Willard v. Hutson

378 P.2d 966, 234 Or. 148, 1 A.L.R. 3d 1092, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 293
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 378 P.2d 966 (Willard v. Hutson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willard v. Hutson, 378 P.2d 966, 234 Or. 148, 1 A.L.R. 3d 1092, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 293 (Or. 1963).

Opinion

LUSK, J.

This is an action for malpractice against two physicians in which .the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $40,000 compensatory damages and *150 the defendants have appealed. At the time of the alleged negligent conduct the plaintiff Daniel Willard was an infant eight months old. He was a victim of hemophilia and the charges of negligence relate to the act of one of the defendants in retracting the foreskin of the child’s penis, thus causing it to bleed and bringing about the loss of a portion of the organ known as the frenulum, and to the failure of the defendants thereafter to use proper means to stop the bleeding.

The defendants moved for a directed verdict, which was denied. They moved also separately for withdrawal of each of three specifications'of negligence which the court submitted to the jury in its charge. These motions were 'likewise denied. The rulings are assigned as error.

The essential facts are as follows: The plaintiff is the youngest of five children born to Mrs. Alberta Bray. Two- of his brothers were suspected hemophiliacs and the mother was informed that her uncle and grandfather were also hemophiliacs. Danny (as he is referred to in the testimony) manifested symptoms of the disease when he was three months old after he began to suck his thumbs and they would bleed and his mother was unable to stop the bleeding. Due to their dire poverty Mr. and Mrs. Bray in February 1957 agreed to the adoption of Danny by Mr. and Mrs. Fay Alvin Willard. Mrs. Willard was informed that Danny was a hemophiliac before the arrangements were completed. The adoption appears to have been authorized by the court on March 8, 1957.

*151 The defendants J. M. Hutson and A. B. Mnnroe were physicians and surgeons practicing their profession in Rosehurg as partners. Mrs. Bray brought the baby to the defendants’ clinic on February 21, 1957. Accompanying her was Reverend Howard E. Baker, a local minister, who was aware that the boys in the family were hemophiliacs. Dr. Munroe examined the baby, found that he was undernourished, his buttocks inflamed and chest “wheezy,” and had him taken to the Community Hospital. On this occasion Danny’s thumbs were bleeding and had tape on them. Dr. Munroe, according to Mrs. Bray, asked why the baby’s thumbs were taped and she told brm that she suspected that he was a “bleeder” because he had two brothers at home who were “bleeders.” Mrs. Bray never saw her child after that-. He remained in the hospital until February 28, 1957, his weight increased and his general condition improved and he was discharged to Mr. and Mrs. Willard.

Thereafter the adoptive mother brought the child to the defendants’ clinic for treatment and DPT shots on March 4, 6, 7, April 11, May 24, and June 26, 1957. On the April 11 visit the baby was attended by Dr. Hutson for the first time. On July 26 Mrs. Willard brought Danny to the clinic to be vaccinated for smallpox. Dr. Munroe was not there and Dr. Hutson attended the child. According to Mrs. Willard’s testimony, Dr. Hutson vaccinated the child and then the following occurred:

“Instantly after Dr. Hutson had given the vaccination he reached down inside the child’s diaper; he did not unpin the diaper; and I couldn’t see what he was doing but I could see the movement of his arm and he jerked it back; the child was screaming. I looked at Dr. Hutson and I said, ‘What have you done V He shrugged his shoulders *152 and then I saw the blood. Danny had a little undershirt on that babies wear and the blood hit the undershirt and I saw it on the diaper and I repeated myself, I said, ‘What ¡have you done?’ He just shrugged his shoulders and went to the door and started out, and I asked him to please come back and help the child. He did not come back ever again.”

Mrs. Willard and the nurse in attendance removed the diaper. The nurse got three other diapers with which they padded the bleeding penis.

The bleeding continued after the child was taken home and that evening about seven o’clock Mrs. Willard called Dr. Munroe on the phone, told him about what had occurred that morning as a result of Dr. Hutson’s treatment of the baby and that she thought the bleeding was dangerous because Danny was a bleeder. Dr. Munroe advised her to keep the child quiet and that in a few hours the bleeding would stop. It did not stop and she called Dr. Munroe again and he said to wait a few more hours. The following morning she took the baby to Dr. Munroe’s house. After examining the baby Dr. Munroe told her to take the baby to the clinic, where he met them, and Dr. Munroe applied “pressure bandages” as Mrs. Willard put it. They were at the clinic two or three hours. The bleeding continued, however, and on the next day Mrs. Willard called Dr. Munroe again. He told her that he had done all he could for Danny and that she should take him to another doctor. Upon Dr. Munroe’s suggestion, the baby was taken to Eugene where, on the evening of Sunday, July twenty-eighth, he was admitted into Sacred Heart Hospital under the care of Dr. Robert Overstreet.

It was Dr. Munroe’s recollection that the treatment *153 on July twenty-seventh was at his home, not the office. He testified that he applied ,to the affected area an oxidized cotton material called “oxycel,” which has .the power to cause coagulation and a holding hack of blood and that he was successful in controlling the bleeding. He was becoming suspicious, however, that the child was a hemophiliac and on July twenty-eighth inquired of Mrs. Willard about the family history, but she said that she did not know it. Dr. Munroe conceded that he did not have sufficient knowledge of the disease of hemophilia to undertake its treatment and that he would have referred the case to a specialist before he did so had he known that the child was a hemophiliac.

Dr. Overstreet ascertained that the bleeding was from the frenulum. He made a diagnosis of hemophilia. Two transfusions of blood were given the child, one of 200 cubic centimeters and the other of 100 cubic centimeters. The purpose of the blood transfusion is to restore an element of the blood which is present in normal persons but absent in the hemophiliac. Dr. Overstreet, who was called as a witness by .the plaintiff, testified that there had been no appreciable loss of blood and no serious injury had been done to the child as a result of his previous bleeding. On August third Danny was discharged from Sacred Heart Hospital. The active bleeding had stopped and the child’s coagulation time returned to normal.

Dr. Hutson testified that on July twenty-sixth before the vaccination, which was performed by a nurse, he examined the child and as part of his examination he retracted the .foresldn of the penis. It was easily retracted up to the point just before the corona, but then he had difficulty because the lining of the foresldn was adherent to the glans due to adhesions *154 completely around the coronal area and which prevented him from seeing behind into the sulkus.

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Bluebook (online)
378 P.2d 966, 234 Or. 148, 1 A.L.R. 3d 1092, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willard-v-hutson-or-1963.