Willard v. Norcross

85 A. 904, 86 Vt. 426, 1913 Vt. LEXIS 212
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 5, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 85 A. 904 (Willard v. Norcross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willard v. Norcross, 85 A. 904, 86 Vt. 426, 1913 Vt. LEXIS 212 (Vt. 1913).

Opinion

Rowell, C. J.

This is an action.for malpractice as a physician and surgeon. On December 29, 1902, the plaintiff, as she was leaving her place of employment in Island Pond in the town of Brighton, in Essex County, slipped and fell forward onto her outstretched hands and hurt her wrists. The defendant, [429]*429living and practicing in Island Pond, being called to attend her, undertook the case and visited her three or four times before she. left Island Pond and went to Charleston, Yt. The testimony-on her part tended to show that on defendant’s first visit her wrists were swollen and painful; that he took hold of them and moved them back and forth several times and examined them, and said no bones were broken; that she spoke about using liniment, and asked him if any particular kind was needed, and that he said any kind, horse liniment was good, it was strong; that he did not bandage them; that two days after the injury her wrists were swollen a little larger than normal and were black and blue; and that for two months or more she was unable entirely to dress or to feed herself, and had never since been entirely free from pain, does not sleep well, and is unable to use her wrists as effectually as before without causing them to become painful and swollen.

The testimony on her part, given by Drs. Yan Allen and Smith, of Springfield, Mass., further tended to show that she had at sometime suffered an impacted Colle’s fracture of both wrists. On cross-examination Dr. Smith testified among other things that .the plaintiff had apparently a useful wrist, had a good movement of the hand; that he did .not know about the strength of the wrist, her power to work with it, but as far as movements were concerned, she had good movement; that she had more deformity than she would have had, perhaps, if there had been some attempt at replacing the bones and holding them in position, that he should say she had a fair result; that he should not expect a perfect result in a person fifty-five years old, but that as far as function is concerned, the mobility of the joint was as good as could be expected with any kind of treatment On re-direct examination he testified that the prognosis in ease of a woman fifty-five years old suffering a Colle’s fracture of both wrists is good, good hand and useful wrist with a slight deformity. The testimony of Dr. Smith further tended to show that a Colle’s fracture is difficult of treatment; that when the bone is only slightly cracked and no displacement, there is great danger of overlooking it and mistaking it for a sprain.

The plaintiff called the defendant in the opening of her case, and he testified that he had practiced his profession in Island Pond for more than twenty-five years; that on December 29, 1902, he undertook the professional care of the plaintiff, and [430]*430after a careful and satisfactory examination, diagnosed a sprain of both wrists but found no fracture; that in his treatment of her he used only one form of splint, namely, a pillow to support her hands and wrists, which were in no way bound to the pillow but only rested upon it.

Passing all else for the present at least, we come to consider whether there was any medical expert testimony tending to show that the defendant, in his treatment of the plaintiff, did not have and exercise the care and skill then had and exercised by physicians and surgeons in the treatment of like cases in the general neighborhood of said Brighton, for that question is raised by his motion for a verdict. That such testimony was essential to recovery is not denied, and is shown by Wilkins’s Admr. v. Brock, 81 Vt. 332, 343, 70 Atl. 572.

The bill of exceptions says that the only medical expert testimony introduced by the plaintiff for the purpose of showing that the defendant, in his treatment of the plaintiff, did not have and exercise such care and skill as physicians and surgeons in the general neighborhood of Brighton in the same general line of practice as that of the defendant, had and exercised in like cases, — is found in the cross-examination of Dr. Stiles of St. Johnsbury, a witness called by the defendant and qualified as an expert in the X-ray and also as a physician and surgeon; in the testimony of Dr. Mitchell, 'of Lancaster, N. H., deceased, given at the first trial and read at this; and in certain portions of the testimony of Dr. Leith, given at the first trial and read at this.

The bill then goes on to say that the defendant claimed that the plaintiff also improved Dr. Yan Allen and Dr. Smith for the same purpose, and that as. to whether they were so improved, their testimony thereinafter recited is referred to and made a part thereof. The bill also says that it appeared that Drs. Mitchell and Leith were physicians and surgeons at Lancaster, about forty miles from' Island Pond, and having a thousand more population,- and that they practiced there and in Essex County; that some of the evidence tended to show that they were physicians and surgeons of wide experience and practice, and prominent in their profession in the vicinity of Guildhall, the county seat of said county, and that their practice extended over a larger territory than the defendant’s. As to whether the above mentioned testimony of Drs. Stiles, Mitchell, and Leith tended [431]*431to show that the defendant, in his treatment of the plaintiff, did not have and exercise such care and skill as that which physicians and surgeons practicing in the general neighborhood of Island Pond, in the same general line of practice, ordinarily had and exercised in the treatment of like cases, their testimony is referred to and made a part of the bill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 A. 904, 86 Vt. 426, 1913 Vt. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willard-v-norcross-vt-1913.