This is an appeal from an order denying a motion for new trial. Appellant was hurt when she fell or jumped from a window while she was a patient in a nursing home operated by appellee. Appellant sued appellee in trespass, claiming that appellee had been negligent in caring for her. The trial judge instructed the jury that in deciding whether appellant had been contributorily negligent, it should hold her to the standard care expected of a reasonable man. The jury found for appellee. On motion for new trial, appellant argued, among other matters, that the evidence showed that when admitted to appellee’s nursing home, she was suffering from a mental deficiency (“organic brain syndrome”), and that accordingly, in deciding whether she had been contributorily negligent, the jury should have held her only to the standard of care expected of a reasonable man
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suffering the deficiency she suffered. In denying appellant’s motion for new trial, the lower court held that unless one’s mental deficiency amounted to insanity, which appellant’s deficiency did not, no such relaxation of the required standard of care should be made. Thus the issue was defined whether Pennsylvania law should follow the lead of such cases as
Warner v. Kiowa County Hospital Authority,
Okl.App.,
“[A]n order denying a motion for a new trial ... does not constitute an appealable order.” Pa.R.A.P. 301(c).
And see Slagter v. Mix,
The appeal is quashed.
