Wiley v. Wigg

1926 OK 611, 254 P. 22, 124 Okla. 30, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 564
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 7, 1926
Docket16379
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1926 OK 611 (Wiley v. Wigg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiley v. Wigg, 1926 OK 611, 254 P. 22, 124 Okla. 30, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 564 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion 'by

FOSTER, O.

On tbe 15th day of November, 1922, the defendant in error, as plaintiff, commenced an action in the district court of Tulsa county against the plaintiff in error, as defendant, to recover the sum of $50,575, as damages on account of the alleged negligence of the defendant, a physician, in reducing a fracture of both bones in his left leg, below the knee. Parties will be hereinafter designated as they appeared in the trial court.

Plaintiff alleged in his petition that on the 4th day of June, 1922, he broke and fractured the bones of his left leg three or four inches below the knee, and employed the defendant to properly set said bones in their proper place, and to attend plaintiff until he should be cured; that the defendant entered upon such employment, but was negligent ahd unskillful in setting said bones, in attempting to reduce said fracture, in dressing said leg, and in failing to use proper care and skill in reducing the fracture by-bandaging the l'eg so tightly as to impair and hinder the circulation of the blood in the leg and foot, and' allowed said bandage to remain so ¡long that the foot became gangrenous; that it was necessary to amputate plaintiff’s leg in order to save his life, resulting in great pain and impairment of his usefulness, and that plaintiff was required to spend the sum of $275 as surgeon’s fees, hospital expenses in the sum of $309, and damages by reason of pain and suffering in the loss of his leg in the sum of $50,000, *31 all in the sum of $50,575, for which he prayed judgment.

Thereafter defendant filed his answer denying all- of the allegations in plaintiff’s petition except as were therein admitted, admitting that defendant was a physieian- and surgeon practicing his profession in the city of Tulsa, and that the plaintiff engaged the defendant to administer to his fractured leg. Defendant further admitted that he accepted said employment and entered upon the discharge of his duties, and alleged that he gave the plaintiff the bene fit of painstaking care, and was not careless in any respect in the performance of his obligations to plaintiff, and was not guilty of any negligence, carelessness, or unskillfulness, and specifically denied that he was in any respect responsible for the condition which necessitated the amputation of plaintiff’s leg.

A reply denying the allegations of the answer was filed by the plaintiff, and the cause proceeded regularly for trial before the court and a jury. On November 13, 1924, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $10,090. After unsuccessful motion for a new trial the defendant brings the cause regularly on appeal to this court by petition in error and case-made attached for review. A demurrer was interposed by the defendant to the plaintiff’s evidence at the close thereof, and a motion for a directed verdict at the close of all the evidence, both of which were overruled and exceptions allowed.

■Numerous propositions of error are urged by the defendant to obtain a reversal of the judgment, but in our view the proper disposition to be made of the case, on the record here presented, is whether there was any evidence reasonably tending to support the verdict of the jury, and whether the trial court should not have directed a verdict for the defendant at the close of all the evidence.

We shall therefore first consider wnether there was sufficient evidence to support the verdict of the jury, and in the event we find in favor of the defendant on this proposition it will be unnecessary to consider the oth’er proposition raised.

The primary act of negligence charged by the plaintiff in his petition and relied upon by him as a basis for a recovery was that the defendant, in reducing the fracture, wrapped the bandage too tightly, thereby cutting off the circulation and causing gangrene to develop, making it necessary to amputate the leg in order to save plaintiff’s life.

From our examination of the record, the following facts appear to be established by the uncontradicted evidence: On Sunday, June 4, 1922, plaintiff’s left leg was broken just below the knee during a baseball game, by reason of an apposing player jumping against him and fracturing and breaking both bones just below the knee; that plaintiff was -immediately removed to the Oklahoma Hospital in Tulsa, and in about three-quarters of an hour after his arrival at the hospital, defendant set the leg and enclosed it in a wire splint, padded with cotton, from the heel to about six inches above the knee, wrapping the splint firmly with a cloth bandage of some, kind; that on the following day plaintiff was removed to the Tulsa Hospital, and thereafter the defendant treated plaintiff, visiting him two or three times a day until the following Saturday; that sometime during the afternoon of Saturday following the accident, the defendant left Tulsa to visit a sick relative in a distant state, and Dr. Ray Wiley, a son of the defendant, and Dr. Cronk were left in charge of the plaintiff. These doctors, together with Dr. Goodman, examined the plaintiff immediately, and after a consultation which occurred in the evening it was, determined that an amputation of plaintiff’s leg would be necessary to' save his life.

The examination of the plaintiff made by these doctors before the amputation disclosed the presence in the leg of an infection which these doctors designated as gas bacillus infection. This infection was described as a sort of poisonous gas in the tissue of the leg caused by a germ which they stared entered the leg from the outside, either through some abrasion of the skin or by being carried in the blood stream from the digestive tract, where this germ abounded and deposited in devitalized tissues in the region of the fracture, or, as contended by plaintiff, the infection superimposed itself upon the dead tissues in the leg after it had died. No expert was produced by the plaintiff by whom the presence of this infection was disputed, and all of the experts who examined the plaintiff’s leg prior to the amputation testified to the presence of the infection. There was likewise no dispute that this infection, described as gas bacillus, could not have been directly produced by tight bandaging of the leg, or by pressure from the exterior.

lit is contended by the plaintiff, however, that the defendant was negligent in wrapping the plaintiff’s leg too tightly, resulting in a simple case of moist gangrene. To substantiate this claim he produced one *32 witness, Dr. Gray from Stillwater, wlio testified tliat tlie trouble from which the plaintiff lost his leg was due to pressure from the outside; that the discoloration appearing in the injured leg could only have been produced by pressure, from which it must be inferred that the bandage was ioo tight. No witness testified that the splint in which plaintiff’s leg was enclosed was wrapped too tightly, nor was any direct evidence offered by which the jury was enabled co determine this matter.

To say that because there is evidence that the discoloration in plaintiff’s leg was due to pressure, that -this pressure could only have been produced by a tight bandage, in the absence of any direct testimony thac the bandage itself was too tight, would be to authorize the jury to base its findings upon mere conjecture or speculation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 611, 254 P. 22, 124 Okla. 30, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiley-v-wigg-okla-1926.