75 Me. 163 | Me. | 1883
The defendants are practising physicians in Portland. The action is against them for making a certificate of the insanity of the plaintiff, which the declaration alleges to have been false, in one count through malice, in the other through negligence.
The exceptions, reciting the material averments of the declaration 'so far as they relate to the questions of law reserved, after setting forth the acts of the defendants and the injuries which resulted to the plaintiff therefrom, conclude the allegations with the statement, "that at the time the certificate was made, she was not insane, and that said certificate was false. The defendants plead the general issue.” It is in this way that the exceptions state the issue raised by the pleadings and the ground on which the plaintiff relied at the trial, namely, that the certificate was false in respect to the alleged insanity of the*, plaintiff.
Upon the issue so raised, and in view of what the exceptions disclose as to the course of the trial, it was correct to rule that the plaintiff, to recover, must sustain the burden of proof in this respect, must establish the averment and the claim that she was sane when the defendants certified to her insanity. The presumption of sanity was in the plaintiff’s favor at the outset, but when evidence had been offered for and against it, the question was no longer to be decided by the presumption alone, but by the weight of evidence, the presumption included, and until in the judgment of the jury this was on the plaintiff’s side, the falsehood of the certificate in the respect to which the issue related, and which the exceptions show was the basis of the plaintiff’s claim, did not appear.
The act of committing the plaintiff to the insane hospital was not the act of the defendants, but of the municipal officers, a tribunal organized for that purpose and from the decision of which an appeal is provided. This is an action, too, not for false imprisonment, but for making a false certificate of the plaintiff’s insanity. Only the defendants’ own acts are alleged .against them, not a combination with others to accomplish an unlawful purpose. It was for the municipal officers,/ not for the defendants, to see that the provisions of law were observed in making the commitment. The act of 1876, c. 117, provides that '"in all cases of preliminary proceedings for the commitment of .-any person to the hospital, the evidence and certificate of at .least two respectable physicians, based upon due inquiry and
The English statute, 9 Gr. 4, c. 41, § 30, provides that "any physician, surgeon or apothecary who shall sign or give any such certificate, without having visited and personalty examined the individual to whom it relates, shall be deemed to be guilty of a misdemeanor.” Rex v. Jones, 2 B. & Ad. 611. The offence defined in this section might perhaps be complete, even if there were no intent to deceive and only the truth was certified. But our statutes contain no such provision, and in the absence of a statutory requirement in that respect, we think there cannot be a civil action for damages against a physician, based upon theinsuf-
Each defendairt is liable only for his own act, for the correctness of the certificate in the terms in which he gave it. The defendants, Cummings and Brooks, examined the plaintiff, as they certified. The defendants, Foster and Small, concurred in the opinion of the examining physicians. It will be observed that we are not now considering what measure of liability would attach to either of the defendants, if their certificate was erroneous. Instructions upon that point were given to the jury at the trial, to which the plaintiff does not except. Apart from any statutory requirement, the law would undoubtedly hold tho defendants in such a case to. the usual professional liability for due care and skill, and when the serious, consequences that may flow from reliance upon such a certificate by the municipal officers, the imprisonment of a sane person in an insane asylum,, perhaps for a long time, the standard of care required, and of professional learning and ability to deal with such a subject, would certainly be an exacting one. But we refer now only to tho ruling that the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff to sustain the issue raised by the pleadings, to prove her own sanity at the date of the certificate. If two of the defendants having examined the plaintiff, expressed the opinion that she was insane and the other two concurred in that opinion, and that opinion was according to the fact, it is not a g'round of liability against either defendant that he did not do more than he certified, that he did not, besides this, pursue all the methods required by the statute as the basis for legal action on the part of the municipal officers. The truth of the certificate upon the points in issue is a defence to the action.
The exceptions to the admission of evidence against the objection of the plaintiff, relate principally to testimony tending to show what inquiry the defendants had made and what information they had received before they gave the certificate.
We think there was no error in the rulings at the trial nor in the verdict of the jury.
Exceptions and motion overruled.