The sole issue for decision by this court is whether the trial court erred in refusing to allow the case to go to a jury. In reaching a conclusion, the evidence together with all reasonable deductions and inferences from it must be construed in favor of the party against whom the verdict is directed.
Whitaker
v.
Paden,
78
Ga. App.
145 (
The physician had prescribed three sedatives marked “Q.I.D.,” meaning they were to be administered (except for the seconol) at regular intervals four times a day. One of these intervals occurred about 4 p.m. The patient was given her phenobarbital, but the third drug, a tranquilizer called pacatal, was not kept in the regular store but had to be sent for. The floor nurse testified that she saw the prescription and knew she would have to fill out a pharmacy slip in order to get it but had not gotten around to filling out the slip at the time of the suicide attempt. While she insisted there was nothing abnormal about the patient, and that she had no instructions other than the word “ambulatory” which meant that the patient could walk around the hospital at will, the evidence further shows that on being informed that a patient from her floor had jumped out the window she ran directly to the bed of the plaintiff’s wife.
The case, construed in favor of the plaintiff, thus presents us with the tragic results of divided responsibility. The physician in charge felt he had made plain to the hospital authorities that the patient was mentally disturbed, and, being on the hospital staff, he undoubtedly supposed that such a patient would at no time be left to her own devices contrary to hospital regulations. *583 The admissions clerk felt she had represented the case to the superintendent of admissions if anything too strongly, because she received a rebuke from that source at her specific indication of the “psycho room.” The superintendent contended she was not told the patient might become violent, that her appearance was normal, and that she accordingly awaited further instructions from the director of nurses. The director never entered the picture. The floor nurse relied upon any lack of special instructions to herself to guard the patient, and, as to the medicine, she contended that the words on the prescription “Q.I.D.” instead of “stat” indicated to her that there was no reason for prompt medication, but only that the medicines, after they were obtained, would be administered in ¿routine fashion.
From the above there can be no doubt but that there was some evidence, at least, to sustain the allegations of negligence. The hospital did have notice of the patient’s mentally disturbed condition, and it cannot be said as a matter of law that they were freed from responsibility because this notice was not in writing contained in the specific instructions brought to them by the patient’s husband at the physician’s request. There was enough evidence as to the patient’s appearance on arrival to make a jury issue as to whether trained staff members should not then have recognized her irresponsible condition. They did not, rightly or wrongly, keep constant watch over her, and they did allow her to wander away by herself. The particular tranquilizer on which the physician undoubtedly relied should have been given at the regular 4 p.m. administration of medicine. Whether, had it been sent for in time, it would hve been available for that purpose, and whether the delay in sending for it constituted negligence, were also jury questions.
It is true that one is not bound to foresee and guard against casualties which are not reasonably to be expected, or which would not occur save under exceptional circumstances, or which result from an unexpected act of the person injured.
McCrory Stores Corp.
v. Ahern, 65
Ga. App.
334, 336 (
The information conveyed to the hospital attache’s by the doctor that the plaintiff’s wife was ambulatory under the meaning of that word as disclosed by the medical testimony in the record referred to her physical rather than her mental condition and meant that the patient was able to walk to the bathroom and elsewhere in the hospital that it was necessary for her to go, and that, accordingly, she would not require bed pan service or mechanical assistance in transportation. It would also convey to the hospital attache’s who already had notice of her mental disturbance that she, a mentally disturbed person, could get up and walk about the hospital unless prevented by attendants from so doing.
It was accordingly error for the trial court to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant, and thereafter to deny the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.
Judgment reversed.
