Friday, October 11, 2013


Criminal Liability in Medical Negligence
Saving the Scalpel: Re-affirming the Hippocratic Oath
 

1.  INTRODUCTION


 
The paper has been painstakingly prepared and designed under three broad heads. This is an upshot of the landmark judgment rendered by the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India in Dr. Suresh Gupta v. Government of N.C.T. New Delhi and Anr in August 2004. The judgment briefly says that the doctors cannot be held criminally liable for error of judgment but can only be liable for gross negligence under section 304-A of the IPC. This judgment is a great sigh of relief to the whole medical fraternity of India.

 

Under the first content, there is an elaborative description on the negligence under the Indian Penal Code (Sec.304-A) with special reference to the acts of medical practitioners.

 

Under the second content, there is a brief note on the instant case with its facts, reasoning and the decision of the division bench. Under the same debate of Supreme Court’s judgment, it is further discussed about concept of mens rea under medical negligence by citing a series of case law.

 

Finally, in the light of discussion on above aspects regarding medical negligence and criminal liability, it is concluded that the judgment of the Hon’ble Supreme Court has led to an implied amendment in the wordings of Section 304-A of the IPC by incorporation of terms ‘error of judgment’ and ‘gross negligence’.

 

2.  NEGLIGENCE UNDER THE INDIAN PENAL CODE
Vis-à-vis MEDICAL PRACTITIONERS


“It is common knowledge that the intention of a man will not be probed, for the devil does not know a man's intention."

-Brian, C.J.

He who commits a wrong is said to be liable or responsible for it. The wrong may be in the form of an act or an omission. The essential distinction between crimes and civil wrongs is that crimes are considered public wrongs, which are a breach and violation of public rights, and duties, which affect the whole community and is distinguished by the harsher term crime or misdemeanor whereas civil wrongs are considered violations of rights that belong to the individual and are termed civil injuries.

Remedy for the wrong may thus be civil or criminal. However, there are some wrongs for which the remedy may be both civil and criminal (defamation, negligence and some other wrongs). Under the criminal law, liability is always penal. In penal liability, the purpose of the law, is, or includes punishment of the wrongdoer. Under civil liability, the law leaves the victim to sue for compensation, by way of damages. Negligence is one of the wrongs for which the law gives a remedy both under the civil law and the criminal law.

It is important for a medical practitioner to remember that there can be no civil action for negligence if the negligent act or omission has not been attended by an injury to any person; but bare negligence involving the risk of injury is punishable criminally, though nobody is actually hurt by it. Example a patient is operated upon in an operation theater without oxygen being available; the medical practitioner would be liable under the criminal law even though the patient may not have needed oxygen. The mere act of exposing the patient to the risk of personal safety or life is enough to bring criminal negligence into play.

From a practical viewpoint, the importance of distinguishing whether negligence is civil or criminal lies in the fact that action for redress to a patient against a medical practitioner would lie under different systems of justice. Civil justice is administered by one set of courts (civil courts, and now, in consumer forums) whereas criminal justice is administered in a somewhat different set of courts (Magistrate's of the First Class). Civil proceedings, if successful, result in a judgment for payment of compensation whereas criminal proceedings, if successful, result in punishments, which include imprisonment, fine, or both. Thus the basic objective of criminal proceedings is punishment and the usual goal of civil proceedings is non-punitive (compensatory).

The general condition of penal liability is indicated by the Latin maxim- Actus non facit reum, nisi mens sit rea- the act alone does not amount to guilt; it must be accompanied by a guilty mind (mens rea). Thus two conditions need to be fulfilled before penal responsibility can be rightly imposed. The one is the doing of some act (read act/omission) by the person held to be liable. The other is the mens rea or guilty mind with which the act is done. Thus, before the law can justly punish a criminal act, an inquiry must be made into the mental attitude of the doer for although the act may have been objectively wrongful, the mind of the doer may have been innocent. The mental attitude of the medical practitioner would thus have to concur with the wrongful act before he could be prosecuted successfully under the criminal law.

To attribute mens rea to a wrongful act it is necessary that the act be done either willfully or recklessly. Where the act is willful, mens rea is easy to attribute to the wrongful act since the mind has acted in concert with the wrongful act. A reckless act (read negligently or rashly) is one where the person is responsible for consequences foreseen as the certain or highly probable outcome of his act. However there are two qualifications- Firstly, criminal law may include provisions penalizing negligence even though this may result from mere inadvertence. Secondly, the law may create offenses of strict liability. We are concerned with the first qualification since the Indian Penal Code creates this liability.

This liability under the Indian Penal Code is created on the assumption of foreseeability of consequences, which could result from a wrongful act. Thus if a medical practitioner, does an act which he did not intend or even foresee, but which a reasonable medical practitioner would have foreseen under similar circumstances as likely to cause death, he would be held guilty of the wrongful act. Here foreseen and foreseeable consequences are put on the same footing as consequences which are intended.

Section 304-A of the Indian Penal Code and Sections 336, 337 and 338 are the only section under the criminal law which deals with professional negligence-the short title of Section 304-A reads 'Causing death by negligence'. The complete section is: "Whoever causes the death of any person by doing any rash or negligent act not amounting to culpable homicide, shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to two years, or with fine, or with both".

The provisions of the section would come into play only when death occurs. No injury short of death would make a medical practitioner liable under this section. Also, the provision comes into effect when there in no intention to cause death, and no knowledge that the act done in all probability would cause death (culpable homicide). When the act is in its nature criminal, the section has no application. The section does not apply when death has resulted from some supervening event which could not have been anticipated, but will only apply when death is the result of the rash or negligent act as its direct or proximate cause.

Criminal rashness means hazarding a dangerous or wanton act with the knowledge that it is so, and that it may cause injury but without intention to cause injury or knowledge that it will probably be caused. The criminality lies in running the risk of doing such an act with recklessness or indifference as to the consequences. Example a medical practitioner performing termination of pregnancy in its sixth month. Here the medical practitioner is aware (knowledge) or should be aware that termination of pregnancy in its sixth month is dangerous but still performs termination though he may not intend to cause death of the patient or have the requisite knowledge that death would probably be caused.

Criminal negligence is the gross or culpable neglect or failure to exercise that reasonable or proper care and precaution to guard against injury, which, was the imperative duty of the professional to adopt. Example a medical practitioner conducts termination of an eight-week pregnancy but does so without adequate training or with unspecialized instruments. Here the medical practitioner has not exercised the caution incumbent upon him to undertake termination only after adequate training in the procedure and only with sterilized instruments in an adequately equipped set up.

  

3.  DEBATE ON THE HON’BLE SUPREME COURT’S JUDGEMENT OF AUGUST 2004

(A Critique of Dr.Suresh Gupta v. Govt. of N.C.T. of  Delhi and Anr.)

On Friday, 6th August 2004 the only discussion that took place in the bar room of most courts and offices of consumer organisations was the Hon’ble Supreme Court’s decision to let doctors ‘off the hook’ in criminal complaints filed against them.

In the judgment[1] that would relieve the entire medical fraternity, the Supreme Court has ruled that if a patient dies due to an error of judgment committed by the doctor, then he is not criminally liable though could have to pay damages.

This judgment was given by a Bench comprising Justice YK Sabharwal and Justice DM Dharmadhikari while quashing criminal proceedings against a plastic surgeon who faced trial for criminal charges for causing death of a person who had wanted to remove a minor deformity in his nose.

The Bench said for fixing criminal liability on a doctor or surgeon, the standard of negligence required to be proved should be so high as could be described as "gross negligence" or "reckless".

"It is not merely lack of necessary care, attention and skill," the Bench said and added, "When a patient agrees to go for medical treatment or surgical operation, every careless act of the medical man cannot be termed as 'criminal'." Justice Dharmadhikari, writing for the Bench, said it could be termed 'criminal' only when the medical man exhibited a gross lack of competence or inaction and wanton indifference to his patient's safety and which is found to have arisen from gross ignorance or gross negligence.

"Where a patient's death results merely from error of judgement or an accident, no criminal liability should be attached to it," the apex Court said "Mere inadvertence or some degree of want of adequate care and caution might create civil liability but would not suffice to hold him criminally liable," it added.

Dr Suresh Gupta of Delhi was facing charges under Section 304A of the Indian Penal Code for causing death of the patient. He had conducted an operation to remove nasal deformity on April 18, 1994 but the patient died on the same day.

According to the post-mortem report conducted after three days, the cause of the death was "blockage of respiratory passage by aspirated blood consequent upon surgically incised margin of nasal septum".

From the post-mortem report and the opinion of the three medical experts of the medical team specially constituted, the case of the prosecution laid against the surgeon was that there was negligence in "not putting a cuffed endo-tracheal tube of proper size" and in a manner so as to prevent aspiration of blood blocking respiratory passage.

The Bench said the approach of the trial courts in such cases should be such that if a doctor did not give proper or adequate care to the patient, he should be liable for damages.

"This approach of the courts in the matter of fixing criminal liability on doctors, in the course of medical treatment given to their patients, is necessary so that the hazards of medical men in medical profession being exposed to civil liability, may not unreasonably extend to criminal liability and expose them to risk of landing themselves in prison for alleged criminal negligence," the apex Court said.

A Series Of Case Law On Medical Negligence Under IPC

For many vested interests, a very important weapon in their arsenal suddenly was defunct and this for them was a major cause of concern. All concerned were aware that the pronouncement was not new and criminal law could not be routinely applied to the medical practitioner but the main grouse was the publicity that the press and the television gave to this pronouncement, which now made their threats of a criminal complaint and imprisonment a non- entity.

Police complaints and criminal litigations have time and again been used to ‘soften’ the medical practitioners to coax them to agree to a hefty out-of-court settlement. Medical practitioner’s ignorance of law was capitalised upon and fear was used as a key to illegal enrichment both by litigants and the competent authorities, but thanks to the wide spread publicity, things are soon going to change much to the dislike of many.

The duty to take the requisite care and caution while treating a patient is a duty cast both under the civil law as well as the criminal law. The courts in R Vs Prentice and Sullman[2] and in R Vs Adomako[3] have settled the law as to how to determine criminal negligence in medical practice. The following is the test to bring home the charge of criminal negligence in medical negligence as settled in R Vs Adomako[4]

(a) Indifference to an obvious risk of injury to health

(b) Actual foresight of the risk coupled with the determination nevertheless to run it

(c) An appreciation of the risk coupled with an intention to avoid it, but the attempted avoidance involves a very high degree of negligence and

 (d) Inattention to a serious risk which goes beyond ‘mere inadvertence’ in respect of an obvious and important matter which the doctor’s duty demanded, he should address.

In short, the settled law is that the prosecution must prove

(i)                 the existence of duty to take care;

(ii)                a breach of duty causing death; and

(iii)              the breach of duty must be characterised as gross negligence. Whether the doctor’s breach of duty amounted to gross negligence, depended on the seriousness of the breach of duty committed by him in all the circumstances in which he was placed when the breach occurred.

Furthermore what must also be considered is whether, having regard to the risk of death involved, the conduct of the doctor was so bad in all the circumstances as to amount to a criminal act or omission. The test for recklessness formulated by Lord Diplock in R Vs Lawrence[5];, is that the doctor having recognised the risk had nevertheless gone on to take it.

This criterion of recklessness is based upon the premise that the doctor himself created the obvious and serious risk. Often the risk of danger to health is not created by the doctor, but pre-exists the doctor assuming a duty of care to the patient. It is thus, clear that the doctor must be proved to have been indifferent to an obvious risk of injury to health, or has actually so foreseen the risk but determined nevertheless to run it.

Death due to medical negligence is an offence, which can be agitated both in the criminal court, under the Indian Penal Code or in the consumer court under the relevant sections of the Consumer Protection Act or alternatively the same may also be agitated in the civil courts under the Law of Torts. Section 304A of the Indian Penal Code deals with death caused by a rash or negligent act.

Whenever there is death due to negligence of a doctor, the State always books the doctor under s 304A of the Indian Penal Code and not under section 302. The law in this regard was laid down by the Supreme Court of India in Juggankhan Vs State of Madhya Pradesh[6].

Similarly in Dr Khusaldas Pammandas Vs State of MP[7], the Indore Bench of Madhya Pradesh High Court held a registered hakim guilty for committing an offence under s. 304A of IPC. The court held that gross rashness and negligence could be inferred when a person undertakes a treatment or performs an operation, when he is totally ignorant of the science of medicine or practice of surgery. Since the hakim registered under section 46 of the Madhya Bharat Indian Medicines Act 1952, had no knowledge whatsoever of penicillin injection treatment, his act of giving procaine penicillin injection to the deceased would be clearly rash and negligent within the meaning of s 304A of IPC.

In Dr Ajit Kaur v State of Punjab[8] the criminal proceeding against the medical practitioner for committing an offence under

section 304A of IPC was quashed by Punjab and Haryana High Court on the ground that the action of the medical practitioner was not even proximately the cause of death of the baby which was born as a result of induced delivery.

In Ghanshyamdas Bhagwandas v State of MP[9] the deceased was on old patient of bronchial asthma. The doctor injected coramine and thereafter patient expired. In the absence of any evidence to establish direct nexus between the death of the patient and the rash act of injecting coramine by the doctor, the criminal liability of the doctor was not established.

In State of Gujarat Vs Dr Maltiben Valjibhai Shah[10], the deceased Ranjanbala went to the clinic of Dr M V Shah for treatment, for sinusitis and hypertension. The doctor gave a test dose to Ranjanbala and then she was given injection bistrepen half gram IM. After giving the injection the patient immediately complained of giddiness, pain in chest, perspiration and her pulse was rapid.

When reaction was noticed by the doctor, she immediately gave a number of injections to counter the reaction. The trial court held the doctor guilty of charge under section 304A, IPC and awarded simple imprisonment for seven days and a fine of Rs 1000 and in default simple imprisonment for seven days. The High Court of Gujarat acquitted the doctor of the charge under section 304A, IPC on appeal, on the grounds that the deceased did not react to test dose of procaine penicillin injection, and that the doctor after noticing reaction of the regular dose of injection, gave immediately a number of injections as anti-reaction treatment.

Criminal liability in medical practice has been discussed in great detail in Dr Krishna Prasad Vs State of Karnataka[11] by Justice Kulkarni. In this case the patient was admitted for a delivery in the nursing home. The doctor decided caesarean operation under spinal anesthesia.

The blood pressure began to fall soon after administering spinal anaesthesia and ultimately the patient died. The criminal proceeding against the anesthetist was started on the allegation that he was not an anaesthetic expert and that the test dose of spinal xylocaine injection was not given to the patient.

The Karnataka High Court quashed the criminal proceeding on the grounds that the doctor holding degrees like MBBS, FRCS, and DGO is qualified to administer anaesthesia and that the omission to give test dose of spinal xylocaine does not amount to rashness or negligence.

Rashness and negligence are not the same things. Negligence cannot be construed to mean rashness. There are different degrees of negligence and rashness. In order to amount to criminal rashness or criminal negligence the courts must find out that the rashness has been of such a degree as to amount to taking a hazard knowing that the hazard was of such a degree that injury was most likely to be occasioned thereby. The criminality lies in running the risk or doing such an act with recklessness and indifference to the consequences.

The question whether the accused’s conduct amounted to culpable rashness or negligence depends directly on the question as to what is the amount of care and circumspection which a prudent and reasonable man would consider it to be sufficient considering all the circumstances of the case[12].

Moreover, in applying the above criterion it is necessary to avoid being influenced by the prejudice arising out of the loss of a life which is so dominant a factor in accident cases. The distinction between the negligence which is sufficient ground for a civil action and the higher degree which is necessary in criminal proceedings is sharply insisted on in several cases.

Medical Negligence And Mens Rea

In criminal cases, the amount and degree of negligence are the determining factors. There must be presence of mens rea in the criminal negligence also. In order to establish criminal liability the facts must be such that the negligence of the accused sent the case beyond a mere matter of compensation and showed such disregard for the life and safety of others as to amount to a crime. Simple lack of care such as will constitute civil liability is not enough.

The duty of a medical man, who undertakes the treatment of a patient, is to use a fair and reasonable standard of care and competence. Before a medical man can be held criminally responsible for the death of his patient, the prosecution must prove all matters necessary to establish civil liability, except pecuniary loss, and in addition must prove negligence or incompetence on his part which went beyond a mere matter of compensation between citizens and showed such disregard for the life and safety of others as to amount to a crime against the State.

Where a doctor prepared an injection by dissolving some powder in water which he gave to fifty-seven children of whom five died and others were made ill, it was held that negligence, to be criminal, must be gross and that the only negligence on which reliance could be placed being the single act of dissolving the powder in water, a criminal degree of negligence had not been proved merely because too strong a mixture had once been dispensed and a number of children made gravely ill.[13]

Culpable negligence is acting without the consciousness that the illegal and mischievous effect will follow, but in the circumstances, which show that the actor has not exercised the caution, incumbent upon him, and that if he had, he would have had the consciousness. The imputability arises from the neglect of the civic duty of circumspection. It is manifest that personal injury, consciously and intentionally caused, cannot fall within either of these categories which are wholly inapplicable to the case of an act or series of acts, themselves intended, which are the direct producers of death.[14]

Following this, in the well-known case of Empress of India Vs Idu Beg[15], Straight J observed:

“Criminal rashness is hazarding a dangerous or wanton act with the knowledge that it is so and that it may cause injury, but without intention to cause injury or without knowledge that it will probably be caused. The criminality lies in running the risk of doing such an act with recklessness or indifference as to the consequences.

Criminal negligence is the gross and culpable neglect or failure to exercise that reasonable and proper care and precaution to guard against injury either to the public generally, or to an individual in particular, which, having regard to all the circumstances, out of which the charge has arisen, it was the imperative duty of the accused person to have adopted’,” Nelson has further on the same page mentioned: “When one does an act with utter indifference to the consequences of which the doer may be conscious and which, he knows, may not take place, one is said to be rash while criminal negligence is neglect to take that precaution which a reasonable and prudent person is expected to take under the circumstances obtaining in a given case.”

 “Negligence is the failure to take reasonable care and the degree of the reasonable care is not to be measured by any abstract standard. Negligence does not mean absolute carelessness or indifference, but want of such a degree of care as is required in particular circumstances.”[16]

”This section, then, does not apply to cases in which there has been a voluntary commission of an offence against the person. If a man intentionally commits such an offence and consequences beyond his immediate purpose result, it is for the court to determine how far he can be held to have the knowledge that he was likely, by such act, to cause the actual result. If such knowledge can be imputed, the result cannot be attributed to mere rashness: if it cannot be imputed, still the willful offence does not take the character of rashness, because its consequences have been unforeseen.”[17]

 
 
4. CONCLUSION

In the recent Dr Suresh Gupta Vs Government of NCT of Delhi (Criminal Appeal Number 778/2004) case the Hon’ble Supreme Court further reinforced the law settled by their predecessors. Justices Y K Sabharwal and D M Dharmadhikari quashed criminal proceedings against the plastic surgeon for allegedly causing death of a person whilst correcting a minor nose deformity.

The Judges in the judgment said that for fixing criminal liability on a doctor or a surgeon, the standard of negligence required to be proved should be so high as could be described as “gross negligence” or “recklessness”. But, in the instant case, the anaesthetist had not put a cuffed endotracheal tube as the result of which blood trickled into the lungs causing death. The anaesthetist expired during the proceedings and a four member expert committee held the case against the plastic surgeon by 3:1.

The Judges further said:” Where a patient’s death results merely from an error of judgment or an accident, no criminal liability should be attached to it. Mere inadvertence or some degree of want of adequate care and caution might create civil liability, but will not suffice to hold him criminally liable.” But the Hon’ble Supreme Court in its judgment has neither categorically made the distinction between error of judgement and gross negligence nor laid down the tests for determining the two.

The Hon’ble Supreme Court held that the doctor was “careless” but not so “grossly negligent to make him criminally liable.”

In this context, everyone shall recite one statement. If the doctor had made criminally liable in this case, then the doctors would be scared of taking the cases, which will finally result in to death of the poor patients in India.

However, because of this judgment, after a very long time, doctors all over the country can now sleep peacefully without fear of the police knocking at their doors. This is a great sigh of relief to the whole Indian medical fraternity. Besides this, henceforth the doctors may easily claim every negligent act as an error of judgment under the garb of this judgment.

Further, it is submitted that if the treatment is successful, the doctor looks like a miracle man. When it doesn't, it is hard for those affected to accept that it was possible to make a mistake. And if that mistake - inadvertent as it may be - leads to death, it becomes near impossible to ccome to terms to it.People want to be sure justice is done if they believe the doctor has been negligent.

Compensation for the mistake is addressed through civil action, while justice – the doctor going to jail for what he has done – is served through criminal courts. However, criminal liability for doctors is a gray area. Basically, any human can hurt another in three ways - through accident, error of judgement or intentionally. When a doctor has intentionally endangered the life of a patient, it becomes a case of murder. If he did not have the intention, but knew he was endangering the life of a patient, it becomes a case of culpable homicide not amounting to murder. However, it is impossible to demarcate where a judgement error becomes gross negligence.

It's difficult to hold a professional criminally liable for a judgement made in good faith. Say a lawyer does a bad job defending someone accused of murder and the client hangs. No matter how bad his defence, as long as he acted in good faith, can you hold him criminally liable? It's the same with doctors.

It can be finally concluded by adding that this judgment however led to an amendment in section 304-A of the IPC. The word used in the section is ‘negligence’, but not ‘gross negligence’.

 

REFERENCES

BOOKS

1.         Nelson, Indian Penal Code, 7th Edition (1983)

2.         Dr Sir Hari Singh Gour, Penal Law of India, 10th Ed (1997)

3.         Ratanlal and Dhirajlal, Law of Crimes, 22nd Edition (2002)

4.         Pillai P.S.A., Criminal Law, Butterworths, New Delhi (2002)

 

JOURNALS

1.         Criminal Law Journal, August 2004

2.         Health Management Express, September 2004

3.         Doctors’ Note, August 2004

 

ARTICLES

1.         Prof. Gopinath N. Shenoy, Criminal Liability in Medical practice, Health Management Express (Aug 15-30, 2004).

2.         A Relief to medical fraternity, Central Chronicle (August 6, 2004)

3.         Reactions to Criminal Liability Reactions to Supreme Court’s Judgment, Health Management Express (15-30 August 2004)

4.         Larger bench to reconsider on Supreme Court’s ruling on medical negligence, The Hindu (August 8, 2004)

5.         Abantika Ghosh, Whose life is it? Times News Network (August 10, 2004)

6.         Samiran Chakraverthi, When does negligence becomes truly criminal? Times of India (September 11, 2004)

 

WEB SITES

1.         www.lexsite.com/articles/lexdoc.asp?docid=99818

2.         www.healthlibrary.com/reading/ncure/law/part2.html

3.         www.healthmanagementexpress.com

4.         www.timesnewsnetwork.com



[1] Judgement of the Hon;ble Supreme Court in Dr.Suresh Gupta v. Govt. of N.C.T. of  Delhi and Anr.
[2] [Court of Appeal (1993) 4 Med LR 304]
[3] [(1993) 4 All ER 935; 15 BMLR 13; CA affirmed by (1994) 3 All ER 79 HL]
[4] Ibid
[5] (1981) l All ER 974; [1982] AC 510; [1981] 2 WLR 524 HL
[6] [AIR 1965 SC 831: 1965(1) Cr U 763: (1965) 2 SCJ 119: (1965) 1 SCWR 796. Criminal Appeal No. 171 of 1962, decided on 10.08.1964].
[7] [1960 Cr LJ 234; 1959 MP LJ 966]
[8] [1986(2) ACJ 696]
[9] [1977 ACJ 182.],
[10] [1994 (1) ACJ 375]
[11] [1989(1) ACJ 393]
[12]Ratanlal and Dhirajlal in Law of Crimes, 22nd Edition, on page 810 
[13] Ratanlal and Dhirajlal in Law of Crimes, 22nd Edition, Pp. 812
[14] Nelson,  Indian Penal Code, 7th Edition (1983) on page 1144
[15] ILR 3 All 776
[16] Nelson,  Indian Penal Code, 7th Edition (1983) on page 1145
[17] Dr Sir Hari Singh Gour, Penal Law of India, 10th Ed, p.2723

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