Woosley v. Dunning

520 P.2d 340, 268 Or. 233, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 454
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1974
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 520 P.2d 340 (Woosley v. Dunning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woosley v. Dunning, 520 P.2d 340, 268 Or. 233, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 454 (Or. 1974).

Opinion

TONGUE, J.

This is an action for wrongful death arising out of an automobile accident, following which the decedent died in a hospital during diagnostic tests. The case was tried before a jury, which returned a verdict for $95,000. Defendant appeals from the resulting judgment. We affirm.

Defendant’s ten assignments of error include the denial of his motions for involuntary nonsuit and for a directed verdict. Because the jury found in .favor of the plaintiff she is entitled to the benefit of all *236 favorable evidence, in the event of any conflict in the evidence, as well as all favorable inferences from the evidence. Gordon Creek Tree Farms v. Layne et al, 230 Or 204, 218, 358 P2d 1062, 368 P2d 737 (1962). We shall therefore review the evidence in that light.

Plaintiff’s decedent had been involved in previous automobile accidents. She sustained a neck injury with accompanying headaches, as well as a numbness of one hand as a result of those accidents. According to the testimony offered on her behalf, however, her eyes were not injured or affected as the result of those accidents.

On August 6, 1970, she was a passenger in the right front seat of a car as it entered an intersection in Coos Bay at a speéd of about 20 miles per hour, according to her daughter, who was the driver. Her daughter testified that defendant, “going at a pretty good speed,” went through a stop sign on her right and hit the right front side of her car.

Defendant testified that he had stopped some 15 or 20 feet behind the stop sign as he was looking for an address and that upon then seeing it further down the street he proceeded into the intersection in low gear, after looking both ways. He testified that there were no obstructions to his view, but that he did not see the Woosley car until it was “bearing down on him” at a speed of about 35 miles per hour.

A police officer arrived shortly after the accident and issued a traffic citation to defendant for going through the stop sign. That citation shows, in the handwriting of the judge, that defendant pleaded guilty. Defendant testified, however, that he told the judge that he did not go through the stop sign, but *237 paid the fine of $10 because he did not want to come back later for trial.

The police officer testified that immediately after the accident he observed decedent hold her hand to her head and complain of discomf ort on the right side of her head. For some time after the accident she complained of severe headaches and then complained that the vision in one of her eyes was becoming “fuzzy.”

In April 1971 decedent was examined by Dr. John Bishop, an >ophthalmologist. Dr. Bishop was not called to testify by either party. According to his report by letter in referring decedent to Dr. James C. Luce, a neurosurgeon, for diagnosis and treatment, his examination revealed “a pale right optic nerve.” According to that report he also performed a “visual field” examination, which was “normal,” but found “some distortion on the Amsler grid,” and concluded with the statement that “we have a 44-year-old lady, with partial optic atrophy, visual loss and a previous neurological history of trauma.”

Dr. Luce testified that under these circumstances there was a possibility of a brain tumor near the optic nerve or of an embolism in an artery in that area, either of which could have caused the optic atrophy and also could cause blindness or death. He also said that another possible cause was that of a head injury, even without a skull fracture.

Under these circumstances, and after some further examinations, Dr. Luce decided that the “next logical step” was to perform diagnostic tests in a hospital, including an arteriogram and a pneumoencephalogram. These tests involved injection of air into the cavities of the brain following a spinal pune *238 ture, so as to make it possible to take X-rays of the brain, including the holes through which the optic nerve comes. He testified that he considered the risks of these tests to be “about the same as for a tonsillectomy, the risk of anesthesia.”

These tests were then performed and disclosed no evidence of abnormality of the blood vessels. Dr. Luce then concluded that decedent had an “optic atrophy due to the head injury” and said that this is a process which comes on slowly after the injury. Unfortunately, the decedent died four hours later of a brain stem hemorrhage. Dr. Luce testified that “there was a relationship between the tests and her death.”

An autopsy was then performed by Dr. Eobert Buck of the hospital staff, including the taking of slides of the right and left optic nerves. Dr. Luce participated in the autopsy and testified that it revealed changes in the right optic nerve, but no evidence of tumor or abnormal blood vessels. He expressed the opinion that there was an atrophy of the right optic nerve and that this was caused by the automobile accident in August 1970, although the previous accidents may have “predisposed her or made it more likely that the last accident would produce this type of thing.”

Dr. Merlin Harvey Johnson, an ophthalmologist, concurred in that opinion based upon an examination of the hospital records, including the “history” of decedent and autopsy reports, as well as the report by Dr. Bishop.

Defendant’s principal witness was Dr. Wiley Leigh Campbell, also an ophthalmologist, who testified after reviewing the hospital records and autopsy reports, after listening to the testimony of Dr. Luce and Dr. Johnson, and after detailed explanations of the *239 problems involved, that a diagnosis of optic atrophy without further studies was “not prudent”; that, in his opinion, it was “very doubtful” whether decedent was suffering from an optic atrophy, and that if she had optic atrophy it was probably not due to trauma as the result of the automobile accident.

1. The trial court did not err in denying defendant’s pretrial discovery motion for medical records and depositions.

This case was tried before the effective date of amendments to ORS 44.040 by the 1973 Legislature and its adoption of ORS 44.610-44.640 (Oregon Laws 1973, ch 136). Defendant’s pretrial motion demanded production of specified medical records and also that “plaintiff’s physician or physicians * * * be made available for deposition * * That motion was denied, based upon our decision in Nielson v. Bryson, 257 Or 179, 477 P2d 714 (1970).

Defendant contends: (1) that the physician-patient privilege “either terminates or is waived upon the death of the patient”; (2) that the privilege is also “waived by a personal representative’s filing of an action which places the decedent’s medical condition at issue”; and (3) that “examinations and tests performed upon a patient following her death are not within the * * * privilege.”

Defendant asks us to overrule Nielson.

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Bluebook (online)
520 P.2d 340, 268 Or. 233, 1974 Ore. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woosley-v-dunning-or-1974.