Ramos v. CA, DSMC - G.R. No. 124354 - December 29, 1999 - Digest
Ramos v. CA, DSMC - G.R. No. 124354 - December 29, 1999 - Digest
Ramos v. CA, DSMC - G.R. No. 124354 - December 29, 1999 - Digest
CA, DSMC
G.R. No. 124354
December 29, 1999
KAPUNAN, J.:
ISSUE:
Whether Dr. Hosaka and Dr. Gutierrez were negligent and are solidarily liable for the
damages.
RULING:
YES, under the principle of Res Ipsa Loquitur.
Res ipsa loquitur is a Latin phrase which literally means the thing or the transaction
speaks for itself. The phrase res ipsa loquitur is a maxim for the rule that the fact of the
occurrence of an injury, taken with the surrounding circumstances, may permit an inference or
raise a presumption of negligence, or make out a plaintiffs prima facie case, and present a
question of fact for defendant to meet with an explanation.
Before resort to the doctrine may be allowed, the following requisites must be
satisfactorily shown:
1. The accident is of a kind which ordinarily does not occur in the absence of someones
negligence;
2. It is caused by an instrumentality within the exclusive control of the defendant or
defendants; and
3. The possibility of contributing conduct which would make the plaintiff responsible
is eliminated.[
In the above requisites, the fundamental element is the control of the instrumentality
which caused the damage. Such element of control must be shown to be within the dominion of
the defendant. In order to have the benefit of the rule, a plaintiff, in addition to proving injury or
damage, must show a situation where it is applicable, and must establish that the essential
elements of the doctrine were present in a particular incident.
In the present case, Erlinda submitted herself for cholecystectomy and expected a routine
general surgery to be performed on her gall bladder. On that fateful day she delivered her
person over to the care, custody and control of private respondents who exercised complete
and exclusive control over her. At the time of submission, Erlinda was neurologically sound and,
except for a few minor discomforts, was likewise physically fit in mind and body. However,
during the administration of anesthesia and prior to the performance of cholecystectomy she
suffered irreparable damage to her brain. Thus, without undergoing surgery, she went out of
the operating room already decerebrate and totally incapacitated. Obviously, brain damage,
which Erlinda sustained, is an injury which does not normally occur in the process of a gall
bladder operation. In fact, this kind of situation does not happen in the absence of negligence
of someone in the administration of anesthesia and in the use of endotracheal tube. Normally,
a person being put under anesthesia is not rendered decerebrate as a consequence of
administering such anesthesia if the proper procedure was followed. Furthermore, the
instruments used in the administration of anesthesia, including the endotracheal tube, were all
under the exclusive control of private respondents, who are the physicians-in-charge. Likewise,
petitioner Erlinda could not have been guilty of contributory negligence because she was under
the influence of anesthetics which rendered her unconscious.
Considering that a sound and unaffected member of the body (the brain) is injured or
destroyed while the patient is unconscious and under the immediate and exclusive control of
the physicians, we hold that a practical administration of justice dictates the application of res
ipsa loquitur.