Aloysius Stahlin and Louise Stahlin, and Cross-Appellants v. Hilton Hotels Corporation, a Corporation, and Albert William Andersen, Administrator of the Estate of Alfreda Andersen, A/K/A Fredarica Andersen, and Cross-Appellees v. Dr. Edward Frank Addenbrooke, M.D., And

484 F.2d 580
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 19, 1973
Docket72-1773
StatusPublished

This text of 484 F.2d 580 (Aloysius Stahlin and Louise Stahlin, and Cross-Appellants v. Hilton Hotels Corporation, a Corporation, and Albert William Andersen, Administrator of the Estate of Alfreda Andersen, A/K/A Fredarica Andersen, and Cross-Appellees v. Dr. Edward Frank Addenbrooke, M.D., And) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aloysius Stahlin and Louise Stahlin, and Cross-Appellants v. Hilton Hotels Corporation, a Corporation, and Albert William Andersen, Administrator of the Estate of Alfreda Andersen, A/K/A Fredarica Andersen, and Cross-Appellees v. Dr. Edward Frank Addenbrooke, M.D., And, 484 F.2d 580 (7th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

484 F.2d 580

Aloysius STAHLIN and Louise Stahlin, Plaintiffs-Appellees
and Cross-Appellants,
v.
HILTON HOTELS CORPORATION, a corporation, and Albert William
Andersen, Administrator of the Estate of Alfreda
Andersen, a/k/a Fredarica Andersen,
Defendants-Appellants and
Cross-Appellees,
v.
Dr. Edward Frank ADDENBROOKE, M.D., Defendant and Appellee.

Nos. 72-1773 to 72-1775.

United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.

Argued June 11, 1973.
Decided Aug. 28, 1973.
Rehearing Denied Sept. 19, 1973.

Max W. Foust, Kansas City, Mo., Eugene F. Welter, Chicago, Ill., for Stahlin.

Thomas D. Allen, James Dorr, John M. Moelmann, Perry L. Fuller, Chicago, Ill., for Hilton.

Before KILEY and SPRECHER, Circuit Judges, and ESCHBACH, District Judge.*

ESCHBACH, District Judge.

This diversity action resulted in a jury verdict against defendants Andersen and Hilton and a directed verdict in favor of defendant Addenbrooke. The jury fixed damages in the amount of $150,000 in favor of Aloysius Stahlin and $60,000 in favor of his wife Louise on her loss of consortium claim. Andersen and Hilton appeal from the verdict and judgment. Plaintiffs cross-appeal from the directed verdict in favor of Dr. Addenbrooke. We affirm as to Andersen and Hilton, but we reverse as to Addenbrooke and accordingly remand for a new trial of the issues relating to his liability.

The primary questions raised on appeal by Andersen and Hilton relate to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict against them, the propriety of the trial court's action in relieving plaintiffs of a certain pre-trial stipulation, and the correctness of certain instructions given the jury.

Plaintiff Al Stahlin checked into the Conrad Hilton Hotel in Chicago, Illinois, on May 24, 1966, for the purpose of attending a sales convention. After an afternoon at the race track, he and Mr. Ken Bishop returned to their room at the hotel and began to get dressed for a company dinner that evening. As Stahlin was hurriedly dressing, he got his foot tangled in his shorts, fell backward and struck his head against the wall about two and a half feet above the floor. Stahlin had to be helped to his bed by Bishop, and the two men stayed in the room rather than attend the company dinner. Stahlin complained of a headache, and Bishop observed a bruise or blood coming to the surface at the back of Stahlin's head. A short time later that evening, Stahlin became nauseous and vomited. Bishop then decided to call the management of the hotel for a doctor. Bishop spoke to the assistant manager, described what had happened to Stahlin and was told that "some help" or a doctor would be sent. Fredarica Andersen came to the room about half an hour later and identified herself as a nurse. After learning the facts of the occurrence from Bishop, she examined and felt the back of Stahlin's head and took his temperature, blood pressure and pulse. She observed a bottle of pills on the table next to the bed and learned that Stahlin had a prior heart condition. Bishop testified that she and Stahlin discussed the fact that the pills were a blood thinner or anticoagulant he was taking for the heart condition. Stahlin complained to her of a terrific headache, and she further learned that he had vomited earlier. Before she left, Mrs. Andersen told Stahlin to stay in bed for twelve hours.

Mrs. Andersen died prior to trial. The following record which she made of her visit was received in evidence:

Pt was putting on his trousers and fell against the wall in his room, bumping back of head. Before this happened, he had been to the race track, had several drinks, ate a beef sandwich, and vomited contents of food and liquor. Pt took a codeine derivative tablet-also has a coronary condition, refused to go to hospital, will stay in bed for 12 hours. 13/p- 15 5/8-tem. 98.6 F.A.

Bishop testified that Mrs. Andersen said nothing to Stahlin about seeing a doctor or about going to a hospital. Stahlin did not testify.

Stahlin slept uneasily that night and was up several times. He vomited four or five times. Stahlin remained in the room the next morning when Bishop left to attend the 9 a. m. meeting of the convention. When he returned to the room between 12:00 and 12:30, he found Stahlin in a semicomatose state. An ambulance was called and Stahlin was taken to the hospital. He was diagnosed as having a subdural hematoma. Surgery was immedately performed to relieve the pressure on plaintiff's brain caused by the large blood clot or hematoma. Plaintiff suffered residual brain damage.

In addition to the foregoing sequence of events, the evidence at trial established that Mrs. Andersen, although commonly referred to at the hotel as a nurse, was not in fact licensed in the State of Illinois either as a registered nurse or a licensed practical nurse. She had been employed for many years by Dr. Addenbrooke in the medical department of the hotel, which department was under his supervision during its entire period of existence from 1948 through 1968. For some time prior to and including the month of May 1966, the medical department was without the services of a physician during the nighttime hours. Dr. Addenbrooke left Mrs. Andersen in charge of the medical department at night with the full knowledge and consent of the hotel management. During these hours it was the practice of the hotel to refer guests in need of medical assistance to Mrs. Andersen. She charged a standard rate of $15.00, the same amount charged for a doctor's night room call. This amount was added to the guest's bill, collected by the hotel, and remitted to Dr. Addenbrooke in accordance with their longstanding practice. Dr. Addenbrooke let Mrs. Andersen use her own judgment in making room calls and merely provided her with a list of specialists to whom she could refer guests. Mrs. Andersen did not consult with Dr. Addenbrooke concerning her room calls and her findings were not reviewed by him.

We believe the evidence was sufficient to support a finding that Hilton was negligent in sending Fredarica Andersen to Stahlin's room in response to Bishop's request for help. Whether Bishop specifically requested a doctor and whether the assistant manager represented that a doctor would be sent are not determinative of this question. Bishop related the circumstances of Stahlin's problem and Hilton undertook to render assistance. As the trial court correctly charged the jury, "the operator of a hotel owes no duty to provide any service for a guest who may be ill or injured. If, however, it undertakes to provide such service for any person, it must exercise ordinary care to provide such services that it has undertaken to give." See Nelson v. Union Wire Rope, 31 Ill.2d 69, 199 N.E.2d 769 (1965). We agree with plaintiffs that the duty undertaken by Hilton was more than merely "sending someone up" to Stahlin's room. Reasonable care under the circumstances required that the hotel send a doctor, or at the very least a licensed nurse, to provide the medical assistance requested on behalf of Stahlin. Moreover, while Hilton denies that it had knowledge of Mrs.

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Stahlin v. Hilton Hotels Corp.
484 F.2d 580 (Seventh Circuit, 1973)

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