Washington Hospital Center v. Butler

384 F.2d 331, 127 U.S. App. D.C. 379, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 5005
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedSeptember 29, 1967
DocketNos. 20368, 20369
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 384 F.2d 331 (Washington Hospital Center v. Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington Hospital Center v. Butler, 384 F.2d 331, 127 U.S. App. D.C. 379, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 5005 (D.C. Cir. 1967).

Opinion

SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:

These appeals emanate from a judgment1 on a verdict for appellee, as administrator of the estate of his wife. Beatrice H. Butler, against appellants,2 a hospital and a partnership of radiologists maintaining a laboratory in the hospital premises,3 in an action charging negligence contributing to a fall by and resulting injuries to Mrs. Butler during the course of diagnostic X-irradiation in the laboratory shortly before her death,4

Mrs. Butler, who had been receiving treatment from her personal physician for diabetes, became a patient in the hospital on March 23, 1962. The physician’s admission note, entered on her hospital chart the following day, recited that she had experienced “recent weakness, dizziness, and near-syncopal episodes for about 8 days.” The physician ordered certain diagnostic tests, including an intravenous pyelogram — an X-ray examination of the kidneys during retention of a dye substance previously injected into the blood stream.

The hospital’s arrangements for the pyelogram included a requisition prepared by a nurse. The requisition form contained space for a summary of the patient’s history, information the form [334]*334characterized as “very essential.” In that space the nurse wrote “diabetes with complications” or “diabetic complications,” omitting further reference to the symptoms recorded on the chart.5

On March 26, Mrs. Butler was moved by wheelchair to the radiological laboratory for the pyelogram. The requisition, but not the chart, accompanied her. She walked to a dressing room, donned a gown and walked to an X-ray table. With the assistance of a student X-ray technician, she stretched horizontally on the table, and the technician made the first picture. Shortly thereafter, a resident radiologist injected the dye substance into a vein in her arm. The technician, continuing the procedures with Mrs. Butler lying supine on the table, made a series of X-rays, the process consuming 20 to 30 minutes.

The technician then requested Mrs. Butler to slide toward the bottom end of the table and rest her feet on a foot-board there, explaining that the table would be turned upright. Asked if she could stand, Mrs. Butler replied that she could, and the turning began. Halfway through the maneuver the technician stopped the table and again inquired whether Mrs. Butler was all right and could stand; again the response was in the affirmative.6 The technician then completed the rotation to a vertical position and, leaving Mrs. Butler standing without any sort of artificial support, went behind the radiation shield to take

the next picture. At that point, Mrs. Butler toppled forward, striking her face against equipment on the floor, and fracturing her left cheekbone.

The development of the proof at trial was somewhat a departure from the more usual pattern involving the use of experts to delineate the duties owed by hospitals and radiologists to their patients and to opinionate as to whether they were honored.7 The mechanical steps in the pyelogram procedure, including the upright X-ray, were competently shown, as was the fact that dizziness is sometimes but not always a by-product of a diabetic condition. But neither side adduced evidence relative to the existence or efficacy of medical practice in the community regarding the kind of information inserted in radiology requisitions or the precautions taken before vertical irradiation is attempted.

Moreover, the liability issues were submitted for the jury’s decision on a legal theory atypical of malpractice suits. The trial judge charged in substance that the hospital was accountable for a negligent omission from the requisition of data contained in the chart, and the radiologists for a negligent failure to protect the patient, if a proximate cause of the fall and the patient did not contribute to it. But the jury also was told that for purposes of ascertaining whether there was negligence, all parties’ conduct was to be measured by what a reasonable person of ordinary prudence would have done under the same circumstances.8

[335]*335Appellants complain that the jury should not have been authorized to assess fault by application of the test these instructions supplied. They also urge that expert testimony was necessary to establish any responsibility and any breach for which they might be charged. We disagree, and we affirm.

With but few exceptions, none relevant here, society demands that everyone under a duty to use care observe minimally a general standard. Familiarly expressed judicially, the yardstick is that degree of care which a reasonably prudent person would have exercised under the same or similar circumstances.9 Beyond this, the law requires those engaging in activities requiring unique knowledge and ability to give a performance commensurate with the undertaking. We have verbalized, in terms of the skill and care customary in the community, the special noncontractual standards which hospitals,10 physicians11 and radiologists 12 must observe.

Thus it is that expert testimony is usually essential in medical malpractice cases.13 With lay jurors unlearned and inexperienced in matters of medical science and technique, there must, when the special tests are to be applied, be explanation in order that they may intelligently determine what the criterion is and whether the defendant’s conduct meets it. And it goes without saying that when liability is to be gauged by special rules, juries must be properly instructed accordingly. We recognize fully these principles and the supporting con[336]*336siderations, and we reemphasize our adherence to them.

There are, however, occasions upon which the acts or omissions of medical professionals can be found to fall below even the standard of reasonably prudent care.14 In that event, there is no reason, certainly if the plaintiff assents,15 why the rights and liabilities of the parties cannot be adjudicated through an application of that standard to the evidence.16 Nor is there peculiar need for expert testimony on any issue the resolution of which would not extend the jury beyond the range of ordinary lay knowledge and experience. Even where the special medical standard is invoked as the touchstone of liability, “the proposition that experts alone are qualified to testify as to the manner of treatment of a patient is ‘sound only when soundly applied,’ ” and “ ‘there must be, in the nature of things, many instances where the facts alone prove the negligence, and where it is unnecessary to have the opinions of persons skillful in the particular science to show unskillful and negligent treatment.’ ”17 And we have differentiated situations “where the question turns on the merits and the performance of scientific treatment,” so that “the issue may not be resolved by the jury without the aid of expert opinion,” 18 from “an ordinary case of negligence, where the jury is able to solve the question by applying thereto their own experiences” and “the test is: How would a reasonably prudent man have acted under the circumstances?”19

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Bluebook (online)
384 F.2d 331, 127 U.S. App. D.C. 379, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 5005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-hospital-center-v-butler-cadc-1967.