Wells v. World's Dispensary Medical Ass'n

9 N.Y. St. Rep. 452
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 9 N.Y. St. Rep. 452 (Wells v. World's Dispensary Medical Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells v. World's Dispensary Medical Ass'n, 9 N.Y. St. Rep. 452 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

Bradley, J.

The plaintiff came from Ohio to the defendant’s hotel in Buffalo, October 22, 1879, with a view to medical treatment. She had then been afflicted for several years with retroflexion of the womb and inflammation of the adjacent structures, and had been under medical treatment.

Shortly after her arrival at the defendant’s hotel a history of her case was taken by the medical attendants. An examination was made, both digital and specular, and she was informed that she had a uterine tumor, and they -advised its removal. And in a few days she submitted to the operation for its removal, which was performed with a platinum knife, heated to a white heat by a galvanic battery. This is termed in surgery a galvano cautery.

The immediate effect of the operation upon the plaintiff was prostration, and followed by great pain in its locality, which continued while she remained at the defendant’s [454]*454hotel. And the evidence tends to prove that since the operation she has suffered more and been less able to be about and attend to the performance of service than she had been before then. This she attributed to the alleged improper treatment by the defendant while under its care, and mainly to the surgical operation before mentioned.

The physicians who made the examination of the plaintiff and participated in the operation were three in the defendant’s service. One of whom is said to make a specialty of female diseases, and mainly had charge of that department of the medical treatment of the association. Another was an operating surgeon of the establishment, and the third was the financial and business manager of the institution.

They seem to have been united in judgment that the operation should be performed, and by their evidence agree in the fact founded upon personal examination that the plaintiff had at the location mentioned a fibroid tumor of the size of a Concord grape.

The first question requiring consideration is whether the evidence was such as to permit the jury to find that there was no tumor. If there was none the conclusion was' justified that the defendants either did not possess or exercise the ordinary skill which the defendant undertook they had and which they assumed to exercise, as it does not necessarily appear that anything more than the use of ordinary professional skill and care were required to distinguish a tumor situated as this was said to be from any other and less serious condition.

The defendant’s three physicians referred to, by their evidence, state positively that there was a tumor; that they felt it, and with the aid of a speculum, saw it distinctly; that it was removed, and after its removal they looked at it. If their evidence is believed, there was a tumor and they removed it.

This was treated by the trial court as a question of fact for the jury, and submitted to them. These three witnesses had such relation to the defendant, and to the transaction of advising the operation and performing it as to present to some extent the question of the credibility of their evidence in that respect. Dean v. Van Ostrand, 23 N Y. Week. Dig., 97.

Yet if there is no evidence fairly tending to prove to the contrary, the fact must remain as stated by them that there was a tumor, because the burden is with the plaintiff to establish the facts upon which the right to recover depends, and the mere fact that the credibility of a witness against her is involved does not have the effect to prove the non[455]*455existence of the fact so testified to. Wallace v. Berdell, 97 N. Y., 13.

The evidence of one witness (D'r. Adams), on the part of the plaintiff, was that he treated the plaintiff for about two years prior and up to July, 1877, and incidentally thereafter, until August 25, 1879; that during all that time he found no tumor in or about the uterus; that he made a digital and speculum examination on August 25, 1879; that there was then as there had been some enlargement of its neck, but nothing he would call a tumor; that a tumor there would have to be very small not to be observed; that there might be difficulty about it, but if of the size of a Concord grape it ought to be discovered; that it would not necessarily be discovered by one examination, probably would be if examination thoroughly made; that if it had been of that size he should have noticed it; that a fibroid tumor could not have its inception, and develop itself there to the size of an ordinary grape in two months, and that it would take at least a year for it to grow to the size of a robin’s egg or hickory nut, and might take longer if of remarkably slow growth. Another doctor says that a fibroid tumor is of slow growth. And others say that it some times grows rapidly, and might within that time develop from an imperceptible condition to the size represented as that of this one. This is said to have been an interstitial tumor, which is more difficult of diagnosis, and removal than one with a pedicle. There is also the evidence of a doctor that some weeks after the operation he examined the plaintiff, and although he saw a scar at the place of the operation, he thought there had been no tumor there, but upon his further evidence and that of others, as shown by the record, it very clearly appears that a few weeks after the operation, no condition necessarily appeared which could enable one to tell whether or not a tumor had existed there and been removed. The examination which Dr. Adams says he made in August, 1879, was within two months of the examination by the defendants, and when they say they found the tumor. Upon the whole evidence the jury may have found that at the time Dr. Adams made such examination the tumor was there, and escaped his observation because then much smaller than it was two months afterwards. And there is some evidence to the effect that there are other conditions which may be mistaken for a tumor, but that does not, so far as we are able to observe from the evidence, seem to apply to this case so as to justify the conclusion that a skillful physician would be led into such an error. While the evidence on the part of the plaintiff in view of the other evidence (exclusive of that of the defendant’s physicians), did not necessarily prove [456]*456that there was no tumor there at the time of the operation, we think it was sufficient to present a question of fact in that respect for the jury. In view of the questions submitted to them by the trial court, the verdict for the plaintiff did not necessarily depend upon their finding that there-was no tumor, but although they may have found that-there was one removed by the defendant’s physicians, they may have found for the plaintiff, because the operation, should not have been performed, “or was not properly per formed.

And here arises the inquiry whether those questions-should have been submitted to the jury for their consideration and as a substantive ground of liability of the defendant in the eyent they found that there was a tumor removed. The defendant’s counsel took exception to the submission to the jury of any question of fact other than that whether or not there was a tumor, and to the refusal of the court to charge that if there was a tumor the verdict should be for the defendant. The question will be considered in view of those exceptions.

The defendant’s physicians assumed to have, and for its protection were required to possess, at least ordinary professional intelligence and skill, and with .their best judgment to exercise it in the treatment of the plaintiff.

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Related

Carpenter v. . Blake
50 N.Y. 696 (New York Court of Appeals, 1872)
Carpenter v. . Blake
75 N.Y. 12 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)
Wallace v. . Berdell
97 N.Y. 13 (New York Court of Appeals, 1884)
Carpenter v. Blake
60 Barb. 488 (New York Supreme Court, 1871)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 N.Y. St. Rep. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-worlds-dispensary-medical-assn-nysupct-1887.