This action was brought to recover damages against the defendant, who was a physician and surgeon in the city of New York, which the plaintiff alleges he sustained by reason of the unskillful and negligent treatment by the defendant, as such surgeon, during two weeks while he was suffering from a fracture of the leg and ankle known as “Pott’s fracture.” The answer of the defendant admitted that he was employed to and did attend and care for the plaintiff while he was suffering from a fracture of the nature described in the complaint, and denied each and every other allegation in the complaint. Upon the trial the plaintiff’s claim for damages seems to have resolved itself into three items, viz.: Por unnecessary pain which he suffered during the two weeks of the defendant’s treatment; for the delay in his recovery; and for a permanent injury caused by the negligent and unskillful treatment of the defendant. Evidence was offered to show the injury to the plaintiff; that he had sustained the fracture alleged in the complaint; and that he was attended by the defendant; from which it was claimed that he had not properly diagnosed the injury, and that, as a result, his recovery was delayed, that he suffered unnecessary pain, and that permanent injury resulted. It will not be necessary, in order to determine the single question which will be discussed upon this appeal, to detail to any extent the evidence which was introduced upon the trial of this action. The court charged the jury as follows, among other things: “If you believe that the injury to the plaintiff was caused by the want of such reasonable and ordinary skill and care, [referring to the skill and care of the defendant,] and that his own negligence did not contribute to it, then you will find a verdict for him in such sum as will compensate him for the pain he suffered and for any
The only evidence in favor of the plaintiff upon this point is that of the physician, Dr. Stimson, who testified as follows: “Question. Did you examine Mr. Smith’s foot here in court yesterday? Answer. I did. Q. Tell the jury what you observed about the injury, as to ils permanency or otherwise. A. There was a swelling on the side of the small bone of the leg, showing where it had been broken. There was a thickening there, what we call the ‘callous.’ Q. Where did it indicate it was? A. About there,[illustrating.] There was some limitation of motion. Q. Did you observe the inside malleolus was broken? A. I did not stop to look at that. 1 felt a roughness. I felt it with my thumb. I had my glove on at the time. Q. Could you tell by an examination? A. I could. There was some restriction of the range of motion of the foot in the direction that brings the foot up to the front, that way, [illustrating.] Q. Is that an essential motion in the act of walking ? A. That is the only one at the ankle joint, with fore and 'aft movement. Q. And is that the one in which you say you discovered the permanent injury? A. It is not as free as it is in the other foot. Q. In your opinion would that be a permanent injury? A. Some of it will stay, if not all.” At a further stage of his testimony, still upon the direct, the witness testified as follows: “The stiffness of the joint, so far as it exists, is probably due to thickening and loss of pliability in the soft parts about the joint. That thickening and loss of pliability are due to preceding inflammation, and that inflammation is due to the original injury, and to the displacement, and, in the assumed case, to the recurrences of the displacement. To that extent those two weeks of the mobility of the foot would have a tendency, by increasing the inflammation, to add to the subsequent loss of pliability,—the subsequent thicknesses of the soft parts; that is all. It would only have a tendency that way. That tendency may,of course,be overcome.” And upon cross-examination the witness stated that he recognized the fact as an expert that, in any circumstances, a Pott’s fracture, when the very best surgical skill is employed, and that skill is employed at the most opportune time, and under the best circumstances, the joint will remain permanently inferior to its former condition. And the witness was then asked the question: “You are not prepared to say to this jury that the present condition that the plaintiff presents is due to the fact of what he says in regard to the treatment he received at the hands of Dr. Dumond?” And he answered: “I have not said it.”
It is thus clear that the physician upon the part of the plaintiff was unwilling to impute the permanency of the injury under which he was suffering or would suffer to any neglect or want of care or skill on the part of the defend-