Vigil v. Herman

424 P.2d 159, 102 Ariz. 31
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1967
Docket8165
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 424 P.2d 159 (Vigil v. Herman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vigil v. Herman, 424 P.2d 159, 102 Ariz. 31 (Ark. 1967).

Opinion

UDALL, Justice.

Aurora P. Vigil, plaintiff below, brings this appeal from the trial court’s granting of a directed verdict in favor of the defendant, Doctor Jack J. Herman.

Commencing in about September of 1957 and continuing through September of 1960 the plaintiff consulted with and was treated generally by the defendant in his capacity as a general medical practitioner.

In April, 1962, plaintiff commenced this suit, alleging that due to defendant’s failure to properly examine, diagnose, treat, prescribe or advise plaintiff, a tubercular condition from which she suffered was permitted to reach an advanced stage.

At the close of all the evidence the defendant was granted a directed verdict. The trial judge indicated that the verdict was granted for the following three reasons, stated by the defendant in his motion:

(1) The plaintiff failed to sustain the burden of proof in proving the medical standard in the community.

*33 (2) The plaintiff failed to show proximate cause between the alleged malpractice and the injury allegedly resulting therefrom.

(3) Plaintiff failed generally to prove the material allegations of her complaint.

On this appeal plaintiff presents nine assignments of error, supported by ten propositions of law. It is necessary for us to consider only the points raised by assignments number 6 and 7, and to some extent, by numbers 8 and 9. The gist of plaintiff’s claim in these assignments is that the medical standard in the community was properly established, that proximate cause was shown, and that plaintiff had established her case sufficiently to withstand a motion for directed verdict and to have the case submitted to the jury.

In order to establish the standard of medical practice, and thus to show what defendant should have, but allegedly did not do, plaintiff offered the following testimony of Dr. Clifford E. Ernst.

(NOTE: The basic facts of this case are hypothetically recited in the quotation. In a later part of this opinion the facts will be indic-cated in greater detail, as necessary) :

“Q. Doctor, I want you to assume a set of facts concerning a patient, and based upon those facts I will ask you questions.
Assume a female Spanish-American patient 24 years of age. She has had in her family home as a child some 10 to 14 years earlier a sister who has had thoracoplasty because of tuberculosis, a niece who has had a pulmonary resection because of pulmonary tuberculosis, a brother-in-law who has died because of pulmonary tuberculosis, a personal history which shows an illness three months long or longer in which the patient believe to have been tuberculosis.
Your records show that on November 16th, 1957, recent chest x-ray, ‘normal’.
On May 11th, 1959 patient reports fainting at work.
On May 13th, 1959 patient reports malaise, fatigue, poor appetite.
May 19th a tubercular skin test is taken, and you treat the patient with vitamin injection.
May 21st the tuberculin skin test is read to the patient as three plus positive.
June 13th, 1959 x-ray report by the radiologist, Dr. Kennedy, reads:
‘This individual will have to be observed very carefully for there is a good possibility that this represents a smouldering minimal tuberculosis lesion which we did not detect on the wet films.’
June 16th, cocci test and complement fixation test are taken, that is, the blood for one and the test administered for the other.
June 18th and June 23rd sputum is sent to the State Laboratory.
Now, subsequently, you have received the report back that the Valley Fever Skin test was negative and the complement fixation test of Valley Fever is negative.
At this point, Doctor, would the standard of practice in the community of Phoenix have required a general practitioner to follow and to continue to follow the symptoms of the patient ?
“A. Yes.
“Q. And, doctor, assume the further added fact:
That on July 10th, the patient submits to a gastric washing which washing is reported on the 24th and 31st of August, 1959 as negative by smear and negative by culture.
Would the standard of practice in the community have required a general practitioner to continue to follow the symptoms of the patient?
“A. Yes.
*34 “Q. ■ Would the standard of practice have required the general practitioner to do further work-up such as lab studies ? By that I mean x-ray, sputum, gastric washing.
“A. Yes.
“Q. And by following the symptoms, Doctor, does that include following the symptoms of fatigue, malaise, loss of appetite, loss of weight, fever and fluctuation of temperature? Does it include those things ?
“A. All these factors have to be taken into consideration.”

In: addition to the above testimony, on the issue of standard of practice much of the testimony of the defendant is pertinent, and in view of our decision in Stallcup v. Coscarart, 79 Ariz. 42, 282 P.2d 791, it is not open to question that the standard in the community may be established by defendant’s testimony. In this respect, Dr. Herman testified (a) as to what the standard of practice required generally of a general practitioner, and (b) as to what he actually did or would have done, if he had had an opportunity. We emphasize the words “would have done” because it is defendant’s contention that plaintiff’s uncooperativeness prevented him from doing the general “work-up” which he allegedly would have performed if the plaintiff ' had cooperated. Defendant’s claim that the plaintiff did not cooperate has no bearing on the sufficiency of plaintiff’s attempt to establish the standard of practice in the community, for regardless of her, attitude in this respect, a matter which we will fully consider later in this opinion, the fact remains that both Dr. Ernst and the defendant testified as to what the standard of practice required, and the defendant testified in great detail concerning'what he actually did or allegedly would have done. In view of the abundance of testimony on this issue, we find no merit in defendant’s claim that the standard was not shown sufficiently so as to provide the jury with a standard by which to measure the defendant’s conduct. It follows that the trial court erred when it found that the standard of medical practice in the community was not adequately established by the plaintiff.

We now turn our consideration to the remaining questions of whether the plaintiff sufficiently established proximate cause and the general allegations of her complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
424 P.2d 159, 102 Ariz. 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vigil-v-herman-ariz-1967.