Welch v. Shaver

351 S.W.2d 588, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2551
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 6, 1961
Docket7123
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 351 S.W.2d 588 (Welch v. Shaver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welch v. Shaver, 351 S.W.2d 588, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2551 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

CHAPMAN, Justice.

This is an appeal by defendants below, Winton Welch and Henry A. Spivey, osteopathic physicians, from a judgment of the trial court based upon a jury verdict for Dorothy Jo Shaver, joined by her husband, J. D. Shaver, in a malpractice case against the two named defendants. Appeal was perfected to the - Sth Supreme Judicial District, whose court sits in Dallas, and the case transferred to us by the Supreme Court for determination.

In September, 1958, Mrs. Shaver, then 29 years of age and the mother of three children went to the offices of Drs. Welch and Harakal, osteopaths, in the city of Mesquite in Dallas County to seek relief from a cramping in her lower stomach. Dr. Harakal first saw her and after examining her told her that she needed surgery to correct the position of her uterus. In November, 1958 Dr. Welch examined her and told her the same thing. Then in December, 1958, immediately after Christmas, she was placed in East Town Osteopathic Hospital in Dallas County to be prepared for surgery. At that time Dr. Spivey, an osteopathic specialist in obstetrics and gynecology, gave her a pelvic examination. Before the beginning of surgery she was given the frog test for pregnancy, which, according to the osteopaths, showed negative. On December 29, 1958, when her abdomen was opened for surgery Drs. Spivey and Welch discovered that she was pregnant. Despite such discovery they continued with the uterine suspension. Severe and painful consequences resulted. One objective symptom of her pain appeared in a dimple of one to two centimeters depth overlying the operative scar in the mid-portion of her lower abdomen, which later surgery indicated was caused by adherence of the uterus to the anterior abdominal wall. During the time appellee was suffering so much following the surgery by the osteopaths she consulted Dr. Joey M. Pirrung, M. D., a young general practitioner. Feeling the need of a specialist in the case he called in *590 Dr. Robert G. Campbell, who did a caesarean section to deliver the child at the end of the gestation .period because its head could never engage the pelvis for normal delivery.

^During the progress of the trial the court permitted a trial amendment to be filed by appellee which alleged negligence on the part of appellant “in proceeding to perform a suspension type operation upon Mrs. J. D. Shaver after they had learned that she was pregnant.” The case was submitted to the jury upon this one ground of negligence.

The sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict was dependent, at least in part, upon the testimony of the two medical doctors, Dr. Pirrung and Dr. Robert G. Campbell, Chief of Obstetrics & Gynecology at the University of Texas Medical School in Dallas and a specialist in that field of medicine. Therefore, we are at the outset presented with the question of whether the testimony of the medical doctors was admissible against the osteopaths in the field of obstetrics and gynecology.

In the landmark case of Bowles v. Bourdon, 219 S.W.2d 779 at page 782 our Supreme Court has announced the general rule with respect to the evidence necessary to establish a cause of action against one’s doctor for malpractice in the following language:

“It is definitely settled with us that a patient has no cause of action against his doctor for malpractice, either in diagnosis or recognized treatment unless he proves by a doctor of the same school of practice as the defendant; (1) that the diagnosis or treatment complained of was such as to constitute negligence and (2) that it was a proximate cause of the patient’s injuries.”

Some 4 years later the same court properly recognized that it would be utterly unrealistic to hold that medical witnesses would be incompetent to give opinion testimony against osteopaths in what constitutes the proper use of a spinal needle in administering a spinal anesthetic, where the proof showed that witnesses representing both the medical and osteopathic schools were trained in the use of a spinal needle in administering a spinal anesthetic and' that both were trained that it was highly dangerous to give the anesthetic above the first lumbar vertebra. 1

In that same case Justice Calvert, now Chief Justice of the court, said “some of the courts of other states recognize that the general rule of exclusion is subject to certain qualifications and exceptions,” and then named two exceptions into which the facts brought his case. One of-those exceptions was “where the particular subject of inquiry is common to and equally recognized and developed in all fields of practice.”

In the latest case we have seen on the competency of medical doctors to testify against those of the osteopathic school 2 Justice Young of the Dallas Court of Civil Appeals has said: “If the methods, training and dangers incident to the operation in question are common to both schools of medical practice and equally recognized,” the testimony of Drs. Pritchard and Ware 3 in our opinion, is brought well within the qualification announced in Porter v. Pur-year, supra.

We have carefully studied the 445-page Statement of Facts in the instant case and find that it is replete with testimony, particularly from the osteopaths, to the effect that in the field of obstetrics and gynecology both schools of training use practically the *591 same text books in their instruction, the osteopaths take many of the same medical journals as the M.D.’s, use many of the same techniques, and recognize the same medical writers in that field as authority. For example, both medical witnesses and both osteopathic defendants recognize the writing of TeLinde 4 as authority in the field of gynecology.

As one example of the testimony of the osteopaths in this connection Dr. Welch said:

“A. With the exception of osteopathic principles and practice, and you’ll find the osteopathically-edited books for that particular part of the educational process; but your basic sciences and your other sciences (surgery, obstetrics, gynecology, and so forth) medical texts are used.”

Another illustration is in the testimony of Dr. Spivey wherein he said in substance that the only difference in the teaching and training of the two schools were those instances in which the osteopaths use manipulation type therapy to correct something of a mechanical nature, such as a crick in the neck, instead of giving aspirin or narcotics.

Dr. Pirrung testified that prior to about 1953 all medical schools were taught to do uterine suspensions, and that only late graduates, those since about 1953 have been discouraged in doing them and that he believes in other methods. So, it would be just as reasonable for us to say that in an OB-Gyn case 5 Dr. Pirrung would be an incompetent witness against another M.D. who was educated before 1953, merely because his individual opinion reflects the recent developments in the profession, as it would be for us to say the medical doctors were incompetent to give testimony against the osteopaths in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
351 S.W.2d 588, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-shaver-texapp-1961.