210 A.D. 770 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1924
The following is the opinion delivered at Special Term:
Motion by the plaintiff for an order striking out of the defendant’s answer to'the amended complaint of the plaintiff the further and separate defense contained in said answer, upon the ground that said defense is insufficient in law upon the face thereof.
The action is brought to recover damages sustained by the
The separate defense which the plaintiff asks to have stricken out alleges that the defendant is a charitable, benevolent and eleemosynary corporation, conducting a hospital for the care and treatment of all persons suffering from diseases of the eyes, ears and throat for the benefit of the public, and not for any private gain or return, and that it owns and maintains said hospital through funds given to it for the purposes of its incorporation and by donations or contributions to it from or through the State and municipality, etc., and that said hospital has never been run, organized or conducted for profit, and that no financial benefit accrues to its directors or organizers, and that the contributions or payments to the defendant for treatment or attention thereat are used solely in furtherance of its charitable and benevolent
The plaintiff Nathan Klein, the husband of the plaintiff Hannah Klein, sets up a cause of action for loss of services of his said wife and for expenses incurred by him by reason of the accident to his said wife, and the defendant sets up the same separate defense thereto.
Before making this motion the defendant asked the plaintiff to stipulate that the actions were for breach of contract alone, or were in negligence, and the plaintiff’s attorney replied to the effect that it would be impossible for him to make any stipulation, and that he felt compelled to stand upon the phraseology of the amended complaint without placing any limitation thereon by stipulation or otherwise.
Plaintiff concedes that if this action were an action for negligence, pure and simple, the pleaded defense would, at least in the first instance, be sufficient, but the plaintiff contends that the gravamen of the action is the breach of the defendant’s contract, and that, therefore, the plea that the defendant is a charitable institution constitutes no defense, and cites the case of Ward v. St. Vincent’s Hospital (39 App. Div. 624) as authority for the proposition that a public charitable hospital is liable to a patient therein for injuries sustained by the patient for a breach of a contract to furnish a competent nurse and attendance. This case has been cited and apparently followed in several cases (Roche v. St. John’s Riverside Hospital, 96 Misc. Rep. 289; affd., 176 App. Div. 885; Collins v. N. Y. Post Graduate Medical School, 59 id. 63; Ward v. St. Vincent’s Hospital, 78 id. 317, 320; Wilson v. Brooklyn Homeopathic Hospital, 97 id. 37; Cunningham v. Sheltering Arms, 61 Misc. Rep. 501), and plaintiff contends that the rule in the Ward case seems to have been followed in Thomas v. Buffalo Columbus Hospital (199 App. Div. 905), where a recovery in favor of plaintiff was unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division of the Fourth Department.
The plaintiff also cites the case of Goodman v. Brooklyn Hebrew Orphan Asylum (178 App. Div. 682), in which the Appellate Division of the Second Department unanimously reversed a judgment in avor of the defendant entered upon a dismissal of the complaint by direction of the court at the opening, and the court said: “ The general principle that protected such institutions as the defendant •
In the case at bar the complaint alleges that the injuries here resulted in part from “ the act of the defendant in furnishing her with a nurse who was not ordinarily well trained and was not ordinarily competent and skillful ” and who gave plaintiff the direction which resulted in her receiving her injuries, “ because she, the said nurse, was not well trained or ordinarily competent and skillful.”
It, therefore, appears quite clearly that plaintiff does not base her case entirely upon the allegations of breach of contract, but alleges negligence in the selection and employment of the nurse who attended plaintiff as well as negligence on the part of the nurse.
In her bill of particulars the plaintiff states: “ The gravamen of plaintiff’s cause of action is a breach of defendant’s contract with the plaintiff, and defendant’s negligent performance of that contract.”
This may be construed as alleging negligence on the part of the nurse who attended the plaintiff, and who, it is alleged, failed to give her attendance at the time plaintiff was injured. As plaintiff has given notice that she intends to rely upon the phraseology of her pleading, the defendant must plead all its defenses to the cause of action.
Section 242 of the Civil Practice Act reads, so far as applicable, as follows: “ Certain facts to be -pleaded. The defendant * * * shall raise by his pleading all matters which show the action * * * not to be maintainable, * * * and all such grounds of defense * * * which if not raised would be likely to take the opposite party by surprise or would raise issues of fact not arising out of the preceding pleadings.”
In the very interesting case of Schloendorff v. New York Hospital (211 N. Y. 125), which settled the law as to the relations between a hospital maintained as a charitable institution and its physicians and nurses, the plaintiff sought to recover for a breach of a contract by operating upon her without her consent, and the answer contained a separate defense similar to that interposed in the case at bar.
In Ward v. St. Vincent’s Hospital (78 App. Div. 317, 323) the court said in reference to the act of the nurse in placing the hot water bag which injured the plaintiff, that if it was a thoughtless or careless act upon her part, no liability attached to the defendant.
It is a question whether the court upon this last appeal in the
I am of the opinion that the defendant should be permitted to set up the separate defense alleged, in view of the character of the plaintiff’s pleading and bill of particulars, and that the plaintiff’s motion must be denied.