Byers v. Bacon
Byers v. Bacon
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The defendant in this case, a physician and surgeon, was charged by the plaintiff with negligence in failing to remove at the proper time, a rubber tube, which during the progress of a surgical operation performed on the plaintiff by defendant, had been inserted in the wound for drainage purposes. In the statement of claim, the
' It may be that the court below was right in holding that under any aspect'in which the case may be placed by additional testimony, the bar of the statute of limitations is fatal to the claim of plaintiff. But we do not see that this is necessarily so. The negligence charged was not in the insertion of the tube, but it was in the failure to remove it at the proper time, or in the failure to give notice of its presence, that it might be removed by another, when it had served its proper purpose. It could hardly have been intended to remain permanently in the body of plaintiff, and he should have been allowed to show when and by whom the tube, which was inserted by defendant, should have been removed. It may'be that good surgical practice required it to be kept in the' wound after plaintiff was discharged from the .hospital
The assignments of error are sustained, and the judgment is reversed with a procedendo.
Reference
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- Negligence — Physician and surgeon — Failure to remove drainage tube — Statute of Limitations — Act of June £4, 1895, P. L. £86. 1. An action instituted on February 18, 1913, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant, a physician and surgeon, in failing to provide for the removal at the proper time of a rubber tube which during the progress of a surgical operation performed on the plaintifE by the defendant was inserted in a wound for drainage purposes and which was invisible from the surface, is not necessarily barred by the provisions of the Statute of Limitations of June 24, 1895, P. L. 236, upon proof that the operation was performed by defendant at a hospital of which he was head of the staff of surgeons, and from which the plaintifE was discharged as a patient by the defendant on March 21, 1910. 2. In such case the plaintifE should he allowed to show when and by whom the tube should have been removed, and when plaintiff might he reasonably charged with knowledge of the fact that the tube had been overlooked.