerably and her condition not improving until Saturday morning, when another physician was called in, who discovered that plaintiff was then in labor and about to become a mother. She was removed to a hospital where,' about seven o’clock that night, a fully developed dead child was taken from her with the aid of instruments, after administering to her an anesthetic.

She stayed in the hospital about two weeks and returned home in a weakened condition and very nervous. [199]*199It became necessary, some sixty days thereafter, to return to the hospital, where a slight operation was performed due to conditions resulting from the childbirth. Her weakened and nervous condition continued from that time, according to her testimony, till the day of the trial.

Plaintiff brought this malpractice suit against defendant alleging unskillfulness in properly diagnosing her case, and both unskillfhlness and negligence in the treatment administered as well as advice given relative to plaintiff’s conduct while in a state of pregnancy. She alleged that the medicine administered was of a very strong character and produced pains and rigors within about one hour after being taken, causing plaintiff to become nauseated and very nervous. She furthermore alleged that defendant improperly advised her to continue-to do her house work, which she had done throughout her married life, and whilch consisted in cooking, washing, ironing and general house cleaning, together with operating a sewing machine, and perhaps other labor which it was charged was improper to be performed by a pregnant woman.

The answer was a denial -only of. the negligent acts charged. Upon the trial and at the close of plaintiff’s testimony the court sustained the defendant’s motion for a peremptory instruction for the jury to find in her favor, which resxilted in a verdict accordingly, followed by a judgment dismissing the petition, and to reverse it plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The law is well settled in this, and we believe in all jurisdictions, that a physician or surgeon is answerable for an injury to his patient resulting from- want of the requisite knowledge and skill or from the omission to use reasonable care and diligence in the treatment of the patient -or to exercise such care and diligence to discover the patient’s malady. 21 R. C. L. 379; Dorris v. Warford, 124 Ky. 768; Vanmeter v. Crews, 149 Ky. 335; Acton v. Smith, 150 Ky. 703; Mason, et al. v. Meloan, 165. Ky. 582; Burk v. Foster, 114 Ky. 20, and Barnett’s Admr. v. Brand, 165 Ky. 616.

Concerning the standard of knowledge and skill and the required care which the physician should possess- and exercise under this rule, it is quite generally agreed that he is bound to bestow such reasonable and ordinary [200]*200care, skill and diligence as physicians and surgeons in similar neighborhoods and surroundings engaged in the same general line of practice ordinarily have and exercise in like cases. R. C. L., supra, 381, and cases above referred to.

Plaintiff, upon the trial, after testifying in substance as hereinbefore indicated concerning the diagnosis of her case, the beginning of the treatment, etc., said: “Q. What happened after you took some of this medicine? A. Well, I continued to stay the same. I never got any better. I would feel sick, cramps in my limbs and shortness of breath. Q. Now you began to take the medicine in February? A. Yes, sir. Q. And that continued right along? A. Yes, sir, every day. Q. How soon after you took any of this medicine did you feel any pains in the stomach and have to vomit and stiffness of limbs, how long was that? A. That was all during the time. I felt that way all the time. Q. Was there any period after you began to take the medicine that you did not feel the stiff limbs, pains in the stomach and have to vomit; was there any time after you took the medicine that you did not feel this? A. There was times that I did not take the medicine, and I felt better without it. Q. That you did not feel the stiffness of limbs, pains and.vomiting? A. I felt that way nearly all the time that I took the medicine. Q. How soon after taking the medicine did ymi begin to feel sick. A. About an hour afterwards.”

She then testified in substance that in June or July she began to feel different and explained her changed symptoms to defendant, including' the crawling sensation in her abdomen, when plaintiff told her she had a very powerful gas in her stomach and gave her medicine for it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 S.W. 820, 183 Ky. 196, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevenson-v-yates-kyctapp-1919.