Plaintiff Arthur Hand entered the defendant hospital for treatment of a stroke. He was partially paralyzed on his right side and unable to move his right arm. Approximately 3 days later the plaintiff’s wife was notified that he had suffered an injury. Substantial portions of the right side of his body had become burned. At the trial, she testified that there were no burns on his body when he entered the hospital. Plaintiff testified he did not recall the cause of his injury and offered no evidence of the cause. The transcript showed that *373 the plaintiff was, to use defense counsel’s description, unable “to testify normally”.
The trial judge granted the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict at the close of the plaintiff’s proofs stating: “There has been no showing of negligence on the part of these people; there wasn’t any showing at all. The mere fact he was in the hospital is not evidence of negligence.”
We remand for a new trial. Although the plaintiff did not offer any direct evidence of negligence, the circumstances were such that the jury could reasonably infer negligence on the part of the defendant.
Pictures of the injury showed the plaintiff had sustained severe burns extending over a large portion of his paralyzed right thigh, right buttock, right arm and right side of the back. Generally, as the trial judge correctly observed, the mere occurrence of an injury does not in and of itself permit an inference that it was caused by someone’s negligence. However “where a thing happens which would not ordinarily have occurred if due care had been used, the fact of such happening raises a presumption of negligence in someone.”
Barnowsky
v.
Helson
(1891),
*374
Plaintiff was in the defendant’s care when his injury occurred. True, visitors were allowed and it is possible that the injury v/as caused by the act of someone other than one of defendant’s servants. However, the absence of exclusive control does not necessarily preclude an inference of negligence in the circumstances of this case.
Gadde
v.
Michigan Consolidated Gas Company, supra,
pp 124, 125. The question is whether “in the light of all of the evidence —circumstantial, direct, or whatsoever it may be, the plaintiff has produced sufficient evidence from which a jury might make a finding of negligence.”
Lipsitz
v.
Schechter
(1966),
We think the plaintiff proved all he could have been expected to prove in this case. 1 He had suffered a stroke and was paralyzed on the side of his body where the burns occurred. It is entirely understandable that his injury could have been sustained without his either being- aware it was occurring or recalling at trial the cause of its occurrence. A hospital having care of such a patient that desires to counter the permissible inference that the injury was caused by its negligence is obliged to come forward with an explanation of the cause of the injury which persuades the trier of fact not to draw such inference or which so overcomes the inference that the court concludes it would no longer be reasonable for the trier of fact to draw the inference.
Substantially analogous on its facts is West Coast Hospital Ass’n v. Webb (Fla, 1951), 52 So 2d 803. There the patient while in a diabetic coma suffered serious burns at the defendant’s hospital. The plaintiff there, like the plaintiff here, was unable to show *375 the cause of her burns. The court concluded that the plaintiff had made a prima facie case upon showing that she had sustained injuries in the manner described.
In
Danville Community Hospital, Inc.
v.
Thompson
(1947), 186 Va 746 (
In
Beaudoin
v.
Watertown Memorial Hospital
(1966),
“Where a plaintiff receives unusual injuries while unconscious and in the course of medical treatment, all those defendants who had any control over his body or the instrumentalities which might have caused the injuries may properly be called upon to meet the inference of negligence by giving an explanation of their conduct.” 3
Reversed and remanded for a new trial. Costs to plaintiff.
Notes
See 9 Wigmore oil Evidence, §2486;
Skeen
v.
Stanley Co. of America
(1949), 362 Pa 374 (
In
Oldis
v.
LaSociete Francais de Brenfaisance Mutuelle (1955),
130 Cal App 2d 461 (
“Those principles are applicable in our ease oven though the plaintiff herein was not ‘unconscious’ throughout the critical period. He was in great pain as a result of the operation and his senses were dulled by the administration of pain-relieving drugs. That makes the more credible his testimony that he did not know what caused the burn, nor when it happened; testimony it might be difficult to believe if he had at all times been in full possession of his faculties.”
Compare
Koepel
v.
St. Joseph Hospital and Medical Center
(1967),
