177 Mass. 11 | Mass. | 1900
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court sustaining a demurrer to the plaintiff’s declaration, and ordering judgment for the defendants. The gist of the declaration is that the defendants took upon themselves the duty of determining, under certain statutes referred to, whether the plaintiff was a proper subject of treatment as a dipsomaniac or inebriate, and that the defendants, without due examination, negligently made a certificate that he was a dipsomaniac or inebriate ; that said certificate was false ; and that in consequence of the defendants’ negligence in examining the plaintiff and making the certificate the plaintiff was committed to the Hospital for Dipsomaniacs and Inebriates at Foxboro, and confined there a long time, to his great damage, etc. There is no allegation of malice or of wilful negligence or falsification, and on recurring to the statutes referred to in the declaration as those under which the examination and commitment were made, it is difficult to see how the commitment can be said to have taken place in consequence of the defendants’ negligence in examining the plaintiff and in making the certificate.
The statute establishing the Hospital for Dipsomaniacs and Inebriates provides that “All the laws relative to commitment of an insane person to a lunatic hospital shall be applicable to and shall govern the commitment of any person under this act,” except that it shall be alleged that they are dipsomaniacs or inebriates, as the case may be, instead of insane. St. 1889, e. 414, § 7. The statute in regard to the commitment of insane persons provides that, “ Except when otherwise specially provided, no person shall be committed to a lunatic hospital . . . public or private, without an order or certificate therefor, signed by one
But, further, the examining physicians are called upon to perform an important duty. In discharging it they are not engaged in the ordinary practice of their profession. If they do not occupy a quasi official or judicial position, they at least
It is more important that the administration of the law in .the manner provided should not be obstructed by the fears of physicians that they may render themselves liable to suit, than it is that the person certified by them to be insane or a dipsomaniac or inebriate should have a right of action in case it turns out that/the certificate ought not to have been given. The statute provides a penalty for a physician who conspires with any person unlawfully or improperly to commit to any lunatic hospital or asylum a person who is not insane, but goes no further.
In Pennell v. Cummings, 75 Maine, 163, and Williams v. LeBar, 141 Penn. St. 149, relied on by the plaintiffs, the question here presented was not passed upon by the court. In Ayers v. Bussell, 50 Hun, 282, there was a dissenting 'opinion, which seems to us to lay down the better doctrine. Moreover, the judgment was not that of a court of last resort. In Hall v. Semple, 3 F. & F. 337, the statute under which the defendant proceeded seems to have been quite different from ours.
In the opinion of a majority of the court the judgment should be affirmed.
So ordered.