Aderhold v. Bishop

1923 OK 1141, 221 P. 752, 94 Okla. 203, 60 A.L.R. 137, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 506
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 18, 1923
Docket11939
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 1923 OK 1141 (Aderhold v. Bishop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aderhold v. Bishop, 1923 OK 1141, 221 P. 752, 94 Okla. 203, 60 A.L.R. 137, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 506 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by'

FOSTER, 0.

On the 10th day of May, 1918, the defendant in error, Bertha E. Bishop, as plaintiff below, commenced an action in the district court of Canadian county against the plaintiffs in error, T. M. Ader-hold and J. A. Hatchett, doing business as the El Reno Sanitarium and Training School for Nurses, defendants below, to recover the sum of $25,240 as damages resulting from the alleged negligent performance of a surgical operation for the removal of a goiter, The parties will be hereinafter referred to as they appeared in the court below.

The plaintiff’s action arose out of the following circumstances:

*204 The plaintiff while undergoing a surgical operation in the El Reno Sanitarium and Training 'School for Nurses, on the 23rd day of July, 1017, for the removal of a goiter or enlargement of the thyroid glands, suffered a bum upon her lower limbs.

The defendants. Dr. J. A. Hatchett and Dr. T. M. Aderhold of El Reno, Okla., were then partners in the practice of medicine and surgery and, performed' the surgical operation. Dr. Aderhold was the operating surgeon and Dr. Hatchett his assistant.

The burn upon the lower limbs of the plaintiff was not discovered, except through the complaint of the plaintiff herself, after she had been removed from the operating table to her room in the sanitarium, and had so far recovered from the effect of the anaesthetic as to be able to complain of the pain in her lower limbs.

The El Reno Sanitarium is and has been for many years a corporation, organized and existing under the laws of the state of Oklahoma, its true corporate name being “El Reno Sanitarium and Training School for Nurses.” The incorporators were J. A. Hatchett, Mary H, Hatchett, F. H. Clark, and Elizabeth Clark, and its principal purposes as expressed in its article of incorporation are: First, “to provide and maintain a hospital for the suitable accommodation, nursing, medical and surgical treatment of such persons as may be in need! of the same irrespective of sex, color, race, or religious beliefsecond, “to establish, maintain and conduct a school for the proper training of women as nurses.” Ry the articles of incorporation it was provided that the corporation should issue no shares of stock.

At the time of said operation the said in-corporators Dr. F. H. Clark and Elizabeth P. Clark had ceased to be members of the corporation, the said T. M. Aderhold having succeeded them therein. Dr. Hatchett had been president of the corporation from the beginning, and was such president at the time of the operation. Dr. Aderhold was its secretary.

Aside from being a training school for nurses, the El Reno Sanitarium was a general hospital. It provided all modern instruments of surgery, operating room, skilled nurses, requisite to the treatment of patients for disease, and for surgical operations, except that it had no medical staff, and provided neither physicians or surgeons.

The plaintiff alleged in her petition that the defendants were each practicing physicians and surgeons, doing business,as “the El Reno Sanitarium, at El Reno, .in Canadian county, Oklahoma,” and contracted with her to perform an operation upon her for the removal of a goiter; and that while engaged in performing the operation, they so negligently and unskillfully performed said operation that plaintiff’s feet and ankles were scalded and burned, to her damage in the sum of $25,240.

The defendants answered by a general denial, and alleged, further, that plaintiff's alleged injury was in no manner due to their negligence or to 'the negligence of their servants or assistants.

The cause was tried on the 19th and 20th of May, 1020, resulting in a verdict by the jury for the plaintiff in the sum of $12,620.

Motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, and the defendants bring the cause regularly on appeal to this court and complain: (1) That the trial court erred in overruling their demurrer to the evidence interposed at the close of plaintiff’s case ■and in overruling their motion for a directed verdict at the close of all the'evidence; (2) that in giving certain instructions to the jury and in refusing to give certain instructions (requested by the defendants; (3) that in refusing to grant a new trial because of the misconduct of plaintiff’s attorney and an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court by which the defendants were prevented from having a fair trial; (4) that in admitting certain evidence for plaintiff over the objections of the defendants and in refusing to admit certain evidence offered by the defendants; (5) that because the damages allowed by the jury were excessive and given under the influence of prejudice and passion.

There is no substantial conflict in the evidence.

Plaintiff was a school teacher and resided at Anadarko in Caddo county, Okla. .She was suffering from a goiter, or an enlargement of the thyroid gland. Dr. IV. W. Kerley, residing at Anadarko, was and had for sometime been her physician. The defendants, Dr. Hatchett and Dr. Adeihold, were partners engaged in the general practice of medicine and surgery at El Reno, Okla. As individuals, but not as a partnership, they were officers and directors of the El Reno Sanitarium, and practically owned said corporation. As a partnership they had no management or control of the corporation, but solely by virtue of being officers in said corporation, they employed and *205 discharged the nurses and other hospital attendants. In their partnership business as physicians and surgeons, they in no way served said corporation and the corporation in no way s.erved them.

The plaintiff’s regular physician, Dr. Ker-ley, had long been acquainted with the El Reno Sanitarium and Training School for Nurses, and with the defendants, Dr. Hatch-ett and Dr. Aderhold. Dr. Kerley recommended that the plaintiff go to the El Reno Sanitarium and that she employ the defendants to perform the operation. Representing the plaintiff, Dr. Kerley arranged, in a conversation over the telephone, with Dr. Hatchett and Dr. -Aderhold to perform the operation. Plaintiff had no conversation or consultation with the defendants, or either of them, concerning the arrangement made by Dx. Kerley prior to the operation.

As recommended by Dr. Kerley, the plaintiff went to the El Reno Sanitarium; was given a room in the hospital, and she paid a hospital fee of $45 in advance.

There is no evidence that plaintiff made any contract with the defendants concerning the El Reno Sanitarium, or for any service which the El Reno Sanitarium should perform in connection with her operation. the contract being a simple engagement toy the defendants to perform on plaintiff an operation for the removal of a goiter.

When the time arrived for the performance of the operation, Dr. Hatchett and Dr. Aderhold were sent for. They entered plaintiff’s room and made such preliminary examinations as were necessary prior to the operation. The plaintiff was placed upon the operating table, and beside the operating surgeons, other persons present and assisting in the operation, were Dr. Riley, who administered the anaesthetic, Miss Esk-ridge, who was the superintendent and head nurse of the hospital, and two other nurses of the institution assisting her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 1141, 221 P. 752, 94 Okla. 203, 60 A.L.R. 137, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aderhold-v-bishop-okla-1923.