113 So. 79 | Ala. | 1927
Count X of the complaint, on which the case was submitted to the jury, in substance, avers that the defendant for reward undertook and engaged to nurse and care for plaintiff, during her accouchement, *328 and that defendant's servant or agent, on being informed that plaintiff was about to give birth to the child and being requested to call the physician, while acting within the scope of her employment, negligently failed and refused to call the physician, and as a proximate consequence plaintiff was denied the presence, aid, and assistance of such physician during the birth of her child, to her damage.
The only objection to this count, urged in argument, is that it "shows on its face that the negligence complained of was about matters calling for professional skill and knowledge, and nowhere is it averred in said count that appellant failed to exercise due and reasonable care in the selection and retention of its servants or agents," who are alleged to be guilty of negligence. It is certain that no professional skill or knowledge was required to enable the servant or agent in charge of the case to call the physician, on being requested to do so by the patient, and the question of whether the servant or agent was guilty of negligence in failing or refusing to do so depended upon the circumstances to be established by proof.
The averments of this count bring the case within the rule of responsibility declared in Tucker v. Mobile Infirmary Association,
The defendant's plea 3 avers, in substance, that defendant's institution was operated exclusively for charity, that due care was exercised by it in the selection of its servants, and that the duty the breach of which is complained of was one that called for peculiar skill and knowledge.
Pleas 4 and 5, in substance, aver the same as plea 3, with the additional averments that plaintiff did not pay or offer to pay, nor was she charged by the defendant, reasonable compensation for the services rendered by the defendant; that the charge made was a mere nominal sum wholly inadequate to the value of the services rendered.
Plea 6 avers that the duty the breach of which is complained of was one requiring "peculiar and special skill, knowledge and learning on the part of the nurses and employés of defendant," and that defendant exercised reasonable diligence and care in the employment and retention of its said servants.
Pleas 3 and 6, in legal effect, confess the averments that the defendant, for a reasonable compensation, undertook to nurse and care for the patient without avoiding the legal effect of these counts, and asserts that the duty of calling the physician when requested by the patient was a duty requiring special skill and knowledge. This statement of the legal effect of those pleas is sufficient to show that the demurrer was properly sustained. 4 Myf. Dig. 469, § 604, Id. p. 470, § 617; Tucker v. Mobile Infirmary Association, supra.
If the plaintiff was a charity patient and the defendant did not, for a reasonable reward, undertake and engage to nurse her during the period of her confinement, as averred in the complaint, this was admissible under the general issue, and the demurrer was sustained to pleas 4 and 5 without error. Bibby v. Thomas,
The evidence is without dispute that the plaintiff was received and registered as a patient in the defendant hospital, and in the absence of plaintiff's physician she was in the charge and care of some one or more of the defendant's nurses, whose duty it was to take her temperature and observe her condition, and that the defendant made a charge for the hospital service so rendered.
The great weight of the evidence shows that the plaintiff had been in labor for about 12 hours before she was delivered, and the defendant's evidence shows that the child's head had passed out through the birth canal before the hospital physician was called to her, while that of the plaintiff was that the child was born before the hospital physician was called. The undisputed evidence shows that plaintiff's physician did not arrive until after the birth of the child, but was there during the delivery of the afterbirth.
The evidence was in sharp conflict as to whether the plaintiff informed the nurse in charge 35 minutes before the child was born that the event was about to happen, accompanied with a request that the doctor be called, followed by the refusal of the nurse to do so, but it tended to show that plaintiff's doctor arrived in 15 or 20 minutes after he was called. In these circumstances it was for the jury to say whether or not the nurse was guilty of negligence and whether or not such negligence proximately resulted in depriving the plaintiff of proper surgical aid in the delivery of her child.
The plaintiff was in the hospital two days, for which a charge of $21.95 was made, including $10 for room and board, $5 for operating room fee, laboratory examination $5,95 cents for drugs, and $1 for surgical dressing, and, in the absence of countervailing evidence, we are of the opinion that it may be presumed, as against the defendant, the party rendering the service and making the charge, that these charges afforded reasonable compensation for the services. On the evidence as a whole, the question of defendant's liability was for the jury, and the affirmative charge was refused without error. Southern States Fire Ins. Co. v. Kronenberg, *329
Something like a quarter of a hundred assignments of error, based on the rulings of the court on the admission of evidence, are argued in bulk, without reference, except in a few instances, in the brief or in the assignments of error as to the pages of the record where these questions are raised, and the sole insistence is that "it is clear that all of these questions and answers were about matters of a professional nature, and about matters to which no one but an expert could testify."
Assuming that this is a serious insistence on these several and numerous assignments — a matter of some doubt — we think it a complete answer to say that the event here involved is such as has attended the human race during its entire history, about which there is much common knowledge, as well as technical learning. The witnesses testifying were the plaintiff and another, who had experienced the travail of childbirth, and defendant's nurse and the physician on the medical staff of the hospital, who were shown to have much technical learning and experience.
We have examined each of these assignments and agree with appellant's counsel that they present nothing requiring special treatment. The authorities cited are not in point.
In Feore v. Trammel,
Here the questions were whether the plaintiff was in labor of childbirth at the time she was received as a patient, whether the plaintiff heard the child strangling before she received assistance, whether or not the plaintiff was nervous or slept less after her experience than she did before, whether plaintiff was suffering pain when she asked that the doctor be called, and kindred subjects relating to the res gestæ of the plaintiff being committed to the care of the defendant, and her experience during travail.
A like number of assignments of error are based on the refusal of special charges predicated, as appellant states, on one or two theories, viz.: (1) The defendant was only liable for the negligent selection and retention of its nurses; and (2) the nurses caring for plaintiff were the agents of plaintiff and her attending physician in and about the negligence complained of.
Appellant's first theory, above stated, has been held unsound, and the doctrine on which it is based repudiated, in our case of Tucker v. Mobile Infirmary Association,
Some of the charges refused were fully covered by others given, and some were inherently unsound as applied to the case presented on the pleadings and proof.
In respect to the objections to the preliminary statement, of counsel to the jury, it appears that the trial court sustained the appellant's objection to such statements as were improper and promptly and specifically instructed the jury that such statements were not evidence and must not be so considered. Moreover, counsel for plaintiff promptly withdrew the alleged objectionable statements and asked the jury not to consider them. We are therefore not of the opinion that appellant was in any way prejudiced by such statement. Feore v. Trammel, supra.
In the motion to strike certain quoted averments from the complaint, the averments of count X, "and plaintiff will be caused to suffer great physical pain and mental anguish in the future," were not included in the motion as among the objectionable averments. Moreover, "the rule here is not to predicate error of such ruling." Bixby-Theisen Co. v. Evans,
We find no reversible error in the record.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur. *330