Wharton v. Long

18 Ohio Law. Abs. 147, 1934 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1051
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 31, 1934
DocketNo 2388
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 Ohio Law. Abs. 147 (Wharton v. Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wharton v. Long, 18 Ohio Law. Abs. 147, 1934 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1051 (Ohio Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

OPINION

By FUNK, J.

The record discloses that plaintiff and his wife (the mother of said son) took their son to the office of defendant in Akron about 9 o’clock a. m. of Sept. 5, 1931, for the purpose of having the son’s tonsils and adenoids removed; that defendant performed said operation within an hour after said parents and son arrived at defendant’s office; that a general anaesthetic was given the child; that after the operation the child was placed in an emergency bed in the doctor’s office, where it remained .for several hours; that the parents remained there with their child, and then took it to their home, which was also in Akron; that the operation was not out of the ordinary for removing tonsils and adenoids, and was sue[149]*149cessful so far as the operation itself was concerned; that both parents testified'that the child vomited some that afternoon, kept spitting up some blood, and developed some fever; that the plaintiff and the defendant each had a telephone in their respective residences, and that the doctor also had one in his office; that about 5:30 o’clock that afternoon, plaintiff telephoned defendant, and, according to plaintiff’s testimony, said to defendant: “I asked him if he — told him the condition of the child as best I could explain it, and asked him if he hadn’t better come down. And he informed me that that was natural with that kind of an operation, and he would suggest paregoric, to give him the ordinary doses to quiet his nerves, and perhaps give him some rest.”

Defendant also testified that he had a 'telephone talk with plaintiff concerning the child about 5:30 o’clock on the afternoon of the day of the operation. Concerning what was said in that conversation, defendant testified that “I was informed that the child had vomited a couple of times, and was getting restless, and I was asked whether or not I would recommend paregoric in case the child continued to be restless,” and that he approved the giving of paregoric.

Defendant further testified that he was not asked to go to see the child that evening, that there was nothing said about his coming to see the child, and that he was not informed as to the bleeding of the child, as claimed by plaintiff.

There is thus some conflict in the evidence as to just what information was given defendant by plaintiff over the phone on the evening of the day of the operation.

The evidence further discloses that plaintiff gave the child paregoric as suggested by himself or the doctor, but that it did not quiet the child, and that the child continued to be restless, to vomit, and to have fever during the night; that plaintiff did not again call the defendant by telephone until the next morning about 8 to 8:30 o’clock, when defendant was preparing to go to see his father; that defendant immediately sent Dr. Rechsteiner to see said child, which doctor was the one who had administered the anaesthetic to .said child at the time of said operation; that Dr. Rechsteiner arrived at plaintiff’s home in about a half hour, examined the child, took some blood from its ear for examination, and advised taking the child to the hospital at once.

Plaintiff did not accept Dr. Rechsteiner’s advice, but at once sent for another doctor, who arrived at plaintiff’s home within several hours after Dr. Rechsteiner left, and gave the same advice Dr. Rechsteiner had given. The child was thereupon taken to the hospital, where a hypodermic was given it, and, after certain blood tests, was given a small blood transfusion the next day. Soon thereafter an abscess developed on the child’s back, also one on its arm, where the instrument was inserted for the blood transfusion, and also others in its ears, and the child became quite sick and carried a fever for some weeks thereafter.

It will be noted that no claim is made for any negligence in performing the operation or for anything that was done after Dr. Rechsteiner arrived at plaintiff’s home the next morning after the operation. The only claimed negligence is that the defendant failed or refused to come to see said child on the evening after the operation, after the plaintiff had telephoned him about the child, as hereinbefore- set forth.

It will be further observed that, while the plaintiff testified that the boy vomited, that his saliva had blood in it, and that he had fever on the afternoon of the day of the operation, it is only by inference that he testified that he so informed defendant, as he does not state in his testimony just what he really did tell the doctor, he testifying only that he “told him the condition of the child as best I could explain it, and asked him if he hadn’t better come down.”

First, the plaintiff in error claims that it was necessary for the plaintiff below to produce expert testimony to the effect that defendant was negligent in failing to call upon the child in response to said telephone conversation; in other words, that it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to show that what the defendant did was not the ordinary, usual and approved method of practice that would have been used by any reputable physician under the information defendant had at the time in question; and defendant also claims that it was necessary for the plaintiff to produce expert testimony to the effect that the subsequent condition of the child was proximately caused by the failure of the doctor to call upon the child as aforesaid; in other words, that plaintiff was required to show, by expert testimony, that the necessity of said blood transfusion and said development of abscesses was the proximate result of the failure of defendant to visit the child after said telephone conversation on the day of the operation and administer such treatment as its condition required; and accordingly, the defendant claims that, in the absence of said expert testimony, it was error to render judgment for the-plaintiff.

[150]*150The rule is recognized in Ohio, and we believe properly so, that expert testimony is not always required to enable a jury to determine whether a physician has been guilty oí negligence or malpractice, and this is particularly so where the conduct of or treatment administered by the physician is of such a character as to warrant the inference of want of care or negligence in the light of the knowledge and experience of the jurors themselves as ordinary laymen.

The doctor and the father of the boy were the only witnesses who testified as to what was said by the father to the doctor at said telephone conversation, and if the jurors believed the father as to what he testified he told defendant, and were justified in inferring that the child had a fever and was bleeding to the extent testified to at the trial by the parents, and that the father so informed the defendant, we do not believe it would require much, if any, expert or opinion testimony to support a finding that defendant was negligent in not going to see the child and administering to its needs on the evening in question.

As to whether expert testimony was necessary to show that the necessity of a blood transfusion, or that the development of abscesses, was the direct result of the failure of defendant to visit the child and administer to its needs on the evening in question, that is an entirely different proposition. Although it may be possible, or even probable, that said condition of the child subsequent to the operation may have resulted from the failure of defendant to visit the child on the evening in question and administer such treatment as the condition of the child required, there is no direct evidence to show that it did.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Ohio Law. Abs. 147, 1934 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wharton-v-long-ohioctapp-1934.