79 N.Y.S. 1004 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This action was brought to recover damages for the breach of an express contract. This was determined upon a former appeal to this court. 39 App. Div. 624, 57 N. Y. Supp. 784. The terms of the contract, according to the allegations of the complaint, are, in substance, that the defendant, for a specific consideration, agreed to furnish the services of a skilled and experienced nurse to the plaintiff while she was undergoing a surgical operation and recovering therefrom in defendant’s hospital. The breach alleged is defendant’s failure to assign such nurse, and that the one which it did assign, by reason of her inexperience and lack of skill, placed an unprotected rubber bag, filled with very hot water, against one of the plaintiff’s legs immediately after the operation, and while she was under the influence of ether, and she was thereby severely burned and seriously injured. The fact that the plaintiff was burned and injured was not denied, but the existence of the "Contract and the breach of it were, and these are the principal issues presented at the trial, which resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, upon which the judgment appealed from was entered.
It seems unnecessary to set out at length the facts established at the trial, inasmuch as they are quite similar to those presented on a former trial, and are stated quite fully on a previous appeal. 65 App. Div. 64, 72 N. Y. Supp. 587. It is sufficient to say that there
“That, if the jury find as a fact that the plaintiff received no more than the personal assurance of Sister Ignatius, then there was no contract on behalf of the defendant, and the jury must render a verdict for the defendant.”
If the jury had found that the plaintiff only received the personal assurance of Sister Ignatius, then no one would seriously contend that the defendant was liable to respond in damages because the-assurance had not been carried out; in other words, if Sister Ignatius had no power or authority to bind the defendant, and what she did amounted only to a personal agreement on her part, then the defendant was in no way - legally obligated to make good damages sustained by reason of the failure of Sister Ignatius to do what she had agreed to.
I am also of the opinion that the court erred in sustaining objections to two other questions put to this same witness. In this connection it appeared that the witness accompanied the plaintiff to the operating room-, and there remained with her while the operation was being performed. In the meantime another nurse prepared the bed in which the plaintiff was to be put after the operation had been performed, and put in it a hot-water bag. When the witness returned with the plaintiff to this room, she found the hot-water bag in the bed, and took it out, and placed it upon the floor. This is the bag which she subsequently took from the floor, placed in the bed, and which burned the plaintiff. After she had stated the foregoing facts, she was asked: “Q. About how long had the hot-water bottle been on the floor, * * * after you put it there, before you took it up to apply it to Miss Ward?” This was objected to, and the objection sustained. She was also asked: “Q. State whether or not the hot-water bag burned your hand at the time.” This was also objected to, and the objection sustained. Both of these questions were proper. Answers to them bore directly upon the question as to whether the witness erred in judgment, by reason of lack of training and skill, in placing the hot-water bag next to the plaintiff’s leg, or whether it was a thoughtless or careless act upon her part, if the latter, no liability attached, and it certainly was for the jury to say which it was, after a due consideration of all the testimony that could be presented bearing on that subject. The least that can be said is that it was some evidence, proper for the jury to consider in determining whether Miss Kinney were a competent and skillful nurse; and, being so, defendant was entitled to have the question answered. Exceptions were taken in each instance, and, it seems to me, they were well taken.
There were other errors assigned to the rulings of the court, which would require very serious examination if their consideration were necessary now to a determination of the appeal before us. Several of these relate to- the refusal of the court to charge, in one form- or another, that if, prior to the time the plaintiff was injured, the nurse' assigned had shown herself to be ordinarily skillful and competent, she was not proved to be either incompetent or lacking in skill by the single act which caused the plaintiff’s injury. This seems to be the settled rule (Baulec v. Railroad Co., 59 N. Y. 356, 17 Am. Rep.
The judgment and order appealed from must, therefore, be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event. All concur; VAN BRUNT, P. J., in result.