Bennison v. Walbank

Decision Date25 April 1888
Citation38 Minn. 313
PartiesGEORGE BENNISON <I>vs.</I> SAMUEL S. WALBANK and others.
CourtMinnesota Supreme Court

W. W. Erwin and E. F. Lane, for appellant.

S. L. Smith, for respondent.

VANDERBURGH, J.1

The plaintiff recovered a verdict for damages against the defendants, physicians and surgeons, in an action for alleged malpractice in amputating plaintiff's arm, which had been injured by being accidentally caught in the gearing of a mill. The injuries were necessarily serious, but the controversy between the parties arises upon the question whether they were of such a character as to warrant a resort to amputation.

The only point insisted on in this court is that the verdict is not justified by the evidence. Immediately upon the happening of the accident, the defendants were summoned, and proceeded to strip and examine the wounded limb. And at the outset we find a direct conflict between the testimony of the plaintiff and his witnesses and that of the defendants in respect to the nature and extent of the injuries suffered by him, and the condition of the arm. Indeed, so different is the state of the case as presented by these witnesses, that one of defendants admitted in his testimony before the jury "that if the wound was as testified to by the plaintiff and his witnesses, the arm would certainly not have been amputated, at that time at least." The plaintiff also illustrated to the jury, by the aid of diagrams which are not returned to this court, the manner in which the accident occurred, and in what position the arm was when hurt. The record does not present the case as clearly as it appeared to the jury, and we are unable to say, upon the evidence as returned, that it was impossible, or improbable, even, that the wounds inflicted were as stated by the plaintiff and his witnesses. It was for the jury to ascertain the facts touching this matter, as a basis for the exercise of their judgment upon the question whether the defendants exercised reasonable care and skill in the premises, and to enable them to understand and apply the evidence of the expert witnesses. One of the latter, called by the plaintiff, testifies that, "assuming the testimony of the plaintiff and his witnesses to be correct, a surgeon, in the exercise of reasonable or ordinary skill, diligence, and care,...

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