57 A.2d 262 | Conn. | 1948
The determinative issue on this appeal is the effect to be accorded to the existence of insurance on the immunity of a charitable hospital from tort liability. The question arose in this way: The plaintiff, as administrator, charged the hospital and its servants and agents with negligence causing the death of his infant son. The defendant filed a special defense alleging that it was a charitable corporation. The plaintiff pleaded in reply thereto that the defendant carried insurance indemnifying it and its property, funds and assets against all liability *284
for negligence and agreed to limit his recovery to the indemnity procurable under the insurance policy. He also alleged that by carrying insurance and thus protecting its trust funds and other property from depletion the defendant was estopped from claiming charitable immunity. A demurrer to the reply was filed by the defendant and overruled. On the trial these pleadings were read to the jury. The court charged, over the defendant's objections and without mentioning charitable immunity, that the defendant was liable for negligence, and it duly excepted. The ruling and the charge were assigned as error. The plaintiff admitted in open court that the defendant was a charitable corporation and the defendant admitted that it was insured. The insurance question was recently raised in Edwards v. Grace Hospital *285
Society,
The plaintiff's claim has a certain meritorious basis, for, except as to premiums, the funds of the hospital are protected to the extent of the collectible insurance when it is insured. Nevertheless, it is not valid. If the charitable institution is not liable for the negligence alleged, it cannot be made liable because it took out insurance which would cover a judgment recovered against it. The fact is irrelevant to the question of liability. See Shaker v. Shaker,
No extended discussion of the other assignments of error is necessary. Plaintiff's intestate, a premature baby, was fatally burned by the heat of the lamps used to warm his bassinet. The jury found in answer to an interrogatory that the baby fell to the bottom of the bassinet and received the burns because an agent of the hospital, acting within the scope of his or her authority, dropped him. The court charged in effect, and the plaintiff claimed, that this person was one of the three hospital nurses assigned to the ward. The doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, on which the jury was charged, is inapplicable. The conditions under which it operates are stated in Briganti v. Connecticut Co.,
The complaint alleged that the defendant was negligent in failing to provide a proper incubator. The administrator of the hospital testified as to the steps taken to provide the apparatus and, in that connection, offered in evidence a circular issued by the manufacturer which the witness had at the time of the purchase. The circular was not offered for the truth of the statements therein contained but to show that steps had been taken by the witness to determine whether it was a good incubator. It was excluded. The circular was admissible for that purpose.
Counsel for the defendant renewed his motion, made in similar cases, that judgment be directed for the defendant non obstante veredicto and assigned its denial as error. The question was examined with care in the preparation of the opinion in Evans v. Lawrence Memorial Associated Hospitals,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.