Tribble v. Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart

242 P. 372 | Wash. | 1926

Lead Opinion

Harry Tribble, for a consideration paid by him, became a patient at the Columbus Sanitarium, a hospital operated by the defendant, the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart, a corporation, at Seattle. After an operation in the surgery, and while still under the influence of an anesthetic, he was taken to his room and placed in bed. His attendant or attendants neglected to remove an aluminum bottle of hot water that had been placed in the bed, and which in a short time severely burned and injured him. He sued the defendant, alleging negligence in its care of him and negligence in the selection and retention of *328 the person assigned to take care of him. From a judgment on the verdict of a jury in his favor, the defendant has appealed.

It appears that the hospital had what were called probationers (student nurses, or those in training to become graduate nurses), and graduate nurses. In short, the testimony of the respondent shows that one Corinne Meiklebust, who it appears was a probationer, about the time respondent regained consciousness, discovered that the bottle of hot water had been left in the bed, and on taking it out exclaimed that she had forgotten to take it out, and that later on, the same day, upon observing the extent of the injuries caused by the bottle of hot water, she remarked that she would "get the devil for that." On the contrary, one Katherine E. Simons, at the time of the injury not a graduate but a student nurse, testified that, when the respondent was put in his bed, she removed two bottles of hot water, but did not know another one had been left in the bed; that she did not know who put the bottles in the bed; and that Miss Meiklebust, though connected with the hospital at that time, was not in the room when respondent was taken back to it. Of course, this dispute of fact as to who was respondent's attendant was for the jury.

[1] The contention of the appellant is that the evidence was insufficient to take the case to the jury. It is said in the brief:

"This contention is based upon the following premises: First, the hospital is owned and operated by the appellant as a charitable institution; second, appellant is not responsible for injuries to its patients unless same are shown to be caused by want of due care in the selection of competent servants; third, that there is no evidence in this case to show that appellant failed to use due care in the selection of competent servants." *329

Though the point was strongly at issue in the pleadings and in the trial of the case, we are disposed to the view, upon consideration of all the proof, that the hospital was maintained and operated as a charitable institution. Merely because an institution receives or exacts compensation from those desiring its privileges to the extent of their ability to pay does not necessarily deprive the institution of its character as a charitable one. Susman v. Young Men's Christian Association,101 Wash. 487, 172 P. 554.

[2] The other two branches of the contention of the appellant as above stated are closely related; that is, non-liability unless want of due care is shown in the selection of servants, and that there is no evidence in this case to show that the appellant failed to exercise due care in the selection of competent servants.

Notwithstanding the plain statement of counsel for appellant as to their contention quoted above and the further statement in their brief that "the appellant cannot be held liable unless it is shown that it failed to use due care in the selection of a competent servant," the argument is made, more fully in the reply brief, that a charitable institution is not liable for the negligence of its officers and managers in failing to exercise due care in the selection of its servants. Some cases are cited to that effect. However, we need not go beyond our own cases. InSusman v. Young Men's Christian Association, supra, the complaint was tested by a general demurrer. It contained no allegation of negligence on the part of the defendant in the selection of its servant. We said:

"The trial court sustained the demurrer on the ground that the respondent is maintained as a benevolent and charitable institution, and as such is not liable for torts committed by its servants against a patron of the institution, in the absence of a showing that it *330 failed to exercise reasonable care in the selection of the servant. The rule applied by the court is the settled rule in this state, and if it appears from the complaint that the respondent is a benevolent and charitable institution, the demurrer was properly sustained. Wharton v. Warner, 75 Wash. 470,135 P. 235; Magnuson v. Swedish Hospital, 99 Wash. 399,169 P. 828."

In the Wharton v. Warner case, 75 Wash. 470, 135 P. 235, it was decided (syllabus):

"A charitable hospital incorporated to found a medical and charitable sanitarium to care for indigent and other sick persons, is not liable for the negligence of its physician, where it exercised reasonable care in selecting him."

In Magnuson v. Swedish Hospital, 99 Wash. 399, 169 P. 828, upon referring to the case of Richardson v. Carbon Hill CoalCo., 10 Wash. 648, 39 P. 95, it was said:

"We there held that the corporation was a charitable institution so far as the hospital feature was concerned, and, even though the company did employ the physician to care for and treat the sick and injured workmen, it was not liable for his negligence, but was responsible only for want of ordinary care in selecting him. This doctrine was reaffirmed in the case of Wellsv. Ferry-Baker Lumber Co., 57 Wash. 658, 107 P. 869, 29 L.R.A. (N.S.) 426."

[3] With regard to the question of the care exercised by the appellant in procuring Miss Meiklebust as a servant, the testimony shows substantially the following: One, Sister Assumption, still connected with the appellant at the time of the trial, had charge, as supervisor of nurses, of the selection of Miss Meiklebust when she was taken into the service of the hospital. She testified that, on selecting her she found her of good character and capable of taking responsibility. *331 She admitted that she got the information of her good character in writing signed by two persons. The writing, mentioning only her good character, was from references furnished on a written application made by Miss Meiklebust. The application was made about a month before the commencement of services, during which time she did not see the applicant. She could not remember the names of the references. Miss Meiklebust was nineteen years of age and a stranger to her and had no former experience in caring for the sick that the witness knew of. She did not give the girl any mental tests. Shortly after the accident complained of, the girl was discharged for outside misconduct and the application blank and letters of reference were returned to one supposed to be the girl's mother. She could not remember who the letters of recommendation were from, nor whether she knew either of them, and that the receipt of such letters of recommendation is somewhat of a formality.

Respective counsel have called our attention to a large number of cases which, though examined, cannot reasonably be reviewed herein. We mention, however, the case of St. Paul's Sanitariumv. Williamson, 164 S.W. (Tex.Civ.App.) 36, because the facts in that case are rather similar to the facts in the present one. That case discusses several of the propositions involved in the present one and exhaustively reviews the authorities. In that case a patient, while under the influence of an anesthetic, was placed in bed after an operation and was injured by a bottle of hot water. It had been placed in the bed by a girl attendant of the hospital by the direction of a superior. The nurse who placed the patient in bed made no examination to ascertain whether the bottle of hot water was in a safe position. This nurse was not a graduate but a pupil. It was further shown that this nurse was almost immediately *332 succeeded by another, and that she made no examination of the bed to ascertain if the patient was in a safe position with reference to the bottle of hot water. This nurse was also not a graduate, but a pupil nurse. Upon reading the whole case, it appears that, principally upon these facts, it was held that the jury was entitled to find that ordinary care had not been observed by the sanitarium authorities in the selection of its servants.

Ordinary care in the selection of servants implies and demands that degree of diligence and precaution which the exigencies of the particular service reasonably require. Admitting the purpose and advisability of using one or more bottles of hot water to increase the lowered circulation of a patient due to an operation, it is nevertheless highly important that a bottle of hot water capable of doing harm should not be left in such position in the bed that a patient may be injured by it. The situation requires more care if the patient is unconscious.

Counsel for appellant says, however, that respondent's views and theory are based upon the girl's exclamations and admissions and are unworthy of belief, in view of the testimony of Miss Simons that she herself had charge of the respondent immediately after the operation. But her own testimony shows that she was only a pupil nurse and that she neglected, also, to remove the hot water bottle that caused the injury. Miss Meiklebust did not testify nor was her absence explained. These were all matters for the jury. So, also, as to the testimony of the officer of the appellant who employed the servants. She alone had charge of and performed that duty and in the very nature of her testimony it was in many important particulars, if not generally, incapable of contradiction. She was, of *333 course, an interested witness. The weight and credibility of such evidence is for the jury. Gosline v. Dryfoos, 45 Wash. 396,88 P. 634; Purdy v. Sherman, 74 Wash. 309, 133 P. 440; Moorev. Roddie, 103 Wash. 386, 174 P. 648; Vernarelli v.Sweikert, 123 Wash. 694, 213 P. 482.

[4] Further complaint is made by the appellant because the wife of the respondent, while being examined in chief on behalf of the respondent, persisted somewhat in referring to a conversation in the nature of an offer of compromise on the part of one of the officers of the appellant. As we view the record in this respect, that course was not invited by counsel after proper objection, but voluntarily persisted in by the witness until warned by the court who fully and specifically instructed the jurors at that time to disregard it. There was in it no prejudice sufficient to warrant a reversal.

[5] Another assignment of error charges counsel for the respondent with improper conduct in asking one of the officers of the appellant corporation, among other things along the same line, what part of the funds of the institution were used to purchase indemnity insurance. Appellant relies in argument onSchwalen v. Fuller Co., 107 Wash. 476, 182 P. 592, 187 P. 366, 10 A.L.R. 296, and other like cases. But we think the purpose for the rule of those cases wholly lacking in the present one and the rule not applicable. As already stated, respondent was contending that the appellant was not a charitable institution, and in support of that contention was attempting to find out about its carrying indemnity insurance. In doing so, counsel relied on Susman v. Young Men's Christian Association,supra, and, as we understand the record, so stated to the trial court. In that case it was said: *334

"The taking of indemnity insurance was but the exercise of business prudence. At any rate it could create no liability where none before existed, however much it might weigh as evidence of the construction the corporation placed upon its limitations and powers."

The trial court, however, decided that the inquiry was objectionable, refused to allow the question to be answered, and at once instructed the jury to disregard the question not allowed to be answered and "not to consider that matter at all in considering the case." The correctness of the ruling on the question asked is in no way now involved, only the good faith of counsel in asking the question. Clearly there was nothing in the incident to indicate other than good faith on the part of counsel and, according to the views of the trial court concerning the controversy, the rights of appellant were protected by the court's immediate caution to the jury.

Affirmed.

MAIN, PARKER, and MACKINTOSH, JJ., concur.






Dissenting Opinion

While I agree with the rule announced as to the care required in the selection of employees, the evidence, as I construe it, was insufficient to take that question to the jury. I therefore dissent. *335

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