Plaintiffs assign error to the granting of summary judgment in favor of defendant as to punitive damages, the granting of directed verdicts on the majority of plaintiffs’ claims of negligence, and the exclusion of certain medical records; also plaintiffs’ challenge the propriety of the jury charge.
Plaintiffs presented as their case in chief the testimony of both plaintiffs; Dr. Amon Funderburk, one of Willie Lee Burns’ treating physicians at Forsyth Memorial Hospital; Everett Fox, an expert in the field of hospital administration; Dr. Joseph Oliver, an expert in the general practice of medicine and Willie Lee Burns’ present doctor; two of the plaintiffs’ daughters; and Mary Newell Waller, an expert in the field of clinical psychology.
Plaintiffs’ evidence tended to show the following: On 28 May 1980, while Willie Lee Burns was driving home from a fishing trip, his “left eye was acting up.” Upon his return home he went to see his regular doctor, Dr. Trujillo, who had him admitted to defendant hospital for tests, specifically a myelogram, to determine whether plaintiff had a pituitary tumor. Mrs. Burns requested a private or semi-private room, but Mr. Burns was placed in a ward. The subsequent tests revealed no tumor. When Willie Lee Burns was discharged on 1 July 1980, he had to use a wheel chair. After his discharge, he required assistance walking for the next eighteen months, required hospitalization on three more occasions, became impotent, continuously experienced severe lower *560 back pain, and required the continuous care of a physician and physical therapist up to the time of trial. According to the testimony of plaintiff and several expert witnesses, the deterioration in Willie Lee Burns’ physical condition resulted from being hit by a chair thrown by Daniel Moore.
Daniel Moore was transferred to Forsyth Memorial Hospital on 21 May 1980 from Reynolds Health Center, a mental health facility. According to the report submitted by Dr. Bahrani, Daniel Moore’s treating physician at Reynolds Health Center, Moore was a voluntary admission seeking treatment of alcoholism. Dr. Bahra-ni diagnosed the seventy-four year old male as suffering from alcoholism, acute alcohol withdrawal syndrome, and asthma. On 18 June 1980, Daniel Moore was moved into Room 839, a ward room with three other patients, including plaintiff Willie Lee Burns. Plaintiff Julia Colson Burns testified that when she came to visit her husband the evening of 18 June 1980, the “new man in the room [was] acting crazy.” Mr. Moore “was hollering and screaming.” “He threw his tray and food all over the room.” Mrs. Burns observed Mr. Moore playing with his sexual organ. Mr. Moore was restrained by being tied across his stomach with a sheet. “The man was acting so crazy that I was scared to leave Willie in there.” Because the nurses who were in the room did nothing to further restrain Mr. Moore, but simply showed amusement at his behavior, Mrs. Burns went to the nurses’ station and demanded that Mr. Burns be moved to a private or semi-private room. Mrs. Burns told the nurse at the nurses’ station that Daniel Moore was dangerous. The evidence further tended to show that, later that night, during the early morning hours, Daniel Moore got out of his bed, stood at the foot of his bed, and threw a chair. His restraint was still around his waist, with the ends tied to the bed rails. While still recuperating from the myelogram, Willie Lee Burns was struck by a chair in his left leg and left testicle and knocked to the floor.
In the first Assignment of Error addressed, plaintiffs contend the court improperly granted summary judgment in favor of defendant regarding punitive damages. We disagree.
Where a motion for summary judgment is granted, the critical question is whether the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the af
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fidavits, establish a genuine issue as to any material fact.
Oliver v. Roberts,
In plaintiffs’ next Assignment of Error, plaintiffs contend that the court erred in granting directed verdicts on many of plaintiffs’ claims of negligence. At the close of plaintiffs’ evidence the court stated:
With respect to the claims in the complaint, I think there is an issue for the jury whether the hospital knew or should have known at the time Mr. Moore was placed in the room with Mr. Burns or thereafter, that the hospital knew or reasonably should have known that Mr. Moore was dangerous to other patients and that if that in spite of that they put him in the room, and that was the proximate cause of the injury and if the injury is proven to the satisfaction of the jury, then a verdict on that basis could reasonably stand. But with re *562 spect to the other allegations of negligence, ... I don’t believe there’s sufficient evidence to allow any of those allegations of negligence to the jury. To that extent, [I] will allow the motion—
We find no error in the court’s ruling. The claims of negligence contained in plaintiffs’ complaint which did not go to the jury are:
That the defendant hospital was negligent in that:
A. It failed to place the plaintiff in a private of [sic] semiprivate room as ordered by Dr. Ernesto De La Torre.
E. It failed to apply effective restraints to Daniel Moore to prevent him from causing injury to the plaintiff.
F. It failed to provide nurses or other hosptital [sic] staff in the plaintiffs room to observe and control Daniel Moore, and to ensure that he not injure the plaintiff.
G. It abandoned the plaintiff by failing to treat his injuries, after he was injured in his hospital room on June 19, 1980.
H. It failed to segregate mental patients, especially Daniel Moore, from other patients in the hospital who were not mental patients.
I. It failed to conform to accepted good medical practice in the Winston-Salem community and in similar communities throughout the nation.
We find that all the above claims of plaintiffs, with the exception of (A) and (G) above, are subsumed in the issue that the court sent to the jury. Accordingly, there is no error. As to plaintiffs’ allegations of abandonment, (G) above, we have carefully reviewed plaintiffs’ evidence and find a complete lack of evidence to support this claim.
We have also reviewed the record regarding plaintiffs’ allegations of negligence for defendant’s failure to place Mr. Burns in a private or semi-private room as ordered by Dr. Ernesto De La Torre, (A) above. Plaintiffs’ evidence showed that on 16 June 1980, Dr. Ernesto De La Torre entered an order in plaintiffs chart as follows: “Transfer to semi-private room for [the] sake of his nerves.” The hospital has a duty to make a reasonable effort
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to oversee and monitor the physician’s treatment of a patient.
Bost v. Riley,
In plaintiffs’ next Assignment of Error, plaintiffs contend the court erred in excluding from evidence as irrelevant certain medical records of Daniel Moore, specifically, (1) the medical records of Daniel Moore from the Reynolds Health Center and (2) the medical records of Daniel Moore from defendant Forsyth Memorial Hospital after the time he allegedly injured plaintiff Willie Lee Burns until his discharge. Plaintiffs maintain that these records were critical to show Daniel Moore’s dangerousness. We disagree.
The excluded medical records from Reynolds Health Center do not pertain to matters within defendant’s knowledge. The medical records of Daniel Moore from defendant Forsyth Memorial Hospital from the time of his admission on 21 May 1980 until 19 June 1980, which were admitted into evidence, contain three pages of notes written by Dr. Bahrani, a physician who treated Daniel Moore at Reynolds Health Center. We find defendant hospital could reasonably rely upon the referring physician’s statements regarding Daniel Moore’s condition. If Daniel Moore *564 exhibited a tendency to be dangerous to others, it was incumbent upon the transferring institution to inform defendant accordingly. It is overly burdensome to impose a legal duty upon defendant to read through the entire medical records of all referrals. Accordingly, the medical records from Reynolds Health Center were properly excluded.
The excluded medical records of Daniel Moore from defendant Forsyth Memorial Hospital from 19 June 1980 until he was discharged contain information regarding Daniel Moore’s treatment and condition after plaintiff Willie Burns was injured. These medical records could bear only upon defendant’s knowledge after plaintiff’s injury. Foreseeability of injury is an essential element of proximate cause. Id. Plaintiffs cannot rely upon defendant’s knowledge after the injury in support of their negligence claim.
The complete medical records of Daniel Moore from defendant hospital were reviewed by the trial judge
in camera.
After ruling that records after 19 May 1980 were not relevant, the judge entered an order allowing plaintiffs’ counsel to inspect these records after the trial, provided that these records be sealed for review by this Court. In their brief, plaintiffs place special emphasis upon information contained in a Code Sheet as being highly probative of the fact that Daniel Moore was suffering from a “major mental defect.” Plaintiffs contend that this evidence alone would be “more than enough for the jury to conclude that he was dangerous. . . .” However, plaintiffs do not provide this Court with any medical definition of the allegedly “major mental defect,” do not provide other medical information with which to assess the probable prejudicial effect of the excluded Code Sheet, nor indicate
when
during Daniel Moore’s hospitalization this information came within defendant’s knowledge, either actually or constructively. The burden is upon plaintiffs as appellants to show error and also to show that the alleged error was prejudicial and amounted to a denial of some substantial right.
Gregory v. Lynch,
In plaintiffs’ last Assignment of Error plaintiffs contend the court erroneously charged the jury. Specifically, plaintiffs contend that the court should have charged according to the standard jury
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charge for health care providers, to wit: N.C.P.I. — Civ. 809.00. Plaintiffs further maintain that defendant is a health care provider as defined in G.S. 90-20.21.11 and, therefore, must comply with the standard of care for health care providers as set forth in
Wall v. Stout,
When the alleged breach does not involve the rendering or failure to render professional nursing or medical services requiring special skills, it is not necessary to establish the standard of due care prevailing among hospitals in like situations in order to develop a case of negligence.
Norris v. Rowan Memorial Hospital,
In
Payne v. Garvey,
In
Witherspoon v. Owen,
In the case sub judice, the court instructed the jury regarding the hospital’s duty to the patient as follows:
The plaintiff contends and the defendant denies that the defendant was negligent in that the defendant knew or should have known that the patient Daniel Moore was dangerous or might reasonably be expected to be dangerous to other patients and that the defendant failed to use ordinary and reasonable care by allowing the patient Daniel Moore to be placed in the room with the plaintiff and or by failing to remove the patient Daniel Moore from the room of the plaintiff.
The jury returned a verdict in favor of defendants. By arriving at its verdict pursuant to the foregoing instruction, the jury necessarily decided the threshold issue, that is, that the hospital did not have notice of an unsafe condition. Having so decided, the jury would have been precluded from addressing the remaining *567 issues. Accordingly, plaintiffs could not have been prejudiced by that part of the charge omitted. This Assignment of Error is overruled. We find
No error.
