Williams v. Dameron

246 S.E.2d 586, 37 N.C. App. 491, 1978 N.C. App. LEXIS 2793
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 15, 1978
Docket778SC727
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 246 S.E.2d 586 (Williams v. Dameron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Dameron, 246 S.E.2d 586, 37 N.C. App. 491, 1978 N.C. App. LEXIS 2793 (N.C. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

*493 MORRIS, Judge.

At the outset we note that the record on appeal contains no assignments of error. Rule 10(c), North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure, provides that “[t]he exceptions upon which a party intends to rely shall be indicated by setting out at the conclusion of the record on appeal assignments of error based upon such exceptions. Each assignment of error shall be consecutively numbered; shall, so far as practicable, be confined to a single issue of law; shall state plainly and concisely and without argumentation the basis upon which error is assigned; and shall be followed by a listing of all the exceptions upon which it is based, identified by their numbers and by the pages of the record on appeal at which they appear. Exceptions not thus listed will be deemed abandoned. It is not necessary to include in an assignment of error those portions of the record to which it is directed, a proper listing of the exceptions upon which it is based being sufficient.” In the record before us, there are no assignments of error whatever. The brief contains one ARGUMENT, which is the same as the QUESTION INVOLVED. The QUESTION INVOLVED refers to “Assignment of Error, Group I (R. p. 48)”. At R. p. 48, we find plaintiff’s exception No. 4, to the oral ruling of the court on the defendant’s motion for directed verdict. There is no assignment of error. After the question is presented, under ARGUMENT appears the following: “This assignment of error is preserved in Exceptions No. 4 ( R. p. 48).” Another violation of the Rules is also present. Rule 11(e) requires that the record shall be certified within 10 days after it has been settled. Here the record was not certified for some 30 days after it had been settled. The appeal is clearly subject to dismissal. Nevertheless we choose to address the merits of the appeal in view of appellant’s obvious attempt to comply with the spirit of the Rules.

Plaintiff’s evidence is summarized as follows: Plaintiff testified that he injured his back when he jumped off a combine. Dr. Cecil Johnson treated him for a short time and referred him to defendant. Defendant prescribed some exercises, but plaintiff’s condition worsened. Defendant then prescribed bed rest, but this did not improve his condition. Defendant then told plaintiff that surgery for the removal of a disc seemed imperative. He told plaintiff that plaintiff would probably be in the hospital from seven to ten days, back at work running his tractor in three *494 months, and back to normal in six months. The morning after surgery plaintiff talked with defendant. On the second day he again talked with defendant and at that time defendant told him that the scalpel blade had broken and a part of the blade was in the bone area, and he didn’t think it would ever bother him. He did not again discuss the situation with respect to the scalpel tip. After his discharge from the hospital, plaintiff continued to experience pain. Dr. Dameron told him to continue his exercises and that he would get better. In March, he again visited Dr. Dameron. Medication which had been prescribed by another doctor for a kidney infection had reacted adversely causing a stinging feeling over his body. His back was not hurting quite as badly. He was advised to walk a mile each day. In April he continued to have pain. Dr. Dameron said he was not improving as rapidly as he had hoped but again prescribed walking. He was discharged by Dr. Dameron in April but obtained appointments in June and twice in August because of the severe pain. In August Dr. Dameron suggested a brace. Plaintiff testified that two years after the surgery he was still able to do very little other than supervise. Three years after the surgery, he could run the tractor for about an hour at the time on level ground. He said he could possibly have run the combine a little but of that he was not sure. No doctor has ever related the pain he has suffered to the scalpel tip left in his back. He has been seeing a chiropractor who says his problem is pinched nerves and that he doesn’t see how the presence of the scalpel tip could help from bothering him. He has been seen by Dr. Hardy, a neurosurgeon, at the request of defendant’s counsel. Dr. Hardy performed tests and made x-rays and was of the opinion that plaintiff had no problem. Plaintiff had also been seen by Dr. Harrellson, an orthopaedic specialist at Duke. These visits were at the request of his own counsel. Dr. Harrellson diagnosed his problem as degenerative disease rather than the scalpel tip which was causing his problem and that the problem was higher up in his back, and he did not believe the scalpel blade was causing his problem.

Dr. Dameron testified that he did not tell plaintiff, but plaintiff had developed some weakness in his foot which could have led to paralysis. Defendant does approximately 50 operations of this type each year and has been practicing for 24 years. The procedure used in this surgery is as follows:

*495 . . Prior to the surgery, the patient was given an anethesia and intubated and turned on his abdomen for the surgery. The back is washed with Phisohex to kill germs. The patient is then strapped, then draped by sterile sheets and towels, and then Vidrape, a cellophane type material with sticky stuff on it, is used to protect against infection. Infection is a main concern in this type of operation.
An incision is then made at the spinous processes down to the bone and then the muscles are moved off the bone. The ligament is then removed and one is then able to see the spinal cord which is moved out of the way. The disc [sic] were then examined and it was found that one of the disc have blown out of its normal base. A piece of the disc, a gristle type substance had come out of its normal place and was pressing on a nerve. This was the reason there was a loss of the use of the foot. The nerve was then freed. Where the blowout had occurred the disc area had already sealed over. Since there was a concern there might be more gristle inside that would be hidden, a little incision was made in the covering of the disc and the disc material was removed by an instrument called a Pituatary Rongeurs. This work was very near the spinal cord and so Dr. Dameron testified that he had to be careful about injuring the spipal cord. Since the Pituatary Rongeurs was too large because of the scarring which had occurred where the disc had gone out before, a smaller blade, a Number 15 blade, was used. In trying to make an incision in that disc covering so the Pituatary Rongeurs could be put in there the tip of the blade broke off. This had happened before. However, usually when that happens you can reach in with the Pituatary Rongeurs and bring it out. In this case we went ahead and removed the disc, the particles of disc, and we could not get that little tip out. . . .”

Dr. Dameron further testified that in looking for the scalpel tip, he looked in places where it might possibly do some harm. In attempting to be certain that the tip was in a location where it was not going to do any harm, he spent 30 minutes looking for it and stopped at the point at which they felt that to go on would cause more bleeding, because it is difficult to control the bleeding in that area. “When the scalpel blade broke, no x-ray pictures were made. X-ray machines are available to the operating room.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 S.E.2d 586, 37 N.C. App. 491, 1978 N.C. App. LEXIS 2793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-dameron-ncctapp-1978.