131 S.E. 42 | N.C. | 1925
Civil action for damages, tried upon allegations and denials that plaintiff's intestate came to his death by reason of the defendant's negligence in failing properly to care for said intestate while a patient at defendant's hospital and which resulted in his self-destruction, or suicide.
At the close of plaintiff's evidence and on motion of defendant, the court entered judgment as of nonsuit, from which the plaintiff appeals. About the middle of November, 1922, plaintiff's intestate, J. Suber, a farmer living near Newberry, S.C., was brought to *834 defendant's hospital in Asheville, N.C. by his physician, Dr. W. H. Moore, who testified that Mr. Suber was then in a depressed mental condition, bordering on melancholia; that he informed Dr. M. A. Griffin, one of the managers of the hospital, of the patient's condition, as he had observed it, and told him how Mr. Suber had recently spent a day in the graveyard, near his home, with a shotgun in his hands, under conditions which indicated suicidal tendencies. While thus in the defendant's hospital, where patients are treated for mental and nervous diseases, for private gain, plaintiff's intestate committed suicide on 23 December, 1922, by hanging himself with a rope.
The only evidence as to how the suicide occurred was contained in a letter written by Dr. Griffin to Dr. Moore sometime after Christmas, following the death of plaintiff's intestate. A portion of this letter, in which the writer stated that Mr. Suber had tried to jump in front of a truck about two weeks prior to his death, and which was offered to fix the defendant with further notice of the patient's suicidal mania, was excluded on objection by the defendant, and this forms the basis of one of plaintiff's exceptions. The evidence was clearly incompetent and his Honor committed no error in withholding it from the jury. Berry v. Cedar Works,
The authorities in this State are all to the effect that what an agent says, relative to an act then being done by him within the scope of his agency, is admissible as a part of the res gestae, and may be offered in evidence, either for or against the principal; but what the agent says afterwards, and merely narrative of a past occurrence, though his agency may continue as to other matters, or generally, is only hearsay and not competent as against the principal. Johnson v. Ins. Co.,
With this letter excluded, we think the court properly held that the plaintiff had failed to make out a case sufficient to go to the jury on his allegations of negligence.
In Byrd v. Express Co.,
There can be no question about the liability of a privately owned or corporate hospital, conducted for individual gain, and not for charitable *835
purposes, for damages to its patients resulting from negligence attributable to the agents of such hospital. Young v. Gruner,
Ordinarily, when a hospital, like the present one, undertakes to treat a patient, without any special arrangement or agreement, its engagement implies three things: (1) that its physicians, nurses and attendants possess the requisite degree of learning, skill and ability necessary to the practice of their profession, and which others similarly situated ordinarily possess; (2) that its physicians, nurses and attendants will exercise reasonable and ordinary care and diligence in the use of their skill and in the application of their knowledge to the patient's case; and (3) that its physicians, nurses and attendants will exert their best judgment in the treatment and care of the case. Mullinax v. Hord,
But we need not enter upon a discussion of general principles, which are well established, because in the instant case the plaintiff has offered no sufficient evidence of the defendant's negligence. Allegation alone will not do; he must have some evidence also in order to support a recovery.
On the record, the judgment of nonsuit was properly entered.
Affirmed.