Williams v. Marini

162 A. 796, 105 Vt. 11, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 181
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 28, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 A. 796 (Williams v. Marini) 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
Williams v. Marini, 162 A. 796, 105 Vt. 11, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 181 (Vt. 1932).

Opinion

Powers, C. J.

.This is an action for malpractice charging a graduate and licensed osteopath with negligence in the care of the plaintiff’s foot. A jury trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendant excepted. The latter seasonably moved for a directed verdict for lack of evidence tending to *15 ■establish liability on his part,, and an- exception to the refusal ■of the court to comply therewith is for first consideration.

The defendant was called by the plaintiff on the morning of August 15, 1930, to the latter’s house in Rutland. On the afternoon of that day, at the defendant’s office, a further examination ■of the foot was made, and the defendant then removed the nails of two toes which he said were already infected. He then ■cleansed and bandaged the foot, and advised the plaintiff regarding its care. The defendant had charge of the ease until ■and including August 22. He gave the foot attention, administered remedies to relieve the pain, and gave directions regarding the home treatment of it. ’ On the 23rd, the plaintiff called Hr. Hammond, a physician of long experience, who gave evidence tending to show that the foot was then in a very bad condition; that the little toe was. entirely black, and that the discoloration extended up the foot and into the ankle; that the toes were gangrenous and had been for at least three or four days. According to the evidence, it was a case of “dry” gangrene, which is self-limiting, and there was nothing to do but await that result. This was done, and when the limitation appeared, the leg was amputated above the knee, as was necessary.

The transcript is referred to, and discloses the sharp conflict in -the evidence that is usual in such eases. If we were at liberty to accept the defendant’s evidence as establishing the essential facts, there would be merit in his motion. But, of course, we cannot. It is the plaintiff’s evidence that must, not only be regarded, but favored. We agree that the defendant’s care of this patient must be tested by what good osteopathic treatment required, and by that alone. Wilkins, Admr. v. Brock, 81 Vt. 332, 344, 70 Atl. 572. And we will assume that the case was such that it required expert evidence from qualified osteopaths to sustain it. This does not imply, however, that only practitioners of that school could be used as experts at the trial. Very many questions pertaining to the diagnosis, physical conditions and what they indicated, the progress of the infection and other observed facts and their significance, could be established by regular physicians;. indeed, some of them, at least, could be shown by unskilled observers. But when the propriety of the treatment from an osteopathic standpoint is the question, the ordinary physician should be rejected as a competent expert, unless it is made to appear that both the *16 schools to which the Avitness and the defendant belong require- and employ the same treatment. Grainger v. Still, 187 Mo. 197, 85 S. W. 1114, 70 L. R. A. 49, 59; Cook v. Moats, 121 Neb. 769, 238 N. W. 529, 78 A. L. R. 694, and note. This is a corollary to the proposition that the skill of any practitioner of medicine is to be judged by the requirements of his OAvn school.

Expert osteopathic evidence Avas produced at the-trial. While the transcript shows an indication of the doctors-to wander from the questions asked and embody in their replies-statements as to Avhat they would have done in the circumstances either shown or supposed, which, standing alone, avouM be inadmissible, Parker v. Bowen, 98 Vt. 115, 119, 126 Atl. 522, yet, taking the questions and answers together, it fairly appears-that Avhat they intended to state was what good osteopathic practice in the general vicinity of Rutland and as there practiced by physicians of that school, required. The plaintiff relied upon negligence^ in the diagnosis. The defendant testified that, at the outset, he tested the patient’s circulation by palpation, only. Dr. Loudon, an osteopath, said that this Avas correct so far as it Avent, but that when the discoloration appeared and extended up the foot, it evidenced a very serious condition AAhich probably required the services of a major surgeon, toAvhom the case should have been turned over. It was the faulty circulation that caused the trouble. This fact seems to have been understood by the defendant, for he recommended and provided for hot applications to improve the circulation. Dr. Sherburne, an osteopath, testified to the effect that the defendant’s treatment was not up to the standard of good osteopathic practice, which required that it should have been supplemented by manipulative work to accelerate the circulation. There was also eAddenee from one or both of these osteopaths that palpation alone in the preliminary examination of a case like the one presented to the defendant would not be sufficient, and that the heart should have been tested, the blood pressure taken, and an analysis of the urine made. The testimony of the plaintiff and that of his daughter as to the condition of the foot, its treatment by the defendant and the progress of the disease, supplemented by that of the medical and osteopathic experts, made a case for the jury on the question of the defendant’s negligence.

The defendant also relies upon the claim of contributory negligence as a ground of his motion for a verdict.

*17 There was some evidence that the plaintiff disregarded the defendant’s advice in the care of the foot, and that he walked on' it contrary to instructions. This was controverted. It is enough here to say that it nowhere appears so plainly from the transcript that the conduct of the plaintiff amounted to contributory negligence that, as a matter of law, it would bar a recovery. It may be that it should have reduced the recovery. But there is no evidence of. anything said or •done by the plaintiff that led the defendant into error in either the diagnosis or treatment, or had any part in the creation of the cause of action relied upon. If the plaintiff was negligent at all, his negligence merely supervened upon that of the defendant, and only affected the amount of damages. Wilmot v. Howard, 39 Vt. 447, 457, 94 A. D. 338. See Hathorn v. Richmond, 48 Vt. 557. The exceptions under discussion is not sustained. By his supplemental request No. 3, the defendant asked the court to charge the jury that his failure to take ' the blood pressure of the patient could not be considered as evidence of malpractice. The request was properly refused. As we have seen, there was osteopathic evidence in the case showing that a retarded circulation in a man of the plaintiff’s age would be a condition requiring careful consideration by an osteopath before performing the operation on the foot, and that the blood pressure would have disclosed the condition that caused, the trouble. It is no answer to this to say that the nails had to be removed. Perhaps so. But according to the evidence both the operation and the after care would need to be more cautious to the end' that gangrene might not result. If, as the evidence tended to showq the defendant did not know of this condition, or knowing it failed to adopt proper methods either at the operation or subsequent to it, negligence amounting to malpractice was indicated.

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Bluebook (online)
162 A. 796, 105 Vt. 11, 1932 Vt. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-marini-vt-1932.