Sullivan v. O'CONNOR

296 N.E.2d 183, 363 Mass. 579, 99 A.L.R. 3d 294, 1973 Mass. LEXIS 426
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 9, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 296 N.E.2d 183 (Sullivan v. O'CONNOR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. O'CONNOR, 296 N.E.2d 183, 363 Mass. 579, 99 A.L.R. 3d 294, 1973 Mass. LEXIS 426 (Mass. 1973).

Opinion

Kaplan, J.

The plaintiff patient secured a jury verdict of $13,500 against the defendant surgeon for breach of contract in respect to an operation upon the plaintiff’s nose. The substituted consolidated bill of exceptions presents questions about the correctness of the judge’s instructions on the issue of damages.

The declaration was in two counts. In the first count, the plaintiff alleged that she, as patient, entered into a contract with the defendant, a surgeon, wherein the defendant promised to perform plastic surgery on her nose *580 and thereby to enhance her beauty and improve her appearance; that he performed the surgery but failed to achieve the promised result; rather the result of the surgery was to disfigure and deform her nose, to cause her pain in body and mind, and to subject her to other damage and expense. The second count, based on the same transaction, was in the conventional form for malpractice, charging that the defendant had been guilty of negligence in performing the surgery. Answering, the defendant entered a general denial.

On the plaintiff’s demand, the case was tried by jury. At. the close of the evidence, the judge put to the jury, as special questions, the issues of liability under the two counts, and instructed them accordingly. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff on the contract count, and for the defendant on the negligence count. The judge then instructed the jury on the issue of damages.

As background to the instructions and the parties’ exceptions, we mention certain facts as the jury could find them. The plaintiff was a professional entertainer, and this was known to the defendant. The agreement was as alleged in the declaration. More particularly, judging from exhibits, the plaintiff’s nose had been straight, but long and prominent; the defendant undertook by two operations to reduce its prominence and somewhat to shorten it, thus making it more pleasing in relation to the plaintiff’s other features. Actually the plaintiff was obliged to undergo three operations, and her appearance was worsened. Her nose now had a concave line to about the midpoint, at which it became bulbous; viewed frontally, the nose from bridge to midpoint was flattened and broadened, and the two sides of the tip had lost symmetry. This configuration evidently could not be improved by further surgery. The plaintiff did not demonstrate, however, that her change of appearance had resulted in loss of employment. Payments by the plaintiff covering the defendant’s fee and hospital expenses were stipulated at $622.65.

The judge instructed the jury, first, that the plaintiff *581 was entitled to recover her out-of-pocket expenses incident to the operations. Second, she could recover the damages flowing directly, naturally, proximately, and foreseeably from the defendant’s breach of promise. These would comprehend damages for any disfigurement of the plaintiff’s nose — that is, any change of appearance for the worse — including the effects of the consciousness of such disfigurement on the plaintiff’s mind, and in this connection the jury should consider the nature of the plaintiff’s profession. Also consequent upon the defendant’s breach, and compensable, were the pain and suffering involved in the third operation, but not in the first two. As there was no proof that any loss of earnings by the plaintiff resulted from the breach, that element should not enter into the calculation of damages.

By his exceptions the defendant contends that the judge erred in allowing the jury to take into account anything but the plaintiff’s out-of-pocket expenses (presumably at the stipulated amount). The defendant excepted' to the judge’s refusal of his request for a general charge to that effect, and, more specifically, to the judge’s refusal of a charge that the plaintiff could not recover for pain and suffering connected with the third operation or for impairment of the plaintiff’s appearance and associated mental distress. 1

The plaintiff on her part excepted to the judge’s refusal of a request to charge that the plaintiff could recover the difference in value between the nose as promised and the nose as it appeared after the operations. However, the plaintiff in her brief expressly waives this exception and others made by her in case this court overrules the defendant’s exceptions; thus she would be content to hold the jury’s verdict in her favor.

We conclude that the defendant’s exceptions should be overruled.

It has been suggested on occasion that agreements *582 between patients and physicians by which the physician undertakes to effect a cure or to bring about a given result should be declared unenforceable on grounds of public policy. See Guilmet v. Campell, 385 Mich. 57, 76 (dissenting opinion). But there are many decisions recognizing and enforcing such contracts, see annotation, 43 A. L. R. 3d 1221, 1225, 1229-1233, and the law of Massachusetts has treated them as valid, although we have had no decision meeting head on the contention that they should be denied legal sanction. Small v. Howard, 128 Mass. 131. Gabrunas v. Miniter, 289 Mass. 20. Forman v. Wolfson, 327 Mass. 341. These causes of action are, however, considered a little suspect, and thus we find courts straining sometimes to read the pleadings as sounding only in tort for negligence, and not in contract for breach of promise, despite sedulous efforts by the pleaders to pursue the latter theory. See Gault v. Sideman, 42 Ill. App. 2d 96; annotation, supra, at 1225, 1238-1244.

It is not hard to see why the courts should be unenthusiastic or skeptical about the contract theory. Considering the uncertainties of medical science and the variations in the physical and psychological conditions of individual patients, doctors can seldom in good faith promise specific results. Therefore it is unlikely that physicians of even average integrity will in fact make such promises. Statements of opinion by the physician with some optimistic coloring are a different thing, and may indeed have therapeutic value. But patients may transform such statements into firm promises in their own minds, especially when they have been disappointed in the event, and testify in that sense to sympathetic juries. 2 If actions for breach of promise can be readily maintained, doctors, *583 so it is said, will be frightened into practising “defensive medicine.” On the other hand, if these actions were outlawed, leaving only the possibility of suits for malpractice, there is fear that the public might be exposed to the enticements of charlatans, and confidence in the profession might ultimately be shaken. See Miller, The Contractual Liability of Physicians and Surgeons, 1953 Wash. L. Q. 413, 416-423. The law has taken the middle of the road position of allowing actions based on alleged contract, but insisting on clear proof.

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Bluebook (online)
296 N.E.2d 183, 363 Mass. 579, 99 A.L.R. 3d 294, 1973 Mass. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-oconnor-mass-1973.