Jess Edwards, Inc. v. Goergen
Decision Date | 09 June 1958 |
Docket Number | No. 5774.,5774. |
Citation | 256 F.2d 542 |
Parties | JESS EDWARDS, Inc., a corporation, Appellant, v. Cecelia GOERGEN and Norbert H. Goergen, Appellees. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — Tenth Circuit |
William W. Gilbert, Santa Fe, N. M. (Carl H. Gilbert, L. C. White, and Sumner S. Koch and Gilbert, White & Gilbert, Santa Fe, N. M., of counsel, were with him on the brief), for appellant.
Wiley E. Mayne, Sioux City, Iowa (Earl T. Klay, Orange City, Iowa, and Irwin S. Moise, Albuquerque, N. M., and Shull, Marshall, Mayne, Marks & Vizintos, Sioux City, Iowa, of counsel, were with him on the brief), for appellees.
Before BRATTON, Chief Judge, and PHILLIPS and BREITENSTEIN, Circuit Judges.
Appellee-plaintiff Cecelia Goergen was injured in an automobile accident that occurred when a car in which she was riding as a passenger was struck from behind by a truck driven by an employee of appellant-defendant, Jess Edwards, Inc. The car was knocked off a bridge into an arroyo fifteen feet below. Edwards admitted liability. After a jury trial on the sole issue of damages, Cecelia was awarded $82,500.00 and her husband, Norbert, was awarded $5,000.00 for loss of consortium.
Edwards contends that Cecelia's injuries were aggravated by negligent treatment which she received from her doctors and that the trial court erroneously instructed the jury as to the liability of Edwards for such injuries.
After the accident Cecelia had much trouble with her back. She consulted her family doctor, an orthopedist, and a neurosurgeon. All were experienced and competent physicians. As she did not respond to treatment a myelogram was performed about one year after the accident.1 According to the testimony of her doctors this test showed "disc herniations in the thoracic eleven and lumbar five areas."2 Plaintiff's doctors testified that this condition was directly attributable to the accident. An operation, known as a laminectomy, was performed on Cecelia's back at the T-11 and L-5 vertebral areas. At each point a herniated disc was found and removed. A bone fusion was performed at L-5 but not at T-11. Cecelia did not improve after the operation. Her doctors testified that there was permanent damage to the spinal cord in the T-11 region. The orthopedist summarized the situation thus:
"I think that at that time the occurrence of the accident she probably suffered some torn ligaments, and the supporting structure around the eleventh thoracic vertebra, around the eleventh thoracic disc, and I think over the number of months which followed, that loss of stability resulted in allowing the disc to press on the spinal cord at that region, and this repeated pressure resulted in damage to the spinal cord, and when we removed that pressure, that it was too late, that the damage had been done, and she just has not recovered."
A neurosurgeon testified for the defense as to his findings from a physical examination of Cecelia a few days before the trial and from his inspection of X-ray pictures. He stated that the myelogram showed a possibility of a herniated intervertebral disc at the T-11 interspace but did not indicate such a condition at L-5. He found an injury to the spinal cord in the lower thoracic region and said that he had no opinion as to whether the damage to the spinal cord occurred at the time of the operation. According to his examination there was no laminectomy performed at T-11 but there had been such an operation at T-10. He said if he had been plaintiff's doctor he would not have performed the operation.
The court instructed the jury, in part, as follows:
Edwards contends that the foregoing instruction was erroneous and that the court should have instructed the jury that if it found any aggravation to Cecelia's injuries because of the assertedly improper treatment, defendant was not liable therefor as such a consequence was not foreseeable.
The general rule is that an injured party can recover from the original tort-feasor for the damages caused by the negligence of a physician in treating the injury which the tort-feasor caused,...
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...302 F.2d 132 at 135 (10th Cir. 1962); Whitaker v. Texaco, Inc., 283 F.2d 169 at 174 (10th Cir. 1960); Jess Edwards, Inc. v. Goergen, 256 F.2d 542, 100 A.L.R. 2d 804 (10th Cir. 1958). In each of the cited cases, the court held that federal courts, in diversity cases, must follow a "clear and......
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