228 Mass. 132 | Mass. | 1917
The defendant operates a private hospital for gain. The plaintiff went there to undergo an operation. She testified that "her physician made the arrangements for [Tier] entering into the hospital. . . . That she paid to the hospital $15 a week for attendance and $10 for the use of the operating room.” The operation was performed by a surgeon not connected with the defendant hospital. The plaintiff was etherized by her family physician and he was not connected with the defendant. In addition to the surgeon and the family physician two of the defendant’s nurses were present at the operation. When the plaintiff was on the operating table before she went under ether she had two rings on her hands. After the operation and while the plaintiff was still under the effects of ether she was carried from the operating room to her own room in the hospital by “one of the doctors assisted by the nurses.” When the plaintiff came out of the ether she noticed that the more valuable of the two rings (a ring which “would not come off without assistance”) was missing. At the trial the plaintiff put the surgeon and the family physician on the witness stand. Each of them testified that he did not take the ring. The defendant put on the stand the superintendent of the hospital, one of the two operating nurses and the plaintiff’s day nurse. Each of them testified that she did not take the ring. The operating nurse who was put upon the witness stand testified that the other operating nurse was in California “the last time she heard from” her. The plaintiff made many requests for rulings and now insists upon the first, fifth, eleventh and twelfth set forth above. These were refused and an exception taken. The judge instructed the jury that to recover the plaintiff must prove that she was in the exercise of due care and that the defendant was negligent. An exception was taken to this ruling. The case is here on these exceptions.
If the absent nurse did steal the ring it is plain that the defendant is not liable on the ground that in stealing the ring the nurse was acting within the scope of her employment as a servant of the defendant. The first request for ruling therefore was properly refused.
If the plaintiff had stood in the relation of a stranger to the defendant there would have been no error in the. trial. But the plaintiff did not stand to the defendant in the relation of a stranger. It is apparent from, the bill of exceptions that the case was not tried on the footing that the rights of the plaintiff in this action depended upon the contract made by her with the defendant. For this reason the terms of this contract do not appear as fully as they otherwise would have done. But from what does appear in the bill of exceptions the presiding judge was wrong in telling the jury that the defendant’s liability depended upon the plaintiff proving that it was negligent.
.Under the contract entered into by the defendant corporation it was its duty not only (1) to give the plaintiff a room in the hospital before and after the operation and (2) to give her surgeon and family physician the use of the operating room for the operatian, but also (3) to give to the plaintiff the services of such nurses as were necessary for her care before, after and during the operatian. It expressly appeared at the trial that “she [the plaintiff] paid to the hospital $15 a week for attendance.” The services of the nurses which under the contract the defendant was bound to furnish the plaintiff included the services of nurses while she was unconscious from the effects of the ether, a condition which was a necessary part of the operation. And the question we have to decide is whether there was a violation of duty on the part of the defendant under this contract if the operating nurse in question stole the ring by forcibly pulling it off the plaintiff’s finger while she was under the effects of ether, or whether on the facts appearing at the trial the jury could have so found. We are of opinion that the jury could have so found.
If for example a stranger had burst into the operating room, attacked the plaintiff and done her bodily harm or had attacked
In its legal aspects the case is governed by the decision in Bryant v. Rich, 106 Mass. 180. In that case a dispute arose between a passenger on one of the defendant’s steamers and one of the defendant’s waiters as to whether the passenger had paid for his supper. The plaintiff, a cousin of the passenger in question, made a suggestion to which no exception could have been taken. Whereupon not only the waiter in question but the head steward and the other waiters knocked down the plaintiff and beat him. It was for this assault and battery that the action in Bryant v. Rich was brought. The presiding judge ruled (in accordance with a request made by the defendant) that “there is no evidence that the steward and waiters, in assaulting the plaintiff, were acting within the scope of any authority, or in the discharge of any duty, imposed upon them by the defendants.” But in spite of this he instructed the jury that the plaintiff was entitled to recover. This ruling was sustained on the ground that as matter of contract the plaintiff as a passenger had the right to receive proper treatment from the defendants and their servants and all of them. This decision has been followed in other cases- of carriers of passengers. Hayne v. Union Street Railway, 189 Mass. 551. Jackson v. Old Colony Street Railway, 206 Mass. 477. Gentile v. Boston Elevated Railway, 217 Mass. 113. In Levins v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 183 Mass. 175, it was held that a case was
The decision in Bryant v. Rich does not depend upon the fact that the defendants in that case were common carriers. The decision would have been the same had the assault and battery occurred on an excursion steamer in place of upon a steamer operated by a common carrier. And the decision would have been the same if the steward and waiters had stolen rings from Bryant’s fingers in place of knocking him down as they did. The doctrine of Bryant v. Rich applies whenever there is a contract between the plaintiff and defendant by force of which the defendant is to furnish for the plaintiff’s comfort the services of its, the defendant’s, employees. Where the injury to the plaintiff is caused by an act of the defendant’s servants done in the course of their employment an action may be brought based on negligence of the defendant’s servants for which the defendant is liable because the act took place in the course of his servants’ employment, or an action may be brought in that case based on violation of the duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff under the contract between the defendant and the plaintiff. But where (as was the case in Bryant v. Rich and in the case at bar) the injury done the plaintiff is caused by an act of the defendant’s servants outside of the servants’ duty as employees of the defendant but by an act of the defendant’s servants which while not in the course of the servants’ employment is none the less a violation of the duty owed by the defendant under the defendant’s contract with the plaintiff, the only action that can be brought is an action founded upon the duty arising out of the contract.
What has been said leaves open the defence which arises out of the testimony that the plaintiff when received into the hospital was asked to put into the custody of the defendant corporation all her “valuables.” The defendant’s agent who received the plaintiff when she came to. the hospital testified that that request was made to her at that time. The plaintiff on the other hand testified that she was asked to put her money into the custody of the hospital but that she was not asked to put anything else into its custody. If the defendant’s evidence is believed, a defence is made out. On the other hand if the plaintiff’s evidence on this matter is believed, her rights depend upon the rule of Bryant v. Rich, ubi supra.
Exceptions sustained.