Plaintiffs brought this suit for the wrongful death of Mrs. Bessie Pogue. The complaint alleged that Mrs. Pogue was a patient in DeKalb General Hospital, which was operated by the defendant Hospital Authority, that defendant James Cooper, a medical doctor acting as a servant of the authority, failed to use reasonable care and skill in treating Mrs. Pogue, and that she died as a result of his negligence. Plaintiffs took this appeal from the grant of summary judgment for the hospital authority. The motion for summary judgment was supported by the affidavit of the hospital administrator. The affidavit, based on personal knowledge of the administrator, averred that the relationship between the authority and the doctor was controlled by an attached contract of employment and that no director, officer, agent or employee of the authority exercised or attempted to exercise any control over the method or manner of diagnosis or treatment of patients by the doctor. The contract was an agreement between the authority and the DeKalb Emergency Group, a partnership composed of the defendant doctor and others, in which the partnership agreed to provide certain professional services for the authority, mainly in operating the emergency room of the hospital on a 24-hour basis.
The agreement expressly designated the partnership as an independent contractor. It specified in detail the duties assumed by the partnership and which patients would be treated by members of the partnership. However, this was merely the identification of the work to be performed, and did not amount to a reservation of control over the manner in which services were to be performed.
Edmondson v. Town of Morven,
A hospital is not liable for the negligence of a physician employed by it where the negligence relates to a matter of professional judgment on the part of the physician when the hospital does not exercise and has no right to exercise control in the diagnosis or treatment of illness or injury.
Black v. Fischer,
Judgment affirmed.
