69 A.2d 742 | N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. | 1949
This is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal entered in the Law Division in favor of the defendant, *49 Overlook Hospital Association, a charitable association operating a hospital in Summit, New Jersey.
In 1942 the plaintiff, Barbara Marie Woods, then four years of age, underwent a tonsillectomy at Overlook Hospital. Dr. Minella was the attending physician and the defendant, Marie Ferree, was the anesthetist. Upon the completion of the operation Barbara was taken to the children's ward and was placed by Miss Ferree in bed and under its covers. Miss Ferree had neglected to remove a hot water bag which had been put in the bed as a matter of hospital routine for the purpose of warming it. Later Barbara's mother discovered the hot water bag and, as she picked it up, noticed that the bed and the outside of the bag were wet. Barbara received severe burns from the hot water bag requiring treatment for some time and leaving her with a permanent scar. The action below was instituted by Barbara and her father, as plaintiffs, against the hospital and Miss Ferree, as defendants, claiming that the injury resulted from negligence of the defendants for which they should be held accountable. Service was never obtained against Miss Ferree, a non-resident, and, at the close of the taking of testimony, the lower court dismissed plaintiffs' action on the ground that since the defendant hospital was a charitable institution it was under no liability to them.
In D'Amato v. Orange Memorial Hospital,
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the ruling of the D'Amato case
has been consistently followed by our courts in a series of cases cited in Rose v. Raleigh Fitkin-Paul Morgan, etc., Foundation,
The plaintiffs next contend that an exception should be recognized where the injury results from the charitable institution's failure to exercise reasonable care in the selection of its employees. Assuming the existence of such exception *51
(see Bianchi v. South Park Presbyterian Church,
Finally, a proposed exception is rested upon the contention that the defendant carried indemnity insurance for which it paid premium and that to the extent of the policy limitation the hospital's immunity may be denied without impairing its trust funds or violating any of the reasons supporting the doctrine of the D'Amato case. This exception has been adopted in isolated instances (see Wendt v. Servite Fathers, supra), although most courts have rejected it preferring, under the principle of staredecisis, to leave to the legislature the modification or abolition of their established immunity doctrine. Cf. Howard v.South Baltimore General Hospital,
The judgment is affirmed.