263 P. 534 | Cal. | 1928
This appeal is prosecuted by the plaintiff from a judgment of the superior court in and for the city and county of San Francisco in the defendants' favor after the court had granted a motion for nonsuit at the conclusion of the plaintiff's case. The action was one instituted by the plaintiff for the recovery of damages for the death of her minor son, which occurred on or about May 4, 1922, while the latter was an inmate of the City and County Hospital of San Francisco, and which death was alleged to have occurred after the performance of an operation upon said inmate by or under the direction of the defendants herein, who were the physicians, surgeons, assistants, and employees in charge of said hospital at said time. The plaintiff's fourth amended complaint was in two counts, in the first of which she alleged that the operation upon her deceased son, a minor, was performed by and under the direction of said defendants, and that the same was performed wrongfully, unlawfully, carelessly, unskilfully, and negligently, and that the same resulted in the death of her said minor son as the direct result of said operation. In the second count of her said complaint the plaintiff, after repeating by adoption the first eight paragraphs of the first count of her said complaint, but omitting those later paragraphs wherein the negligent performance of said operation was averred, proceeded to aver that the operation thus alleged to have been performed upon the person of her said minor son was performed "wrongfully and unlawfully and without the knowledge or consent of the parents or guardian of said minor," and that by reason of said operation the said minor, on or about May 4, 1922, died. The defendants answered severally with denials of the gravamen of both counts of said complaint, and the cause proceeded to trial before a jury. At the beginning of the trial counsel for the defendants joined in a motion to compel the plaintiff to an election upon which count of her said complaint she would proceed to trial. The trial court, over the objection of the plaintiff, granted said *248 motion, and thereupon the plaintiff, still insisting upon her objection, elected to proceed to trial upon the second count of her said complaint, viz., that averring that the death of her said minor son occurred through the performance upon him by said defendants of said operation without the parents' or guardian's consent. During the progress of the trial the court from time to time sustained objections urged by defendants' counsel to the introduction of any evidence tending to show negligence on the part of the defendants, or any of them, in the performance of said operation, thereby confining the plaintiff's evidence strictly to the issue of consent. At the conclusion of the plaintiff's case several motions for nonsuit were made on behalf of one or more of said defendants severally, all of which were granted by the trial court, the result being that each and all of said defendants were absolved from liability and the general judgment in their favor followed as of course.
[1] The plaintiff makes two points upon this appeal: First, that the trial court was in error in making its order at the beginning of the trial compelling the plaintiff to an election as to which of the two counts in her said complaint she would proceed to trial; second, that the trial court was in error in granting the defendants' motion for nonsuit. As to the first of these alleged grounds of error an examination of the plaintiff's said complaints discloses that the two counts or causes of action set forth therein arose out of the same transaction, viz., out of an operation performed upon the minor son of the plaintiff while he was an inmate of the hospital of which the defendants in various capacities were in charge. Both causes of action were grounded in alleged injuries to the person of the plaintiff's minor son, followed by his death. Both of these causes of action were actions ex delicto, the one being an injury alleged to have been committed upon the person of the decedent and which was in the nature of an assault or trespass upon his person because committed without the consent of his parents or guardian; the other being for the negligent performance upon the decedent's person of an operation which resulted in his death. (Harding v.Liberty Hospital Co.,
The judgment is reversed.
Shenk, J., and Langdon, J., concurred. *252