
    PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS
    [Summit (9th) Court of Appeals,
    January 19, 1923.]
    Washburn, Pardee and Punk, JJ.
    Denis Pantazatos v. Emmet C. Jelm.
    Degree of Skill Required of Specialist Greater Than That of Ordinary Practitioner.
    Where a physician is employed because of his peculiar learning and skill in a specialty practiced by him, his duty to his patient is not measured by the average skill of a general practitioner, and he should be held to that degree of skill and knowledge which is ordinarily possessed by those who devote special time and study to the disease as to which he has held himself out as a specialist.
    Error.
    
      Carl M. Myers and Donald Qottwald, for plaintiff in error.
    
      Waters, Andress, SouthwortJi, Wise & Maxon and Bernier, Darter, Walker <& Watters, for defendant in error.
   Per cnriam.

This is an action in which plaintiff sued the defendant to recover damages for an alleged malpractice. The verdict of the jury and judgment of the court was for the defendant.

The principal error complained of and set out in the brief and noticed in oral argument is in reference to the charge of the court.

At the request of plaintiff, the court charged before argument as follows:

1. "You are instructed that a physician who offers his services to the public impliedly agrees with those who employ him that he possesses that reasonable degree of learning, skill and experience which is ordinarily possessed by persons engaged in that profession and sufficient to qualify him to engage in that profession. A physician assumes to exercise the ordinary care and skill of his profession, and is liable for injuries resulting from his failure to do so, if his failure to exei’cise the ordinary care and skill of his. profession is the proximate cause of the injuries. ’ ’

The plaintiff also asked the court to charge as follows:

2. “You are instructed that a physician holding himself out as having special knowledge and skill in the treatment of a particular disease is bound to bring to the discharge of his duty to a patient employing him as such specialist to treat such disease, not merely the ordinary degree of care and skill possessed by general practitioners, but that special degree of care, skill and knowledge possessed by physicians who are specialists in the treatment of stich disease in similar localities, having regard to the present state of medical and scientific knowledge at the time, of treatment. ’ ’

This request the court refused to give before argument, to which ruling plaintiff excepted. The general charge of the court was along the lines indicated in the first request quoted, which was given, and at the conclusion of the charge, plaintiff again requested that request No. 2, which had been refused, or some similar statement of the law, be charged, which the court refused, and to which plaintiff excepted.

The petition alleged and the proof established by the admission of the defendant, that he held himself out as a specialist in the treatment of the disease concerning which it was claimed he was guilty of malpractice.

The courts of Ohio have not spoken on the subject as to whether or not a physician who holds himself .out as a specialist is held to a greater degree of care and skill than the ordinary care and skill of general practitioners, but numerous authorities outside of the state of Ohio sustain the proposition that where a physician is employed because of his peculiar learning and skill in the specialty practiced by him, his duty to his patient can not be measured by the average skill of a general practitioner, but that he should bring to the discharge of his duty to patients employed by him as such specialist, that degree of skill and knowledge which is ordinarily possessed by physicians who devote special attention and study to the disease of which he has held himself out as a specialist. McClarin v. Genzfelder, 126 S. W., 817; Coleman v. Wilson, 85 N. J. L., 203 [88 Atl., 1059]; Rann v. Twitchell, 82 Vt., 79 [71 Atl., 1045]; Physicians and Surgeons 30 Cyc., 1571; Physicians and Surgeons, 21 R. C. L., 387; Stewart’s Legal Medicine, p. 254, sec. 93; Gillette v. Tucker, (67 Ohio St. 106; 65 N. E. 865), 93 Am. St. 639, 664n; Palmer v. Humiston (87 Ohio St. 106; 101 N. E. 283), 45 L. R. A. (N. S.) 640.

No decisions holding to the contrary have been cited and we have found none, and we are satisfied that the trial court in the instant case should have adopted the view of, the law expressed in these eases and that it was error not to charge that a specialist, employed as such, is charged with the duty of exercising that degree of skill and care which is ordinarily exercised by specialists in his line under the same or similar circumstances.

The court’s attention to this phase of the law was challenged both before and after the general charge, and it was error to refuse to charge on the subject.

We further find upon a review of the record that such error was prejudicial in this case. Judgment will therefore be reversed for such error, and the cause remanded.

Washburn, Pardee and Funk, JJ., concur in judgment.  