57 Ga. App. 824 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1938
The general rule as to the duty owed by a private hospital to a patient is well stated in Emory University v. Shadburn, 47 Ga. App. 643 (171 S. E. 192), and Stansfield v. Gardner, 56 Ga. App. 634 (193 S. E. 375), as follows: "A private hospital in which patients are placed for treatment by their physicians, and which undertakes to care for the patients and supervise and look after them, is under the duty to exercise such reasonable care in looking after and protecting a patient as the patient’s condition, which is known to the hospital through its agents and servants charged with the duty of looking after and supervising the patient, may require. This duty extends to safeguarding and protecting the patient from any known or reasonably apprehended danger from himself which may be due to his mental incapacity, and to use ordinary and reasonable care to prevent it.” The plaintiff in the present case made no arrangements for treatment at the hospital of the defendant. He was not consulted in that respect, but while obviously unable to exercise any judgment was placed in the hospital under an agreement with the wife to pay the expenses. As between the husband and the wife she was a benevolent volunteer, and not his agent, in attempting to supplement whatever duty rested on the hospital. This necessarily follows from the fact that he neither authorized her to assume that role nor ever ratified her action. It appears that the hospital did not expressly designate her as his caretaker for the night when he was injured, but, on being informed that his condition required the presence of some one throughout the night, she volunteered, as became a good and faithful wife, to undertake that supervision. But though the spirit
So far as the hospital’s duty to the patient is concerned, the acceptance by it of the services undertaken by the wife can not be said, as a matter of law, to have discharged that obligation. Whether or not the hospital, with the wife present in the ward where the husband was a patient, should, in the exercise of ordinary care, have reasonably apprehended that the patient, in his condition known to the hospital authorities, might have harmed himself, presents a question for determination of the jury. The record does not show that the wife informed the hospital that she was in need of sleep, but it does disclose that the defendant knew that she worked in a hosiery mill by day, and that her husband had been sick for about a week before he was admitted to the hospital, and seriously ill for several days, being “out of his head,” and that her inability to properly ^ care for him and two small children had forced her to place him in the hospital. The defendant knew, as shown by the chart which it kept, and which was admitted in evidence, that the patient was “mentally off,” and that without adequate supervision he might, as he had done before the wife volunteered her services for the night, escape from his bed, and might harm himself. Should a reasonable consideration of these facts have caused the hospital, in the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, to apprehend that such a person as the wife might not, in her condition, however solicitous she might have been for the husband’s welfare, be able to properly protect him and that, in his known condition, he might come to harm? We think that a jury question was presented, and that the nonsuit should not have been granted.
Counsel for the defendant in error contend that under the Sims-
Judgment reversed.