Summary
In Stachowiak, a medical malpractice case, the defense used enlarged charts from medical textbooks to illustrate the defendant's testimony that he had relied on available information in designing a course of treatment for the plaintiff patient.
Summary of this case from Fletcher v. Ford Motor Co.Opinion
Docket No. 78-849.
Decided September 10, 1979.
Lopatin, Miller, Bindes, Freedman Bluestone (by Michael Gagleard), for plaintiffs.
Sullivan, Ranger, Ward Bone, for defendant.
Before: T.M. BURNS, P.J., and M.F. CAVANAGH and MacKENZIE, JJ.
Plaintiffs-appellants appeal of right a December 29, 1977, jury verdict of no cause of action in this medical malpractice suit. We reverse.
Plaintiffs first complain that the trial court erred in admitting into evidence certain exhibits of the defendant. The four objected-to exhibits consisted of medical charts that were drawn from information obtained from a medical treatise. This information was offered to support the defendant doctor's claim that he acted in accordance with the requisite standard of care when he chose one method of treatment for plaintiff Elizabeth Stachowiak over another.
Both the applicable Michigan rule of evidence, MRE 707, and the Supreme Court's interpretation of that rule, see Bivens v Detroit Osteopathic Hospital, 403 Mich. 820 (1978), preclude the admission at trial of statements contained in learned treatises for purposes other than impeachment. Because the objected-to exhibits were excerpts from a learned treatise, the lower court erred in permitting their introduction at trial as part of defendant's case in chief. Because we cannot say that this error was harmless, we must reverse.
Plaintiffs also argue that the lower court erred in denying their motion for a mistrial which they made because of certain allegedly improper arguments of defense counsel in his closing to the jury. In his closing argument defendant's counsel intimated that testimony of plaintiffs' expert had been "bought" and indicated that, although defendant had additional evidence that would have supported his position, "[r]egrettably, some of our rules of evidence prohibit introduction of the kinds of things that would, in my judgment, at least, lead to some complete understanding of the truth in a case". After making this latter comment, defense counsel listed several pieces of evidence that had been excluded at trial.
Because of our disposition of the first issue in this appeal, we need not decide whether the merits of this issue require reversal. However, we note that these comments by defense counsel were improper and we trust that they will not be made again on retrial.
Reversed and remanded. Plaintiffs may assess costs.