164 A.2d 162 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1960
Plaintiff sues for damages for personal injuries and consequent losses suffered when he fell three stories to the ground after passing through the window of a room of the defendant hospital in which he was a patient. The answer of the defendant includes a special defense alleging that plaintiff was a patient in the defendant hospital and setting up charitable immunity as a defense. Plaintiff has demurred to this defense.
One ground of the demurrer is that the special defense lacks an averment that "plaintiff was . . . ever a recipient of charity from the defendant." This fact is within the issues presented. Paragraph 4 of the complaint alleges that plaintiff entered the hospital upon an understanding that he would pay an appropriate sum for the medical service and care. Defendant has denied this. In refuting this allegation, defendant may show that plaintiff, in whole or in part, was the beneficiary of the defendant's charity. A different contract from that alleged may be proven under a general denial. McCarthy v. Tiernan,
This further ground of the demurrer is that a defense of charitable immunity is not applicable to an action on contract. This claim as applied to the present case avails the plaintiff nothing for two reasons. The first reason is that the complaint, although artfully avoiding the use of terms such as negligence and proximate cause, does not succeed in eschewing completely averments of an action of a tortious nature, and further fails to allege an action purely in contract. Among other allegations, it alleges an agreement, for a consideration to be paid, whereby defendant was to furnish "proper and adequate medical service and care," and further that the defendant "in holding itself out . . . to those who enter it as patients . . . and in accepting and *152 admitting said patients . . . is obligated to give proper and adequate care to protect [them] from harm incidental to and commensurate with the undertaking." These allegations imply the duty of the defendant to exercise due care, a breach of which would spell out negligence.
An action ex delicto can be the outgrowth of a precedent contractual relationship. Dean v. Hershowitz,
Further support of the tortious nature of the action set up in the complaint is found in the damages requested. "The general intention of the law giving damages in an action for the breach of a contract is to put the injured party, so far as it can be done by money, in the same position as he would have been in if the contract had been performed." Bachman v.Fortuna,
Also to allege, as the complaint sets forth, that there is an agreement to provide adequate and proper medical care and that plaintiff was injured as a result of the breach of that agreement is tantamount to averring, and indirectly to aver, that under the agreement there was a duty to exercise proper care, which duty was breached, and that as a result the plaintiff was injured. The essentials of a tort action are there.
Thus, if the complaint sets forth an action in contract, it equally sets forth an action of tort. This is particularly true if, apart from any contract, the allegations of paragraphs 3, 4, 5, 7 and 8 of the complaint are noted; they spell out a relationship between the parties as the basis of a duty to exercise the proper care, not based upon contract necessarily. In Klein v. New York Eye Ear Infirmary, Inc.,
There is a second reason why the demurrer should not prevail in connection with its second ground. The rule of charitable immunity as to hospitals in Connecticut is based upon considerations of public policy. Hearns v. Waterbury Hospital,
Accordingly, the demurrer of plaintiff to the special defense is overruled on both its grounds stated.