Wright v. Conway

241 P. 369, 34 Wyo. 1, 1925 Wyo. LEXIS 55
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1925
Docket1170
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 241 P. 369 (Wright v. Conway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Conway, 241 P. 369, 34 Wyo. 1, 1925 Wyo. LEXIS 55 (Wyo. 1925).

Opinions

*6 Potter, Chief Justice.

Damages are sought in this action for alleged malpractice of the defendant, when employed as a physician and surgeon to attend the plaintiff for an injury described as a fracture of the femur bone of his right leg. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence in the district court a verdict was directed for defendant, and the cause is here on error for the review of the judgment rendered thereon. The several assignments of error each present substantially the same question; the sufficiency of the evidence to require its submission to the jury, upon charges of negligence in diagnosis and treatment, especially in a failure to' use X-ray to aid diagnosis, and in burning the flesh of the leg by hot applications.

The fracture is conceded to have been simple and transverse, at a point about nine inches above the knee, at or a little above the junction of the lower and middle third of the femur. The facts of the diagnosis and treatment are related in the testimony of the plaintiff, his wife and his father, which may be introduced by stating that the method of treatment adopted was. what is generally known to the medical profession as “Buck’s Extension.” The manner in which it was employed is first stated in plaintiff’s testimony. He testified that his injury was the result of an accident while riding a motor-cycle on the race-track at Cheyenne, on the evening of June 10, 1921. That he was taken to his father’s home in Cheyenne, the doctor called, and then removed to St. John’s Hospital in that city. That he was unconscious until, at the hospital, he was conscious for a minute or so and saw his father and the defendant standing at the foot of the bed. That he asked the doctor if he had “got her all fixed up,” to which the doctor replied, “Yes, sir, you are all right now.” That upon fully recovering consciousness, he found:

*7 “They bad taken some boards and put underneath the bed, between the springs and the bed railing, so that there would not be any spring to the bed, and the bed was elevated —it was a little higher at the foot, I judge 'about three and one-half inches or four — and there was a weight tied on my right leg, and a sandbag up this side, from about here up to here (indicating) on the outside, and up about here on the inside (indicating). There was a strip of adhesive tape starting just above the knee, a couple of inches above the knee, and came down around my foot, and came up this side, just above the knee, and then it was bandaged below the knee, around this way (illustrating) to keep that tape from slipping, and he fastened the weight in the bottom of that tape that the rope was tied to that held the weight. ’ ’ That there were no splints along the side of the leg, nothing but the sandbags; that he heard them say that the weight attached to his leg was either 27 or 37 pounds ; that his leg hurt all the time where the tape was, and it hurt underneath his leg and at his ankle. That the skin was not broken anywhere, but there was a blue mark about three inches above the knee on the outside. That he asked the doctor where the bone was broken, and he says “right under there (indicating) about three inches above the knee.” “That is where this blue mark was. ’ ’'

He further testified: Q. What treatment did he administer on these daily visits? Did he make any examination at all when he would come in ? A. Sometimes he would throw the covers back, and look at it (the leg) and feel here (indicating) like that, and then walk away. Q. How many times did he measure your leg, during the five weeks that you were there, that you know ? A. Once, that I know of. About eight days after I was in the hospital. Q. Tell the jury whether or not you ever felt a lump down on either side of your leg while in the hospital. A. Yes sir; eight days after I got hurt. Q. Where was that lump ? A. Right about there (indicating); * * * about nine inches *8 above the' knee. * * * It felt like a bone # * * Just the same as if you. bent your elbow and would feel that end of your elbow. * * * That Dr. Conway, his wife and father, and a couple of nurses saw and felt of the lump, and that the doctor felt there two or three times, shook his head and said “That feels like the callus on the bone.” He measured the leg then, but did not tell him what the measurement was. About at the end of four weeks, the leg began to swell; that the doctor said it was a pure and simple ease of phlebitis, caused from poor circulation; that he ordered hot packs applied to the leg, “but it kept swelling worse, ’ ’ and his leg was burned from the not water bottles. That X-ray pictures were taken after the swelling developed, and after the second picture was taken, he asked Dr. Shingle, who took it, if the bones were grown together, and he shook lus head and said “I don’t think you have got any union. ’ ’

Covering the same matter, up to that point, the plaintiff’s father, W. F. Wright, testified that upon arriving at the hospital the doctor, first, looked over the leg, “rubbed over it a little, and told how he would have to fix that,” (witness here describing the use of tape, weights, sandbags, etc); “that the weight would draw the leg back in place and would hold it in its natural position, to be careful and put the sandbags up against him, and for him to lay still so as not to take any chances of moving that leg out of place. I asked him where the leg was broken, there was a blue spot, evidently where he was hit between three and four inches above the knee, and he said it was at that place where it was broken. ’ ’

That witness also testified about his son complaining of a lump or knot underneath and about nine inches above the knee, which felt to him (the witness) like a bone pressing against the flesh, but the doctor said “that is just a callus forming there.” “He assured me all the time that there was no occasion to be uneasy; that it was simply a straight break,: — what they call a pipestem break — a very easy mat *9 ter to fix these things, ’ ’ and that he could be taken home in five weeks.

The testimony of Mrs. Wright was substantially the same concerning the appliances for reducing the fracture and holding the leg in place; also that when Dr. Conway arrived at the house he felt of the leg and said that the femur bone was fractured, and that he would have to be taken to the hospital. That he told her later that the bone was broken about three and one-half inches above the knee-cap. That on the eighth day, her husband found a lump underneath his leg, about half-way between the hip and the knee, which felt to her “like your bended elbow, only larger.” That when Dr. Conway felt of it he said that it was the bone callus, but that he wasn’t quite sure because as a rule callus did not form within two weeks; that she asked him if he could not take an X-ray picture and make sure, but he said that he did not think it was necessary, that he could not get a machine, and Mr. Wright could not be moved to where there was one. But he measured the leg at that time and said that “it was just exactly right.” That there was no marked swelling until “about four weeks” later, when the leg swelled to about twice the normal size, extending throughout the upper portion. That she again asked if it was not possible to get an X-ray, saying to the doctor “that we heard there was a portable machine in town; ’ ’ and he said that he would see.

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Bluebook (online)
241 P. 369, 34 Wyo. 1, 1925 Wyo. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-conway-wyo-1925.