166 N.E. 461 | Ill. | 1929
Lead Opinion
Plaintiff in error, George Albert Hogan, a minor, by his father and next friend, brought suit in the superior court of Cook county against defendant in error, the Chicago Lying-In Hospital and Dispensary, a corporation, to recover damages for personal injuries. The court overruled the demurrer of plaintiff in error to the second plea, he elected to stand by his demurrer, the suit was dismissed at his costs, an appeal was prosecuted to the Appellate Court for the First District, where the judgment was affirmed, and the cause comes to this court on a writ of certiorari. *43
The declaration consisted of six counts, and alleged, in substance, that defendant in error is a corporation organized to provide medical care for poor women and women without homes during confinement and to care for their infants; that plaintiff in error was not a charity patient in said hospital but a substantial fee was paid for the care of him and his mother; that on February 23, 1926, he was born in said hospital, and defendant in error through its nurses and servants negligently allowed him to be placed in close proximity to a therapeutic lamp for an unreasonable length of time and his feet were seriously burned.
The second plea, to which the demurrer was overruled, alleged that defendant in error was incorporated under the laws of Illinois as a corporation not for pecuniary profit and that its object was the establishment and maintenance of a hospital for charitable purposes; that it had no capital stock, it paid no dividends, and at the time of the commission of the supposed grievance was engaged in the maintenance of a hospital for charitable purposes and not for pecuniary profit.
It is insisted by plaintiff in error that the demurrer was improperly overruled, for the reason that where an institution organized for charitable purposes undertakes a duty to an individual for an adequate consideration it should be held liable for its neglect of such duty; that the neglect of a servant is the neglect of the principal, and the character of the principal should create no distinction in law as to liability, and that an implied contract to waive liability for negligence should not be held to exist between a patient and a hospital where the patient paid as much as the services were reasonably worth, — and that this is especially true where the patient had no capacity to contract.
In Parks v. Northwestern University,
In Tollefson v. City of Ottawa,
In Johnston v. City of Chicago,
Plaintiff in error insists that these cases are not conclusive, and he cites cases from other jurisdictions which hold to the contrary. The rule is not uniform in all jurisdictions, but the rule announced in the Parks case, supra, is in accord with the great weight of authority in the United States. A few of the cases in which this rule has been followed are: Abston v. Waldon Academy,
We find no reversible error, and the judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion reported by Mr. Commissioner Partlow is hereby adopted as the opinion of the court, and judgment is entered in accordance therewith.
Judgment affirmed. *46