Wilson v. Borden

62 F.2d 866, 61 App. D.C. 327, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3239
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedDecember 12, 1932
DocketNo. 5563
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 62 F.2d 866 (Wilson v. Borden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Borden, 62 F.2d 866, 61 App. D.C. 327, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3239 (D.C. Cir. 1932).

Opinion

ROBB, Associate Justice.

Appeal from a judgment in the Supreme Court of the District upon a directed verdict for the defendant at the close of all the evidence in an action for malpractice.

In her declaration plaintiff alleges that she employed the defendant “to skillfully and carefully set and adjust a certain bone or bones of the left arm of the plaintiff, which had been diagnosed by defendant as a fracture at or near the left wrist, and to give the plaintiff the proper, customary, and necessary care, attention, and treatments in connection therewith”; and that the defendant “did then and there negligently, carelessly, unskillfully, and improperly set and adjust the aforesaid broken bone or bones of the plaintiff’s left wrist, and did negligently and carelessly remove the splints and bandages therefrom before said bone or bones had been properly set and adjusted, and before said bone had been allowed to heal, and negligently, carelessly, and improperly discharged the plaintiff when he knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care, skill, and prudence should have known, that the said fractured bone or bones had not been properly set and adjusted and had not healed.”

Plaintiff testified that she was a clerk in the Interior Department in September, 1926, and is still employed there. On September 6, 1926, she was injured in a collision between a truck and a street car upon which she was a passenger. On the next day she consulted Dr. Edward Larkin, who treated' her for about two weeks. Not being satisfied with the treatment, she was receiving, she consulted the defendant (appellee here), but did not tell him tbat she had been treated by Dr. Larkin. Dr. Borden examined her arm, took an X-ray picture of it, and requested her to return in the afternoon. When she returned in the afternoon he showed her the picture; “the end of the bone was broken off, and he immediately set the arm.” He had her return every few days to examine the arm, which was in wooden splints from the elbow to the wrist. “He didn’t take a picture of the arm after that at any time.” She told the doctor that she had had an accident to her right arm several years previous. Whereupon the doctor told her that she had got the arms mixed; that the fracture shown in the picture in the left arm was an old fracture. “He removed the splints and pronounced the [867]*867arm cured. This was about three weeks after tho first visit,” which occurred on September .16, 1926. Before the accident she was a stenographer and typist. After the accident she was unable to operate a typewriter. The witness identified, and there was introduced in evidence, an X-ray picture of her left wrist taken by defendant. That a year after she had been discharged by Dr. Borden she consulted Dr. Harry Lewis. About two years after her discharge by Dr. Borden she consulted Dr. Leadbetter, and subsequently Dr. Sterling Ruffin. In 1928 she consulted Dr. Thomas Foley, “who treated her, baked and massaged her arm. He didn’t discharge her. She simply ceased the visits.”

On cross-examination she testified that Dr. Larkin did not treat her for a fractured arm, but for contusions and lacerations; that before she was dismissed by Dr. Borden an X-ray was taken by Drs. Groover, Christie, and Merritt (X-ray exports and surgeons). She consulted Dr. Lewis in September, 1927. He did not treat her. Dr. Borden did not tell her it was an old fracture until ho removed the splints.

Dr. George W. Warren testified that he examined the plaintiff twice in June, 1931, and found an old fracture of the left wrist. “Could not tell how old the fracture is. Does not think anybody could tell whether it was five or twenty years old.” Upon being shown one of the pictures of the left wrist, he said that there was a fracture “at the end of the ulna.” He had no difficulty in determining there was a fracture. Assuming that there was a fracture, “witness testified that they are always put up in splints or a east, and the bones adjusted properly, and an X-ray taken to see if it is all right.” Asked how long, “in the due course of careful and skillful treatment, should those splints have been allowed to remain upon the am,” he answered, “In my opinion it should be from four to six weeks.” Thereupon the witness examined the plaintiff’s wrist and was asked, “What is that thing on the outside of her arm,” and ho replied, “That looks like—that is a bunch of tendons, I think, separated from the bone.” That the fracture caused the tendons to be detached. That, assuming tho splints were put on September 16 and removed October 4, he didn’t think the plaintiff should have been discharged as cured.

On cross-examination Dr. Warren testified that there was no evidence of a fracture in the right wrist. “If he had had that X-ray (taken by Dr. Borden, September 16) before him he would have set the arm with splints, or a east, and kept it there for some time; then before he removed the cast, he would have taken an X-ray to see if it was in condition. * * * That tip which is broken is very small, a little larger than a pea, and he can not tell from X-rays how old that fracture is. From the pictures that Mr. Downing (plaintiff’s counsel) showed him (taken in 1926 and 1928) that fracture might have occurred September 6, 1920.”

Testifying in rebuttal, this witness was asked, assuming that it was an old fracture, “What, in the course of reasonably skillful practice, should have been done?” He replied, “The arm should have been set and treated for some time.” He further testified that an operation might have helped. On cross-examination he was asked, “Would you have operated on this arm?” And answered, “No sir, I would not.”

Defendant testified that plaintiff first came to his office on September 16,1926, stating that she had hurt her arm in a street car accident. There was considerable swelling above the wrist and some thickness of the wrist. After taking an X-ray of her arm, he placed it in splints on the first day she consulted him; took another X-ray later, and removed the splints on October 18, 1926. He took the splints down once a week, and when they were finally removed the wrist looked perfectly normal, with one exception, “and that was at the upper end of the styloid.” He had her move her wrist in all directions. He was of the opinion that the X-rays disclosed no fracture as recent as September 6, 1926. “He should say it was a matter of years, or months, certainly not a matter of days.” He sent plaintiff to Drs. Groover, Christie, and Merritt, who on October 2, 1926, reported to him that tho condition of the wrist probably resulted from an old injury, “probably a Colles’ fracture”; that “there is no evidence of recent bone injury.” Witness stated that: “A deformity of the lower end of the left radius means some thickening of that radius over and above the normal. It is not very apparent. If you are not an expert you can hardly tell the difference.”

Dr. Edward Larkin, who for twenty-one years had specialized in bones and joints, testified that he had known the plaintiff for about fifteen years. She called on him on September 6, 1926, and complained of pains in her left elbow and her left wrist. “The diagnosis was a contusion on the left fore[868]*868arm. He treated her about ten days. Nothing more than bandages and possible fixation."

Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
62 F.2d 866, 61 App. D.C. 327, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 3239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-borden-cadc-1932.