Ghere v. Zey

ELLISON, J.

The defendant is a physician and surgeon and was employed to serve plaintiff professionally. Plaintiff brought this action for malpractice and recovered judgment in the trial court.

It appears that plaintiff wras driving when his horse became frightened at an automobile and he was throwm from his vehicle, his leg being broken from the fall. Defendant was called and the charge is that he so negligently and unskillfully performed the service required in and about the broken leg as to cause it to be “impossible to get a perfect union and to get the leg properly extended, as a result of wdiicli, said leg has been materially shortened and plaintiff rendered a cripple for life.”

Though the case seems to have been sharply contested and though the record presented here is quite large, yet there appears to be little in the case which is the province of this court to determine. The record discloses that there Avas evidence which, if believed by *366the jury, tended to support the plaintiff’s theory and charge of negligent treatment; and upon the other hand, there was evidence tending to sustain defendant’s defense of proper professional skill and diligence in the treatment rendered. In such situation it is settled law that the jury must determine the facts and render a verdict in accordance with their belief. The sole province of the court, on appeal, is to ascertain whether the trial court committed error in admitting or rejecting evidence, or in giving or refusing instructions. Though the evidence is voluminous, there is but one complaint on that head and that is where the court struck out a statement made by defendant that he “was interne for the City (St. Louis) Hospital; the assistant in the medical college there is something every medical student works for; that is the height of their ambition.” That Avas properly stricken out. It was not responsive to the question and Avas argumentative in character.

There were ten instructions given. It does not appear that they Avere asked by either party and seem to have been giA7en by the court of its OAvn motion and they perhaps were, as they fully present the law of the case on the theory as advanced by both plaintiff and defendant. The defendant only excepted to the action of the court in giving numbers 1, 2, 3 and 1, and though others are discussed we cannot notice them. It is urged that instruction one is too general and that it should have only required defendant to have exercised the ordinary skill of physicians in the locality where he practices. The instruction, Avhile not using those words, did limit the skill to that “ordinarily used by competent physicians and surgeons under like circumstances and conditions This Ave think was proper and is the substance of what defendant contends for, so that we need not determine the correctness of defendant’s position.

Instruction two is said to be too general in not limiting the damages. But we find it to be perfect in so far *367as it goes, and if defendant wished one more specific, it was his duty to ask it and to except if refused. [Browning v. Railroad, 124 Mo. 55.] This case has been uniformly approved by the Supreme and appellate courts.

The objection to instruction three concerning a claim for following out defendant’s directions, is that no claim of that nature is stated in the petition. This, we think an erroneous construction of the petition, and wre regard the instruction as proper.

Instruction number four informed the jury that under defendant’s employment he had no right to substitute any other person to take his place in treating plaintiff without the latter’s consent. There was evidence in the case upon which this instruction was based and it was proper to give it. The defendant was contemplating a trip to Europe and that he would leave another physician in charge of plaintiff. Plaintiff refused the offer and employed others.

Exception was taken to remarks of one of plaintiff’s counsel in argument as not being warranted by the evidence. The trial court did not seem to consider them, harmful. Nor do we understand how they could have affected the mind of the jury as to the merits of the case. Besides, the only reference to this in the motion for new trial is that “the court erred in not reprimanding counsel for plaintiff for improper and prejudicial remarks in his closing argument.” The court was not asked to reprimand counsel. There was no complaint made at the time the remarks were uttered that they were prejudicial; and, as already stated, we think they were not.

Finally complaint is made of the refusal of two instructions offered by defendant. The first one, in part, was already, in effect, embodied in those given. The remainder amounted to a comment on a particular part of the evidence. The entire substance of the second one was embraced in those given. We think the jury *368could not have failed to understand the issues presented.

An examination of the entire record satisfies us that we have no right to interfere with the judgment and it is therefore affirmed.

All concur.