Mrs. Bell filed an action against two physicians for the death of her nine-year-old son, due to their alleged wilful and gross negligence in treating him for a respiratory disorder and of the codefendant hospital in failing to furnish proper emergency treatment, seeking damages for the full value of his life. She and her husband then filed a second action in the same court against the physicians alleging the same factual course of conduct and death and that the treatment was a breach of the defendants’ contract with the plaintiffs to use "that degree of care and skill commonly possessed and exercised by physicians specializing in pediatric medicine,” to keep the disease under surveillance, to hospitalize the child, to call in a consultant physician, and to render emergency life saving treatment. These are the same allegations which constitute the allegations of negligence in the first action. Damages were sought for grief and mental anguish, that is, for solatium, resulting to them from the child’s death. A motion to dismiss the second action was sustained and the plaintiffs appeal. Held:
It is well settled that the breach of a contract between doctor and patient may give rise to a right of action sounding in either tort or contract, and that, prior to the Civil Practice Act, the election to pursue either by the contracting party barred the other.
Stokes v. Wright,
We do not think the mere fact that the action (in order to differentiate it from the previous lawsuit) is denominated as sounding in contract rather than tort would change the rule. The suit in either event is for a breach of a contract by reason of tortious acts which resulted in the death of the child. For such wrongful death the right to recover is given by Code Ann. § 105-1307 — first to the mother but, if the mother is not living, then to the father. The mother brought the action here. The mother and father, alleging themselves to be joint contractors, brought the second, but this is not enough in itself to require a contrary disposition of the case.
In
Bulloch County Hospital Authority v. Fowler,
The judgment of dismissal is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
