Winchester v. Chabut

32 N.W.2d 358, 321 Mich. 114, 1948 Mich. LEXIS 459
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1948
DocketDocket No. 23, Calendar No. 43,757.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 32 N.W.2d 358 (Winchester v. Chabut) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winchester v. Chabut, 32 N.W.2d 358, 321 Mich. 114, 1948 Mich. LEXIS 459 (Mich. 1948).

Opinion

Dethmers, J.

The defendant, a. physician, appeals from a judgment for plaintiff for malpractice.

*118 In performing an open surgery reduction of a comminuted fracture of plaintiff’s right femur, defendant is alleged to have been negligent in two respects:. (1) Leaving a cotton gauze surgical sponge in the incision when the wound was closed by sutures and: (2) failure to reopen and explore the operative area dowrn to the bone when abscesses formed on the upper right leg several months after the operation. Plaintiff claims that because of the presence of the sponge infection occurred, causing abscesses from which pieces of gauze are alleged to have erupted, delaying healing of the bone and, thus, causing mal union, angulation, shortening of the leg and atrophy of thigh muscles, permanently disabling plaintiff from performing his work as a locomotive engineer. Defendant denies that a sponge was left in the wound. He contends that the abscesses wore bone spicules working out in the normal process of comminuted fractures; that there was no reason nor occasion for, nor did good medical practice require, performing an exploratory operation when the abscesses occurred; that the angulation was caused by plaintiff bearing weight on his leg too soon after the operation.

There was no direct testimony or evidence that a sponge had been left in the wound, but plaintiff maintains that that conclusion is the only one to be drawn from the fact that pieces of cotton gauze worked out and were discharged from the abscesses at intervals after they had been lanced by defendant. This latter fact defendant explains by his testimony, denied bv plaintiff, that after lancing the abscesses defendant inserted cotton gauze strips or wicks therein to facilitate drainage.

Defendant contends that the court should have directed a verdict for him because there was neither direct nor medical nor scientific evidence establishing or tending to establish the leaving of a sponge *119 in the wound and no evidence of malpractice. Lack of direct evidence of the alleged act of negligence is not fatal to plaintiff’s case when there is evidence from which an inference to that effect may legitimately be drawn. LeFaive v. Asselin, 262 Mich. 443. Defendant insists that the extrusion of several pieces of cotton gauze from different abscesses is not evidence from which it may be inferred that a gauze sponge was left in the wound because testimony of doctors sworn for the defense was that the physical reaction and natural processes in extruding-such sponge, consisting of one piece of gauze about 15 inches square and folded and refolded into a 3-inch square, would be to encapsulate it and extrude it in one mass at one opening and that nature in this process does not unfold, separate and twist it in strands and extrude them separately in various places in the manner in which extrusion of gauze is alleged to have occurred in this case. However, the testimony of one of defendant’s expert witnesses was that it might conceivably be erupted through one or more abscesses. There was thus a question of fact for the jury and testimony from which an inference might legitimately be drawn that the extrusion of bits of gauze from the several abscesses was occasioned by leaving a gauze sponge in the wound at the time of the operation. That this did not constitute good medical practice need not have been (LeFaive v. Asselin, supra), but was, shown by the testimony of expert witnesses. As said in Ballance v. Dunnington, 241 Mich. 383 (57 A. L. R. 262), even the merest tyro would know this was improper. A doctor sworn for the plaintiff testified that, under the history of the case, after the abscesses occurred good practice required more than mere lancing, as was done by defendant in this case, but rather, exploratory surgery to discover the cause of ffhe abscesses.. The question of defendant’s negligence *120 or malpractice in this connection was one for the jury.

Defendant also contends that the verdict is against the great weight of the evidence because his experts testified that the presence of a sponge in the wound after suturing would cause certain reactions which did not occur in this case; but the doctor sworn for plaintiff testified that the reactions could be such as plaintiff claims did occur in this case. The doctors testifying for defendant and plaintiff agreed that plaintiff had not enjoyed the normal recovery to be expected in the absence of untoward occurrences at or after the operation; that X-ray pictures show malunion of the bone and that this could result from infection caused by leaving a surgical sponge in the wound. There is competent evidence to support plaintiff’s theories in this case and we cannot say that the verdict is against the great weight of the evidence.

Defendant charges as error the court’s ruling that the hospital operation record was inadmissible when offered on the grounds that it had not been sufficiently identified. However, when objections were withdrawn later, it was received in evidence. The error, if any, in ruling the record inadmissible was cured by its subsequent admission. Defendant complains of the court’s failure to give his request to charge as to the probative value to be given to the absence of any notation on such record of any missing sponge, contending that the court thus conveyed to the jury the erroneous impression that only entries actually made and not the absence of notations thereon have probative value. This record contains certain notations as to sponges, which were explained by the doctor assisting defendant in the operation as showing that 36 sponges were used and that thereafter a count was made and 36 used sponges accounted for. He testified that if the sponge count *121 at tlic end of the operation is incorrect a notation thereof is made. The court instructed the jury that they might consider the record as evidence bearing on the question of whether a sponge count was kept and all operative sponges accounted for. Inasmuch as the record purports to bear an affirmative notation that all sponges used were accounted for, the absence of a contradictory notation that they were not all accounted for needed not to be stressed by the court as evidence that the sponges were accounted for. Under the circumstances the value of the record as evidence was properly presented to the jury.

Defendant asserts that the court erred in admitting the mortality tables over his objections because defendant had testified that plaintiff was in ill health and suffering from certain maladies and it is claimed that plaintiff so admitted. However, the doctor sworn for the plaintiff testified that he had examined plaintiff a few days before the trial and found him, aside from the leg condition, to be in good physical condition generally. The court instructed the jury that the expectancy shown by the tables is based on the average duration of life of normally well men. No error was committed in this connection.

Plaintiff’s attorney asked defendant on cross-examination whether it was true that he was not permitted to operate in a certain hospital. Objection thereto was sustained and the question left unanswered. Defendant made no request to charge in relation thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.W.2d 358, 321 Mich. 114, 1948 Mich. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winchester-v-chabut-mich-1948.