Lead Opinion
This court in Morrison v. Henke,
It was properly and advisedly conceded on the triаl of this case that the appellant here, Young Women’s Christian Association, is a public charitable corporation and is not operated for private gain. It is therefore in the same class and stands on the same footing as do hospitals which are conducted as public charitable institutions and which particular form of chаritable corporations were the defendants in most of the prior decisions on this subject.
In Morrison v. Henke, supra, upon the facts there presented the question was necessarily limited in its applica
The reason why, under the doctrine of respondeat superior, the liability incurred by the breach of the positive obligation of due care towards others which every responsible human being has resting upon him may be loaded onto others in addition to such defaulting human agent, has been recently and fully treated in the case of Apfelbacher v. State,
Because, therefore, of the nature, purpose, and functions of the defendant Young Women’s Christian Association as master and employer of the negligent employee, who was individually responsible for the injury to the plaintiff in this case, and not because of any particular position the plaintiff here occupied towards the defendant, the liability
We are satisfied, therefore, that this case comes within the scope and purpose of the spirit and basis of and for the dеcision in the Morrison Case, supra, and that it should and must control here.
The precise and narrower question here presented was decided at substantially the same time as was Morrison v. Henke, supra, and the same result reached, in Loeffler v. Sheppard-Pratt Hospital,
In Roosen v. Peter Bent Brigham Hosp.
Again in the late case of Emery v. Jewish H. Asso.
In Deming Ladies’ H. Asso. v. Price,
We have not overlooked the subsequent decisions in Mulliner v. Evangelischer Diakonniessenverein,
It follows from'what has been said that plaintiff cannot maintain his action against the appellant, and this of course renders it unnecessary to discuss any of the other questions presented on this appeal.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). In Morrison v. Henke,
“Since the hospital derives no profit from its work, and since it is founded for the sole purpose of conserving the health and life of all who may need its aid, and since it ministers to those who cannot pay as well as those who can, thus acting as a good Samaritan, justicе and sound public policy alike dictate that it should be exempt from the liability attaching to masters whose only aim is to engage in enterprises of profit or of self-interest. The patient who accepts the services of such an institution, if injured therein by the negligence of an employee, must be content to look for redress to such employee alone. The principle*183 invoked is analogous to that which exempts municipalities from the rule of respondeat superior in the discharge of their governmental functions.”
The first case in this country involving the immunity of a charitable hospital from liability to a patient on account of the negligence of a servant is McDonald v. Massachusetts Gen. Hosp.
Many of the courts based their opinions upon the so-called doctrine of public policy, 'and give as a reason that such institutions are inspired and supported by benevolence and devote their assets and energies to the relief of the destitute, sick, and needy, and that the common welfare requires that they should be encouraged and held exempt from liability for tort, and that to do otherwise would operate to discourage the charitably inclined, dissipate the assets of such institutions in damage'suits, and ultimately
“In answer to this argument, however, it has been said that while the public has an interest in the maintenance of a great public charity, it also has an interest in obliging every person and corporation which undertakes the performance of a duty to perform it carefully, and to that extent, therefore, it has an interest against exempting any person and any such corporation from liability for its negligence, and that moreover it is solely for the legislature, and not for the courts, to say that the former interest is so supreme that the latter must be sacrificed to it.”
This public-policy doctrine has been disapproved in University of Louisville v. Hammock,
The third class of cases holding to the doctrine of immunity is based upon the implied-waiver doctrine, under which it is held that one who accepts the benefit either of a public or private • charity enters into a relation which exempts his benefactor from liability for the negligence of his servants in administering the charity. In such cases it is said:
“There is an assumption of risk by the patient who seeks and receives the services of a public chаrity.” Powers v. Massachusetts H. Hosp.109 Fed. 294 ; 13 Ruling Case Law, p. 947, § 11.
In the Morrison Case (
It is said in 5 Ruling Case Law, 376:
“A careful study of the decisions, however, is convincing .that the doctrine of respondeat superior does apply though the business of the master is not carried on for the purpose of profit,” citing cases under note 18.
The doctrine which is perhaps most generally recognized by the courts is the implied-waiver doctrine, being the doctrine of waiver by acceptance of benefits, and this doctrine only applies to patients. It has therefore been held that recovery could be had in favor of a stranger injured by reason of the unsafe condition of hospital premises, or by an employee’s mechanic working on the hospital premises, or. by one injurеd by the careless driving of a hospital’s servant, or by an apprentice nurse put in charge of a patient suffering with a contagious disease without warning, whereby she contracted it. 13 Ruling Case Law, 949, and numerous cases cited in the notes.
While I do not agree with the decision in the Morrison Case, but assuming that the doctrine declared for therein is now the law in this state, the question arises whether it should be extended to immunize an institution like the defendant in the instant case. Exemption from liability for negligence in cases of private institutions should be founded solely upon acts of the legislature, and such exemption is particularly a province of the legislature. The legislature in this state has seen fit, in a number of instances, to exempt property of such institutions from taxation. Surely such exemptions would not have been within the proper field of determination for the courts. While hospitals, Young Men’s Christian Associations, and similar institutions are actively engaged in the welfare of humanity and tend to
Under the present-day existing circumstances, is it a wiser policy to hold to the doctrine of immunity or to the doctrine of liability; and assuming that the doctrine of immunity shall be continued with respect to hospitals in regard to their patients, should such doctrine be extended to include injuries received by strangers ?
The Young Women’s Christian Association has been a powerful factor for good in every civilized community. To my mind it is repulsive to the very idea underlying the organization and its purpose to make claim tо or grant immunity, especially where an injury is sustained through the negligence of a servant of the association by a stranger. What reason is there for immunizing an association of this kind on account of the negligence of its servants, and placing the entire consequences of an injury upon an innocent third person or upon the family of such injured person? The doctrine of responsibility for negligence is
The immunity declared in the instant case is a corollary derived from the principle laid down in the 'Morrison Case. .The error is in the premise, and therefore the final results are not true; but, in any event, the limits of the public-policy doctrine declared in the Morrison Case should have been there drawn, for if an exemption on the ground of public policy can be legally declared under the facts existing in the Morrison Case, such exemption can be judicially limited.
In this present day сharity is administered mainly through the agency of corporations, which 'can act only by and through agents, so that'the immunity doctrine in effect results in a license to commit irremediable torts; a doctrine which the plaintiff, an innocent traveler on the highway, injured through the negligence of the defendant’s agents, resulting in epilеptic fits — a rather serious human ailment,— will never be fully able to understand or appreciate. Charity from the modern viewpoint is an attribute of justice and springs from the Christian doctrine of service to mankind, and is not only a privilege but a duty, at least in the moral sense. The protection of life and limb by organized sociеty is of greater importance to mankind than any species of
For the reasons stated I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion.
