*106Dissenting Opinion by
Me. Justice Musmanno:In affirming the nonsuit in this case the Majority follows precedent which is commendable, but, in looking back over the landscape of the law, it apparently trains its glance on a small hill instead of the towering mountain which overshadows the hill and all the terrain in between.
The hillock, which impresses the Majority, is the decision of Robinson v. Wirts, 387 Pa. 291, decided in 1956. The skyseraping mountain which eludes its view is the case of Davis v. Kerr, 239 Pa. 351, decided in 1913.
Let us look at the mountain first, which certainly can be seen without a telescope, and then later pick up the microscope to study Robinson v. Wirts, supra, as it casts its anaemic shadow on the panorama of law and justice.
In the Davis v. Kerr case, the defendant-surgeon failed to remove from the plaintiff’s abdomen, in which he was operating, a sponge he had employed during the surgery. A lawsuit charging him with negligence followed. At the trial, the Court affirmed a defendant’s point as follows: “If the jury find from the evidence that a sponge, or other material of like nature, was left in the abdomen of Mrs. Davis, at the time of the operation, such fact alone is no evidence of negligence on the part of the defendant.” The jury found for the defendant and the plaintiff appealed. This Court reversed, and Justice Stewaet, speaking in language as clear as a mountain brook, and with logic as irresistible as Aristotle’s, said: “Why was a foreign substance left in the parts which the operating surgeon should have removed? It was for him to acqwit himself of negligence with respect to it. The sponge escaped his observation, why? Was it so hidden and concealed that reasonable care on his part would not have disclosed it; or were conditions such that in his professional *107judgment further exploration by him for sponges would have endangered the safety of the patient? In a word, did he do all that reasonable care and shill would require? Except as one or the other of these questions can be answered affirmatively from the evidence, the lam will presume to the contrary, and attribute the unfortunate consequences to his contributing negligence*
In the case at bar the defendant-doctor handled a gastroscope in such a manner that he punctured the plaintiffs esophagus and partially collapsed her right lung. As a result the patient almost died. In addition, she had to undergo major surgery because of the puncture. An incision had to be made from “the vertebra to the clavicular line”, the seventh rib had to be removed in order to reach the perforation and forty-one stitches were required to patch the break.
Did the doctor use due care when he thrust the gastroscope into the plaintiff’s gullet? If he did, he is not responsible for the horrible injury, pain and agony suffered by the plaintiff, but if he failed to exercise proper care, why should the plaintiff be denied her day in court to show what she is entitled to by way of recompense for the terrible hurt inflicted upon her?
The Majority of this Court says that the doctor is not required to show whether he did or did not use due care because the plaintiff did not bring into court another physician to stand before the doctor-defendant, level an accusing finger at him, and charge him with what perhaps is to the medical profession the most odious word in the language — malpractice. But is this the law? Of course, it takes no philosophical stethoscope to determine the reason why doctors are reluctant to testify against other doctors, but such reluctance should not act as a closed door against a meritorious *108claim by someone who has suffered through a doctor’s negligence.
I stand second to none in my boundless admiration for the medical profession. In my estimation, statesmen, industrialists, inventors and philosophers are inconsequential, so far as contributing to human happiness is concerned, as against the doctor who is dedicated to health — the sweetest desideratum in life because without health one has not the strength to squeeze the orange of existence to obtain the elixir of the joy of living. <
But after having paid my sincere tribute to doctors, I would not place them on a marble platform of impeccability and infallibility. They are human and therefore subject to all the foibles and weaknesses of the flesh which occasionally manifest themselves through indolence, indifference, carelessness and incompetence in a particular field which requires the maximum of competence, attention and' care.
And if one doctor is negligent, the rest of the medical world does not need to feel that this constitutes an adverse appraisement of their own skill and their own supreme dedication to the welfare of man.
The plaintiff in this case, Mrs. Katherine Demchuk, entered the Kensington Hospital in Philadelphia on August 16, 1955, complaining of pains in her abdomen. She was examined by the defendant, Dr. S. Philip Bra-low, who, after studying X-rays and the results of other tests, diagnosed her condition as “antral gastritis.” In order to thoroughly explore the possibilities of this condition he decided to probe the interior of her stomach with a gastroscope, which is a semi-flexible tube some three feet long and seven-eights of an inch in diameter. But it is more than a tube. In describing the apparatus Dr. Bralow said: “this instrument can be bent in a roughly 60 or 70 degree angle and not obliterate the optic system. We have at the tail-end a rubber finger, *109which is used to direct the passage of the instrument through the esophagus. The next portion is a light, which is roughly about the equivalent of 10 candlepower. The next portion of the instrument is the lens, and this acts very much as a periscope. In fact, this instrument was modeled after a periscope. This light reflects an image horizontal to it, and reflects through this lens, then shoots the image up through the 48 lens in this portion. This portion of the instrument is rigid, and it has a stainless steel shaft. In the examination, after the instrument is in its place, one looks through this eyepiece and gets the image.”
On August 23, 1955, then, Dr. Bralow decided to push this leviathan into the esophagus of the patient, descend into the depths of the chest, and pursue a course which would bring him to the stomach where he intended, periseopically, to look around.
The photograph of an exhibit introduced at the trial reveals the esophagus as a pipe which drops perpendicularly to a point and then curves almost at a right angle just above the stomach, which it finally enters and more or less becomes part of it. It must be obvious to the eye of the rankest amateur in mechanics, propulsion and civil engineering that in order to get any inside object around the curve of that tangential pipe one must proceed with measured caution and retarded momentum. No expert is needed to testify that any force which approaches a curve with exceptional power or unusual velocity will fail to take the curve and plunge ahead, regardless of consequences.
Applying that incontrovertible rule of physics to the instant situation, it would have to be obvious to any person that any insistent pushing behind the advancing ram of the gastroseope would force it not around the curve but against and through the wall of the esophagus which is, after all, only human tissue.
*110Dr. Bralow testified that he made two attempts to negotiate the curve and that he felt resistance. In spite of this he plunged ahead and when the plaintiff reacted with pain he -withdrew the gastroscope and Avith his assistant rushed her to the X-ray department “to find out whether we had caused any serious damage.” He found that he had indeed caused serious damage. He had forced the gastroscope through the esophagus wall. When he was asked: “Is there any doubt in your mind that this perforation or tear was caused by the instrument you were using?” he replied with an unequivocal: “No, sir.”
Having admitted that he himself caused the tragic perforation in the plaintiff’s esophagus wall, why was he not required, in the words of Justice Stewart in the Davis v. Kerr case, to “acquit himself of negligence”? The stark fact that Dr. Bralow punched a hole in Mrs. Demchuk’s esophagus raised of itself a question of fact for the jury (again quoting from the Davis case), namely: “. . . did he do all that reasonable care and skill would require?” And if he could not answer that question in the affirmative, should not the law, as Justice Stewart said, “presume to the contrary” ?
We have said more times than there are State Reports that: “When the thing which causes the injury is shown to be under the management of the defendant, and the accident is such as in the ordinary course of things does not happen if those Avho have the management use proper care, it affords reasonable ewdence, in the absence of explanation by the defendants that the accident arose from a want of care.”*
Could anything have been more under the exclusive control of the defendant than the gastroscope which Dr. Bralow lowered into Mrs. Demchuk’s interior? And *111isn’t it natural to suppose that if the doctor had used due care he would not have pierced the thin passage within?
The slightest acquaintance with this case prompts questions as inevitably as sparks fly upwards: Did the doctor use the gastroseope properly? Was he skilled in its use? How much experience, if any, did he have in this highly delicate procedure? The record shows that Dr. Bralow was certificated as a gastrophist in April, 1955. Four months later he performed the gastroscopy on Mrs. Demchuk.
If he was thoroughly competent and exercised aU the precautions which instinctively, to say nothing of scientifically, suggest themselves, there would be the logical inference that no accident would happen. There is the sad realism, however, that an accident did happen. Did Bralow do what it seems to me should be the first thing a neophyte doctor would be instructed not to do? Did he, with youthful enthusiasm, energy, and blind force, push ahead in the curve when he knew, or should have known, that he was in the esophagus curve?
If a passenger in a bus is injured when the bus does not take a curve in the highway, the passenger does not need to prove, in order to make out a prima facie case against the common carrier, that the driver was drunk, that the steering gear was defective, or that the wheels of the vehicle were out of alignment. He shows that the bus did not turn with the road and ipso facto, he has a case in court. It is then up to the bus company to demonstrate that it used due care in that it employed a sober driver, that its steering gear had been tested, and so on.
In the case at bar, the doctor was not called upon to show that he employed a good instrument, that he had a steady hand, that he took every precaution to *112avoid a puncture. And so, in the state of the law as the Majority now announces it with this decision, the legal profession is informed that we require a higher responsibility of care from a bus driver who travels over a wide macadamized highway than we require of a doctor who embarks on a journey through the narrow and darkened passages of the alimentary canal.
The Majority, quoting from the opinion of the lower court, and thereby accepting it as its own, cites in support of the nonsuit, the case of Robinson v. Wirts, 387 Pa. 291, the one which I have called a small hill amid the mountain ranges of the law. In the Robinson case the doctor also used a gastroscope on his patient, he also burst through the walls of the esophagus, and he also was absolved of all responsibility, although he wrought ruin and havoc on his patient. Why? Becáuse ¡no doctor could be found to say in court that Dr. Wirts was negligent. This Court, apparently feeling that some explanation for the tragic mishap was to be expected, said that it was possible that Dr. Wirts broke through Mrs. Robinson’s esophagus because her esophagus had “an abnormally weak wall.” But this kind of guessing should not have ruled out the plaintiff’s case. We said in Saganowich v. Hachikian, 348 Pa. 313, that: “. . . the law does not require the elimination of every possible cause of the accident other than that on which plaintiff relies, but only such other causes, if any, as are fairly suggested by the evidence . . . Proofs to a degree of absolute certainty are rarely attainable; it is sufficient that they be such as to satisfy reasonable minds.”
In Liguori v. Philadelphia, 351 Pa. 494, we said: “. . . it is equally well settled that, since proof to a degree of absolute certainty is rarely attainable in any litigated factual controversy, the law requires only that the evidence as to the operative cause of the accident be enough to satisfy reasonable and well-balanced *113minds that it was the one on which the plaintiff relies.”
Thus, in the realm of possibilities, it was more likely that the doctor was careless than that the walls of Mrs. Robinson’s esophagus were constructed of tissue paper. But the Majority argued in that case that the doctor’s negligence was not so clearly manifest that a jury could find him responsible for the injury he inflicted upon Mrs. Robinson. The Majority then gave an illustration of the kind of negligence which would be clear and which would do away with the necessity for the calling of expert evidence. Let us suppose, the Court said, a case “ ‘where a surgeon engaged in removing a tumor from a patient’s scalp would let his knife slip and cut off his patient’s ear.’ ” In such a case, the Court assured the legal profession, the patient would not have to call expert testimony to show that the surgeon was negligent. In the present state of the law, however, as announced by this decision, I am not so certain that the one-eared patient would still not be thrown out of court on his other ear if he did not come into court accompanied by a doctor who would testify that in cutting off the plaintiff’s ear the defendant surgeon was not living up to the standard of care and loyalty required by doctors under the Hippocratic oath.
The Majority gave another illustration where expert testimony would not be needed, namely, where a surgeon “ ‘undertook to stitch a wound on his patient’s cheek and by an awkward move would thrust his needle into the patient’s eye.’ ” But in such a situation who would determine that the surgeon’s move was an “awkward move”? The jury, of course. Why shouldn’t the jury in the present case, then, have been allowed to determine whether the defendant was not engaged in an “awkward move” when he forced his gastroscope through the right angular wall of the esophagus instead of easing it around the corner?
*114■Sometimes lawyers in their briefs will cite without analysis or explanation a string of cases with an attitude that the mere enumeration of names, initials and digits, establishes their position on Mt. Sinai. I am not always impressed with this conciseness of a telegraphic code and this sterility of expository projection. And I am no further impressed when this cabalistic enumeration is done by a Court. Thus, the Majority cites, as if uttering the last word in irrefutable postulation the cases of Bierstein v. Whitman, 360 Pa. 537, Powell v. Risser, 375 Pa. 60, and Scacchi v. Montgomery, 365 Pa. 377.
It so happens that no lawyer could describe these cases to a layman without embarrassment because if they are symbolic of justice through law, the average layman might have reason to feel that in entering a courthouse he is passing over the threshold of a house of mystery.
In Bierstein v. Whitman, supra, the plaintiff suffered a broken jaw when a dentist set about to extract a tooth. The smashed-jaw plaintiff brought a suit against the dentist and he was nonsuited. This Court affirmed the nonsuit with the statement that: “Negligence may not be inferred by laymen merely because the jaw was found to have been broken. A jaw could be broken even though there was no lack of care or skill by the dentist.”
In the absence of evidence that the patient had a “glass jaw,” why would there not be an inference that only negligence could shatter the osseous mandibles of a healthy human being? Of course, we can understand that in the old days when teeth were removed with chisel and hammer, a jaw could suffer breakage even though the extraction were performed by the ablest blacksmith in the town. But if law is supposed to keep pace with modern progress in dentistry, surgery, engineering and every other field of science, it cannot pos*115sibly accept a fractured jaw as a normal sequence of a tooth extraction. The Bierstein case, incidentally was decided in 1948, not 1848!
The decision in Powell v. Risser, 375 Pa. 60, fractures one’s sense of justice even more than the Bier-stein case. In that case one witness testified that the plaintiff’s hands Avere swollen “ ‘ two and a half to three times their normal size and resembled two raw steaks. There Avere blisters in the center of both palms, about the size of a half-dollar, and other blisters over his hand and fingers.’ ” There Avas evidence that these blisters Avere toxic and capable of spreading poison throughout the patient’s body. The doctor in the case operated on these blisters Avith an ordinary penknife which he carried around in his pocket. He did not sterilize the blade, he took no precaution to prevent infection. As a result of the ensuing infection the patient lost 60% of the functioning of both hands. Why would not such an obvious flagrant violation of the most elementary rules of hygiene become a case for a jury to decide Avithout the necessity of expert testimony? Why Avould such gross and almost wanton negligence differ from the negligence of the surgeon who by mistake slices off the patient’s ear? I have said it before and I repeat it here that: “The injustice of the decision in the PoAveli case is so palpable that to expatiate on it further can only increase one’s moral indignation without decreasing one’s intellectual revulsion which is complete. Time cannot dim, for me, that abhorrence, and I accordingly cannot permit citation of the Powell decision as authority for any case today, Avithout repeating the protest I made at the time of the original decision.”
In the case of Scacchi v. Montgomery, 365 Pa. 377, Avhere the patient died, the defendant-surgeon admitted : “ ‘I don’t knoAV, it never happened to me before, I must have gone too deep or severed the vein’ ”, “ ‘May*116be it happened I went too deep or skipped some vein.’ ”
This Court, in affirming the nonsuit entered there, said: “In the light of all the evidence presented, the Court below held and we concur that these statements were too vague or indefinite to establish negligence.”
What is the difference between cutting the wrong vein and slicing off a man’s ear? Especially when the doctor admits that he went beyond the depth of his knowledge, experience and skill?
After citing the Bierstein, Powell, and Scacchi cases, the Majority says that these cases “ ‘merely follow a long train of authorities . . . holding that no presumption or inference of negligence arises merely because the medical care or surgical operation terminated in an unfortunate result which might have occurred even though proper care and skill had been exercised, and where the common knowledge or experience of laymen is not sufficient to warrant their passing of judgment.’ ”
But this “long train of authorities” does not take the Majority across the desert of Bierstein, Powell and Scacchi back to the mountain peak of Davis v. Kerr where Justice Stewart, speaking for this Court in 1913, said that if a doctor leaves a sponge amid the entrails of a patient he must explain why. And if a doctor forces an instrument through those same entrails, why shouldn’t he be made to explain why, or otherwise be regarded as negligent?
Although the Majority of this Court has accepted the lower court’s opinion as its own, the decision of the lower court was only a reflection of what this Court had said in the Robinson case and did not represent its own sincere convictions in the matter. In point of fact it can be said that the Majority Opinion here is in the nature of a performance in ventriloquism because while it seems to be quoting the lower court it is in reality only re-speaking its own words.
*117The true views of the lower court were expressed when the trial judge, Vincent A. Carroll, battle-scarred veteran of war and the courts, addressed the jury as follows: “My entire sympathies are with the plaintiff in this case, but sympathies can’t control the law. I do not have the authority, and I would not arrogate to myself the power to change the law, although I am in sharp disagreement with it. The law in Pennsylvania on this point is clearly annunciated in the Robinson and Wirts case, which was decided in 387 Pennsylvania 291.”
Judge Carroll believed that, under the restrictions of the Robinson case, the plaintiff did not present the kind of evidence which he could properly submit to the jury, but he went on to say to the jury: “If there had been the slightest iota [of that type of evidence] I would have presented the case to you, because I believe the medical profession has responsibility in matters of this kind not to hole up, not to run into a covered shell when these things happen, but to admit that a doctor can make a mistake. They advance the theory that doctors cannot make a mistake, and they have been doing that for years. Well, I have the highest regard for the medical profession, especially the great doctors we have in Philadelphia. Notwithstanding their high professional standing, their high degree of intelligence and their high standards, in this one area where these things occur, you can never get one doctor to testify against another, and that to me is a deplorable condition. I have had this feeling for years.”
In concluding to the jury, Judge Carroll said: “I want to say this by way of conclusion, because this record may go to the Supreme Court, my feeling about the Robinson-Wirts case is this: I think it constitutes an unwarranted extension of protection to the physician, absolutely unwarranted, and this case establishes that fact. Certainly, it seems to me if the effect of a *118doctor’s diagnosis or Ms treatment is in issue, a lay jury is not competent without expert testimony to pass on medical propriety, and you can’t get medical testimony in any part of this great big wide world, and the time has come, and what I have said here may help accelerate that time, that the law will be so formed as to permit the testimony of persons not particularly skilled in medical practice, but people with common sense, and conclusions will be permitted to be drawn from the presumptions that arise in cases of this kind. As of this moment, a lay jury is not competent to pass upon medical propriety, and that is the Robinson case in a nutshell.
“However, let me say that where care is exercised by a doctor in effecting an otherwise proper treatment, when that is at issue, the use of care by the doctor, it should present a jury question. However, the Robinson-Wirts case says it does not, and again I say it isn’t for this court to arrogate to itself the authority to disrupt the existing law of Pennsylvania, with which I am, however, definitely out of accord.
“Therefore, I am going to grant a nonsuit. If the Supreme Court reverses me, as I hope it will in this case, I would be very much happier than if they affirmed what I have done here this morning.”
I greatly regret that this Court did not reverse the nonsuit, as Judge Carroll recommended, and I particularly regret that it has not levelled the little hill of Robinson v. Wirts.
A decision of this Court which does not even command the respect of the trial courts, is even a smaller hill than the one I have pictured on the terrain of jurisprudence. Nevertheless, I believe that if time does not work its erosion until the Robinson case can no longer be pointed to as a landmark, a reappraisement of the entire subject matter will bring into respectful and obedient focus the authority of Davis v. Kerr. And, *119•with the justice and logic of that decision restored to the law, patients may then enter hospitals assured that they will be as fully protected when the doctor engages himself in the dark, labyrinthian passages of the inner man as when the doctor, in a state of absent-mindedness, slices off an indispensable ear.
Italics throughout, mine.
Kotal v. Goldberg, 375 Pa. 397.