*305 This appeal involves the liability of a railroad under the Federal Employers Liability Act, 45 U.S.C. Sec. 51 et seq., resulting from a contagious disease contracted by a clerical employee from a fellow employee. Plaintiff-appellee, Christine Patterson, was emplоyed in January, 1966, by defendant-appellant, Norfolk and Western Railway Company, as a stenographer-clerk and was assigned to its offices in Detroit, Michigan. She worked at a desk directly behind a fellow clerical employee until he was hospitalized in January, 1968 with advanced рulmonary tuberculosis. After the hospitalization, the appellant suggested that all employees who had been in close proximity to the afflicted employee should have a physical examination. Acting on this suggestion, appel-lee had a medical examination and was found to have pulmonary tuberculosis. She later brought an action against the railroad, alleging that she had contracted the disease from her fellow employee near whom she was required to work and that the railroad was liable under the F.E.L.A. for negligently failing to prоvide her with a safe place in which to work. The district court submitted the case to a jury which returned a verdict in her favor in the amount of $45,000.00. The railroad perfected its appeal to this Court.
Appellant phrases the first issue as follows:
“Under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act is a railroad under a duty to its employees to rеmove from his post a fellow employee who is afflicted with a contagious but nonoccupational disease, until the railroad actually perceives the potential for danger in him?”
In arguing that the trial court erroneously answered this question in the affirmative, the railroаd points out that the afflicted employee’s condition con-cededly did not result from his employment. A further facet of the railroad’s argument is that the law imposes no requirement that a reasonably prudent employer must equip himself with special knowledge or expertisе in the field of contagious diseases not indigenous to the employer’s business. The railroad insists that liability can arise only if it should happen to acquire actual knowledge of the existence of the disease in an employee, or special knowledge from the use of whiсh it can reasonably perceive the potential for danger. “Then and only then,” it is insisted, “does the duty of ordinary care for the safety of other employees arise.”
We are unable to find support for this restrictive view of a railroad's duty under the F.E.L.A. Case law clearly establishes that under the Act liability for negligence attaches if the railroad “knew, or by the exercise of due care should have known” of the danger or risk to an employee. Urie v. Thompson,
Did the trial court, as appellant insists, err in failing to instruct the jury on the law of contributory negligence?
Under the F.E.L.A., contributory negligence is not a defense but must be сonsidered in diminution of damages. Rogers v. Missouri P.R. Co.,
Another issue raised on appeal is whether the trial court erred in admitting into evidence the medical records of the afflicted fellow employee.
In preparation for trial, a law clеrk employed by the appellee’s attorney obtained from the fellow employee a consent to the examination of his hospital medical records. The fellow employee gave his consent under the assumption that if he refused to do so, the appеllee could obtain the records by subpoena. The trial judge held that despite that misapprehension the fellow employee had waived the physician-patient privilege to which he was entitled under Michigan law (M.C.L. 600.2157; Stat. Ann. 27A.2157) and that the medical records were admissible as evidence. Although the trial court focused on waiver of the privilege, the real issue is whether this state-created privilege is applicable in a federal court trial under the circumstances of the present case.
Under Rule 43(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedurе, the so-called “maximum admissibility” rule, evidence may be received in federal court if it is admissible under any of three tests: (a) under a federal statute, (b) under federal equity precedents, or (c) under the rules of evidence of the state in which the court sits. Wright v. Wilson,
“This is a federal question case (with ancillary state aspects) rather than a diversity case. Such actions are predicated on federal law, embodying federal policies. Enforcement of these policies dеmands that the federal courts apply their own rules of privilege where substantial state interests are not infringed.”
In any given instance a special federal interest in seeking the truth in a federal question case may require admissibility of evidence despite the existence of a state rule holding such evidence to be privileged.
2
Fears v. Burris Manufacturing Co.,
Finally, we hold in the light of modern concepts that the evidence оf Mrs. Brunner and the threat of Brunner to impose silence upon his wife is not in the present circumstances privileged. This is a civil case based upon a record necessarily relied upon by Brunner. He must stand or fall by what it discloses. We said in Fraser v. United States, supra [145 F.2d 145 , 6 Cir.], “a disclosure once made is irrevocable. It is public property and may not be recalled.” To recognize the privilege in present circumstances is to expand it beyond the considerations that gave it birth.
The state interest in the physician-patient privilege is the protection of confidentiality to encourage full disclosure by the patient to the physician so that adequate and complete medical treatment may be obtained. The medical records of the fellow employee were released by him to the plaintiff’s attorney. With this disclosurе the substantial state interest in protecting the confidentiality of the records was vitiated. The federal interest of seeking the truth in federal question cases easily tips the scales on the facts of this case against the state interest. Thus the trial court correctly admitted the rеcords in evidence. We reach this result without detei’mining whether a consent given under the particular facts presented here is a valid waiver of a state-created privilege where federal policies are not involved.
A further issue before us is whether hospital bills incurred in the treatment of an injury due to the employer’s negligence and paid for by the employee’s hospitalization insurance are recoverable as damages from the employer in an F. E.L.A. action where the employer has provided such insurance to the emрloyee free of charge.
The general rule under the F.E. L.A. is that an employee may recover damages from the employer even though the damages have already been paid by insurance if the insurance is a “collateral source.” Haughton v. Blackships, Inc.,
“The policy considerations for the collateral source rule are apparent. On the one hand, an employer-tort-feasor who voluntarily undertakes to indemnify itself against liability by payment into a fund for that purрose, should not be penalized by permitting *308 the plaintiff a double recovery of his benefits under the fund as well as his full measure of damages. On the other hand, where the employer-tort-feasor makes payment directly or indirectly into a fund established for an independent reason, or where such payment by the employer should be considered in the nature of a fringe benefit or deferred compensation, the employer should not be entitled to benefit by setting off such income in mitigation of his responsibility as a tortfeasor.”
Id. at 791.
The appellee’s hospitаl bills were paid under an insurance policy supplied to her by the appellant who paid all of the insurance premiums. The appellant urges that the policy was purchased to indemnify the company from liability for injuries to employees. The payment of premiums does not prevent the insurance policy from being classified as a collateral source. Application of the collateral source rule depends more upon the character of the benefits than upon the source of the funds. United States v. Price,
We have considered the other issues raised by the appellant and find them to be without merit.
Affirmed.
Notes
. This evidence would be admissible subject to the same restrictions as any other documentary evidence under the proposed Federal Rules of Evidence. The Advisory Committee’s note to Rule 504 of the new Federal Rules of Evidence, approved by the Supreme Court of the United States, but not yet effective, stated:
“The rules contain no provision for a general physician-patient privilege. While many states have by statute created the privilege, the exceptions which have been found necessary in order to obtain information required by the public interest or to avoid fraud are so numerous as to leave little if any basis for the privilege.”
Since the Federal Rules of Evidence are not in effect, we must of course look elsewhere to resolve this problem.
. Many federal courts in non-diversity cases have reached the same result by undertaking to determine the question of privilege with little or no reference to the state law.
See
Natta v. Hogan,
. The appellant attempts to distinguish Sail because the insurance policy in that case was supplied by the employer as the result of a collective bargaining agreement while in our case the company acted unilaterally without the compulsion of a union contract. In the context of this case we find this distinction to be immaterial.
