212 P. 537 | Or. | 1923
It is admitted that Elmer L. Reed, plaintiff, entered into a valid contract with the defendant National Hospital Association, for surgical and medical treatment and hospital services. It is charged that the contract was broken. Each party to
There are no intricate questions of law involved in this appeal. The matter for determination rests upon the evidence as disclosed by the record.
At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant moved for a judgment of nonsuit. The court’s ruling in denying the motion is assigned as error. Section 182, subdivision 3, Or. L., provides that:
“ A judgment of nonsuit may be given against the plaintiff as provided in this chapter * * when upon the trial the plaintiff fails to prove a cause sufficient to be submitted to the jury.”
It is the established law in this state that a non-suit will not be granted whenever any evidence is produced by the plaintiff in the trial of a cause, tending to uphold his right to recovery; and in considering’ the evidence every fair and legitimate inference which can arise therefrom must be made in favor of the plaintiff. In truth, it has frequently been declared by this court that a motion for a nonsuit is in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence. It admits all that the evidence proves, and also all that it tends to prove. See local citations collected in Farrin v. State Industrial Acc. Com., 104 Or. 452 (205 Pac. 984, 987, 988).
Did plaintiff make a case that comes within the requirements of the law as set down above?
Dr. A. M. Green, superintendent of Emanuel Hospital, situate in Portland, Oregon, testified that on December 3, 1919, the plaintiff in this case became a patient in that hospital, where he remained until March, 1920; that the patient was furnished by this hospital a room, surgery, medicines and dressings for a period of thirteen weeks, for the reasonable charge
The plaintiff’s testimony is to the effect that he was treated by Dr. Gillespie, representing the National Hospital Association, about the twenty-sixth day of October, 1919. From the physician’s diagnosis of the case he wasn’t satisfied as to the ailment from which the plaintiff was suffering but gave him some pills and advised him to return in á few days. He says:
“I came back in three days. I was feeling a little better. My back was the main trouble then. I could hardly lie in bed. He asked me how I was. I told him I was feeling better. He says, ‘I was kind of afraid about you. I thought you were going to have some contagious disease such as smallpox’; that I had a temperature and everything led up to that.
“Q. What happened after that?
“A. I went back to work and would work a day or two and lay off a day or two; kept on that way until I finally went up to Dr. Trimball.- * * I went to the office and told them [Hospital Association] I needed to see a doctor. * * They gave me a written order to go and see Dr. Trimball.”
Witness informed the doctor that he believed he was suffering from appendicitis. Moreover, he testified that he had a high temperature when he was examined by Dr. Trimball. The physician examined him and stated that he was not suffering from appendicitis.
“He said all the matter with me was, some nerves in my side.”
Plaintiff testified that Dr. Trimball gave him some ointment and told him to apply it to his side; that it would be all right in a couple of days, and that he should not worry. He says he had no further or
On December 3d, plaintiff was taken from the home of his mother-in-law to Emanuel Hospital, where he was immediately operated on for appendicitis by Dr. Trummold.
Plaintiff testified that he had been too ill to com-, municate with the Hospital Association since November 26th, when he was examined by Dr. Trimball, but that his wife had gone to the office several times. He swore that he did not see or hear from the Hospital Association for about seven weeks after his operation for appendicitis, when a representative was sent out to see him, although his wife notified the Association of the situation on the morning after the operation was performed. He testified that his chief trouble was brought about by one of his kidneys, which caused his appendix to be inflamed, and that a second operation was required for the removal of the diseased kidney. He further testified, in response to the following questions of the defendant:
“Q. You didn’t call on the Hospital Association for that either?
“A. No, we called on them several times between, and the manager wouldn’t even talk to the wife; the manager had an engagement with her. He wouldn’t talk to her at all.
“Q. Of course she told you that?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Do I understand that after the appendix operation it was your desire to have the Hospital Asso*479 ciation take the matter out of Dr. Trummold’s hands and look after you?
“A. I wanted them, to come out and see what was the matter with me. * *
“Q. You want the jury to understand you couldn’t have called the Hospital Association during all that time?
“A. Personally, myself, I couldn’t.”
Dr. Trummold testified to the plaintiff’s severe illness when he saw him on November 27th. He was asked this question:
“Q. Prom what you saw of him on the 27th of November, could you say what his condition would have been on the afternoon of November 26th?
“A. Well, I believe he was very sick. * *
“Q. Could a doctor who examined him at that time, the 26th of November, 1919, the date of the Association’s physical examination, have discovered he [plaintiff] was a critically sick man?
“A. I believe he could.”
Dr. H. W. Howard, a specialist in genito-urinary diseases, who was called into the ease by Dr. Trummold, testified to the diseased condition of the kidney and that an operation was imperative. Assisted by Dr. Trummold, he performed the second operation.
Mrs. Elmer L. Beéd testified that on the day following her husband’s first operation she telephoned the National Hospital Association and asked the girl at the office if she might speak to the manager. The attendant said that the manager was out, asked Mrs. Beed to state the case to her and said she would attend to it. Mrs. Beed acted upon this suggestion. Not having heard from the Association, she again called them over the telephone three or four days later. She asked them why the Association had not sent someone or called to see her husband, and was informed that the Association would let her know.
At the conclusion of Mrs. Reed’s testimony, the plaintiff rested his case, whereupon the defendant moved the court for an order of nonsuit, on the ground that the testimony of plaintiff failed to establish the allegations of the complaint in the particulars necessary to make a case.
The defendant Hospital Association should not have expected a man whose temperature was 103%, and who was suffering from appendicitis, superinduced by a diseased kidney, to go to its place of business and demand treatment. The jury had the right to believe, from the evidence, that the Association did have notice; that knowledge was brought home to it that the plaintiff was in need of, and en
By far the greater portion of the expense of the illness was incurred after the wife notified the Hospital Association of the plaintiff’s severe illness.
Under the record, as disclosed, the court could not properly grant the motion for nonsuit, and it correctly denied the motion for a directed verdict.
This is not a question of the weight of the evidence adduced by the respective parties. We are not called upon, nor are we permitted, to decide which party has made the better case. The fundamental law of this state provides that — ■
“No fact tried by a jury shall be otherwise reexamined in any court of this state, unless the court can affirmatively say there is no evidence to support the verdict.” Const., Art. VII, § 3c.
We find some competent evidence in the record supporting each and every material allegation of the complaint. This constitutional provision has been applied many times. It is not subject to construction or interpretation. Its language is clear, plain, obvious and explains itself. Like the term “reasonable doubt,” it is not made clearer by definition or exposition.
The law of plaintiff’s case is governed by the holding of this court in Jackson v. Pacific Coast Condensed Milk Co., 61 Or. 158 (120 Pac. 1, 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 757); Crites v. Willamette Valley Lbr. Co., 87 Or. 10 (169 Pac. 339, Ann. Cas. 1918D, 1050).
This court has many times held that abstract propositions of law, inapplicable to the evidence adduced upon the trial, are mischievous and misleading, and that the giving of such constitutes error. Among the many decisions, see the early case of Morris v. Perkins, 6 Or. 350. For a recent case, see Miami Quarry Co. v. Seaborg Packing Co., 103 Or. 362, 379 (204 Pac. 492). In the latter case, however, Mr. Justice McCourt, speaking for the court, after stating the general principle, makes the common-sense observation that—
“Though it is error to instruct the jury upon abstract propositions of law, a case will not be reversed upon that account, unless the court is able to see ‘that under the circumstances disclosed by the record, the jury may have been, and probably were, misled, to the injury of the complaining party’: Salmon v. Olds, 9 Or. 488, 491; Gregoire v. Rourke, 28 Or. 275 (42 Pac. 946).”
But in the case at issue, the instructions rest upon some evidence. There is no such conflict in the court’s instructions as would warrant this court in reversing the case.
We have examined all assignments of error of the defendant, but believe that a fuller treatment is unnecessary, for the reason that every principle involved has been discussed by this court again and again.
In obedience to the command of the law, this case is affirmed. Affirmed.