Wallace v. Yudelson

244 Ill. App. 320, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 169
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 17, 1927
DocketGen. No. 31,441
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 244 Ill. App. 320 (Wallace v. Yudelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace v. Yudelson, 244 Ill. App. 320, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 169 (Ill. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Gridley

delivered the opinion of the court.

On July 17, 1923, plaintiff commenced an action in case against two physicians, William E. Schroeder and Albert B. Tudelson. The former was a surgeon and chief of staff of the Wesley Memorial Hospital, Chicago, and the latter a specialist in neurology, practicing in Chicago. Subsequently Dr. Schroeder died and the cause was abated as to him, but came on for trial in June, 1926, before a jury against Dr. Tudelson as sole defendant. Plaintiff was a witness in his own behalf and several witnesses testified for him. Defendant also testified at considerable length. At the conclusion of all the evidence the court instructed the jury to find defendant not guilty. Upon said verdict being returned, judgment for costs was entered against plaintiff and this appeal followed.

The declaration consists of five counts, to which defendants jointly filed a plea of the general issue. In the first count it is averred that on, to -wit, August 18, 1921, plaintiff employed defendants in their professional capacity to ascertain, locate and diagnose the nature of a certain ailment or malady from which he then was suffering, and to treat him for the cure thereof, and, if they deemed it advisable, to operate upon him; that he fully informed them of the history of the ailment or malady, the location and character of his pains and the location and extent of the conditions of anesthesia with which he then was affected, etc.; and that defendants treated plaintiff for about a year, etc. It is then charged that during said time defendants “so carelessly, negligently and unskillfullv conducted themselves in that behalf, in attending and treating plaintiff, that, by and through the want of ordinary care and shill upon their part as physicians and surgeons, his said sickness, ailment or malady then and there continued and became greatly increased and aggravated, and he underwent great and unnecessary pain and anguish and was obliged to undergo several operations, and became and is an incurable paralytic and a cripple for life,” etc., to his damage, etc. The charge of the second count is substantially the same, though it is limited to defendants ’ negligent failure to correctly “diagnose” plaintiff’s ailment or malady. In the third count it is charged that defendants “negligently, unskillfully and incorrectly diagnosed plaintiff’s sickness, ailment and malady as a tumor on the spinal cord between the fifth and tenth dorsal vertebrae.” In the fourth count it is charged that they negligently failed “to locate said tumor at the right place” and to remove the same, etc. In the fifth count it is charged, in substance, that they negligently diagnosed the tumor to be pressing on the spinal cord between said fifth and tenth dorsal vertebrae, and negligently performed unnecessary operations for its removal in that region, whereas by the exercise of ordinary care they should have diagnosed it to be between the first and third dorsal vertebra and should have removed it.

The following facts in substance are disclosed from the evidence: In December, 1920, while plaintiff was in Brazil, South America, and riding in a street car,he received a severe blow on his back. He was about 60 years of age. On his return to Chicago, about April 1, 1921, he was suffering from severe pains “emanating near the spine and terminating around in the breast,” and he consulted Dr. Guy Van Alstine, who examined and treated him and suggested that Dr. Elliott, a specialist in lung diseases, be called in consultation. Dr. Elliott examined plaintiff, took X rays, and suggested that plaintiff be taken to a neurologist, and, on Van Alstine’s recommendation, plaintiff, on May 4, 1921, consulted the defendant, Dr. Yudelson. After making an examination Yudelson told plaintiff that, to properly diagnose his trouble, observation and study would be required, and advised his going to a hospital. Plaintiff went to the Wesley hospital on the following day, with the approval of Van Alstine, and daily during the following week he was observed and examined by Yudelson, who made various tests. He told Yudelson the history of his case and that his pains seemed to be “below the shoulder blades where he was hit, and about the ribs down to the pit of the stomach.” At this time plaintiff could walk, although “his gait was rigid and stiff and he scraped the floor with his toes.” Yudelson told him that, as a result of his examination and tests, he was of the opinion that plaintiff had “an approaching paralysis” but that he could not localize the trouble, and suggested further examinations and treatments, and, also, that an operation might have to be performed to remove a possible tumor, near or pressing upon the spinal cord. Plaintiff stated that he was obliged to leave town on important business, and, against Yudelson’s protests that he should not leave until the cause for his pains and condition had, if possible, been ascertained, left the hospital and went to a distant city. Yudelson made a full report to Dr. Van Alstine, whose patient plaintiff was. While plaintiff was away on his trip he noticed that his condition was becoming worse and that he “couldn’t guide his legs,” and he returned to Chicago sooner than he had planned. He again consulted Dr. Van Alstine who took him to Dr. Schroeder (former defendant). The latter, according to Van Alstine’s testimony (plaintiff’s witness) was a noted surgeon, “had done a great deal of neuro-surgery,” had “great ability in surgery for nervous diseases,” and who “generally operated where and when he thought it was necessary.” Schroeder examined plaintiff and made suggestions to Van Alstine for the making by the latter of certain tests and treatments, which suggestions Van Alstine followed. Van Alstine’s treatments extended over a period of about eight weeks. During the early part of August, 1921, at the request of both Van Alstine and Schroeder, Yudelson was again called into the case, and he made thorough examinations of plaintiff and made other tests. At this time plaintiff was in bed and said he was unable to walk, and, in response to his inquiry as to possible relief by an operation, Yudelson expressed doubt if plaintiff would ever walk again or if an operation would help his condition, giving his reasons therefor, based upon his recent examinations and tests, and further stating that any operation would be more or less of a “fishing expedition.” Yudelson testified on the trial that, after making said last examination and tests, the nearest he could come to it in the way of a diagnosis was that whatever there was on the cord, whether a tumor, a swelling or a disturbance of the bone, must be about the sixth, seventh and eighth dorsal cord levels or segments, which would be the fifth, sixth and seventh dorsal vertebrae. He made a written report at the time as to his findings and conclusions and turned the report over to Dr. Schroeder, who finally decided to perform an operation and invited Yudelson to be present and the latter attended it (in Wesley hospital on August 18, 1921) but took no part therein. Van Alstine, who acted as an assistant to Schroeder at the time, testified that “Dr. Schroeder selected the field of operation”; that he did not know just what vertebrae Schroeder opened, but that two or three were exposed and two small plaques were removed. There was apparently no improvement in plaintiff’s condition, and on May 15, 1922, Dr. Schroeder performed a second similar operation, at which both Van Alstine and Yudelson were present. Apparently, no improvement in plaintiff’s condition followed this operation, and he remained partially paralyzed in the lower part of his body.

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Bluebook (online)
244 Ill. App. 320, 1927 Ill. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-yudelson-illappct-1927.