24 A.2d 273 | N.H. | 1942
The defendant does not deny that a charitable institution may in some instances become liable to pay damages for its negligence. Its liability in this case depends, however, upon whether there was a breach of any duty of care that it owed the plaintiff. The existence of such a duty, and its extent, depend upon the nature of the relationship between the parties. Tullgren v. Company,
The relationship, in this instance, arose from certain facts that are beyond dispute. The plaintiff's husband was a patient in the hospital, and he was near death. The plaintiff came upon the defendant's premises in order to visit him. The only access to the hospital from the street was by a driveway that was a glare of ice, from which the last sanding had been washed by rain several hours earlier, as was well known to the defendant's superintendent. There was no separate foot-walk.
The plaintiff entered in the evening from a street that was well sanded. Before entering, she observed that the driveway was "a perfect sheet of ice," and unsanded. She proceeded carefully, but *43 fell and was injured when she attempted to step aside to avoid being hit by an outgoing automobile.
The relationship of a patient's visitor to a hospital has usually been described as that of an "invitee" or a "business visitor," without reference to whether the entrant is a pure caller, or comes to help the patient to enter or leave the hospital. Alabama c. Hospital Board v. Carter,
We are unable to follow that theory fully. The" business visitor" or "invitee" relationship depends upon the mutual benefit of the visit to the entrant and the possessor of the premises. Hobbs v. Company,
A purely incidental benefit to the owner or possessor of land, from the social visit of a stranger on a "business visitor" of the former, may usually make the relationship between the caller and the possessor a borderline one as between" licensee" and" invitee." If in some cases the visitor may be regarded as an "invitee," any doubt in this instance ought to be resolved in favor of the defendant. Such questions turn generally upon principles of "fundamental justice and reasonableness." Cavanaugh v. Railroad,
At this point we are met by the fact that the defendant's "business" is that of a public charity. As such it is entitled to some consideration concerning its duty of care even to its patients, beyond what an ordinary business corporation can claim. Welch v. Hospital,
She stands no better than a "gratuitous licensee," to whom no duty is owed, as to the condition of the premises, except to warn of dangers actually known by the defendant and not open to ordinary observation by the plaintiff. Hashim v. Chimiklis,
Judgment for the defendant.
ALLEN, C. J, was absent: BRANCH, J., did not sit: the others concurred.