Bush v. Board of Managers of the Binghamton City Hospital

251 A.D. 601, 297 N.Y.S. 991, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7006
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 2, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 251 A.D. 601 (Bush v. Board of Managers of the Binghamton City Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bush v. Board of Managers of the Binghamton City Hospital, 251 A.D. 601, 297 N.Y.S. 991, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7006 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Rhodes, J.

The action is in negligence; at the close of the evidence with the consent of plaintiff, the complaint was dismissed as against the defendant Lape.

Decedent, plaintiff’s wife, with her infant child was suffering from measles; they were sent to the Binghamton City Hospital by their attending physician, received there, as paying patients, June 19, 1926, and were placed in a room in a building used by said hospital for the treatment of communicable diseases.

It is plaintiff’s claim that through the negligence of said hospital authorities his wife contracted diphtheria from the effects of which she died on July 6, 1926. The plaintiff alleges that said defendant was negligent in choosing its physicians, nurses and employees and in the maintenance and operation of said hospital and in the treatment of patients suffering from communicable diseases; in failing to provide suitable facilities and appliances; in failing to provide and maintain a proper system for such treatment and in placing said decedent in such close proximity to patients suffering from diphtheria that she was exposed thereto.

The defendant board of managers was incorporated by chapter 135 of the Laws of 1904; the members of the board are appointed by the mayor of the city, who is ex officio a member. They are [603]*603constituted a body corporate, may sue and be sued, receive and hold for the use of the City Hospital real and personal property and have the custody and control of all the property held and owned by said city for hospital purposes. It is conceded that the hospital is an eleemosynary institution.

At the time decedent was received into the hospital it was being remodeled; the building in which deceased was placed, which was then being used as an isolation building, and which was on the same street as the hospital and near thereto, had formerly been used as a nurses’ home for said hospital, it originally having been a dwelling house. There were three or four rooms on the first floor and three or four rooms on the second floor. The room in front on the second floor was for the treatment of patients suffering from measles and deceased and her baby were placed in this room. Next toward the rear was another room separated by a partition with an arched opening having no door, in which latter "room were placed patients suffering from scarlet fever. Next to the rear were two rooms used for the treatment of diphtheria patients, said rooms being separated from those in front by a partition and door. Access to the diphtheria rooms could be had directly by an outside stairway leading from the ground level, which stairway was usually used by those going up to the diphtheria rooms.

Before the building was rented for use of the hospital it was inspected by the city health officer, Dr. Chalmers J. Longstreet, and the deputy health officer, the defendant Dr. George S. Lape, and by Dr. John A. Conway, who was District State Health Officer of the State Health Department, by Dr. Frank M. Dyer, who was a member of the board of managers, and by Superintendent Jerome F. Peck, and it was upon the recommendation of these physicians and health officials that the superintendent rented the building and placed it in use for isolation purposes. All testified that it was suitable, adequate and safe for the purposes and in the manner used; that the means of sterilization and disinfecting employed were safe and adequate and that the rooms and equipment were surgically clean.

Evidence for the plaintiff comprises that of Hannah F. Hayes, who for sixteen years was inspector, Medical Division, State Department of Social Welfare, she being a graduate nurse. Her inspection was made on the 23d day of July, 1926, several days after the death of decedent, and the second floor was not in use when she visited it. As a result of her inspection she reported that there was a lack of cleanliness as to the walls, window frames and beds on the first floor, but was not able to say whether or not they were sterile and surgically clean. She also testified that the equip[604]*604ment and number of nurses were not “ standard,” as compared with the general prevailing standards in this State.

Plaintiff also produced as a witness a man who was employed as porter or orderly, who testified as to his duties as to mopping floors, cleaning windows and washing dishes; he also made up and carried trays and performed similar work, being the only porter or orderly in the building at the time. His superior was the supervisor in charge, Miss Bita Ford who, at the time of trial had married and whose name was then Bita Ford Heuner.

The only other witness for plaintiff who gave testimony requiring discussion was Dr. Edward Boss Proctor, who had been plaintiff’s family physician, and who testified that, in his opinion, the equipment and conditions were below the reasonable standards which prevailed in, 1926, but that they were the standard for the city of Binghamton, because it was the only place in the city of Binghamton for such treatment; that if there were surgical cleanliness, the presence of dirt having no germs, would not spread disease, but he did not know the conditions that prevailed in the building; that equipment might look dirty but be surgically clean. He did not treat deceased after she was received at the hospital, but at the request of plaintiff he obtained permission from Dr. Lape and visited her, at which time he examined the decedent’s hospital case record. It contained a report of the pathological laboratory showing diphtheria germs from the nasal culture, no diphtheria germ from the throat culture. The patient’s case record showed that diphtheria antitoxin had been administered. Upon the said laboratory tests and the statement that antitoxin had been given, he based his opinion that deceased had contracted diphtheria and that she died therefrom. At the time he had been in practice a year after his interneship, but was not a specialist in communicable diseases.

It was a rule of the hospital that any patient who was admitted suffering from a communicable disease was placed under the charge of said health officers, irrespective of whether they had previously been under the care of other physicians.

The statement of the attending physicians is that when deceased was admitted to the hospital she was suffering from measles and valvular heart murmurs, the heart being enlarged and the heart condition being very serious; that shortly after she arrived she was developing bronchial pneumonia, that bronchitis is one of the symptoms of measles, and apt to develop into pneumonia; that she developed a discharging abscess in the left middle ear, and Dr. George Bogt, an ear specialist, was called and treated the ear.

[605]*605The testimony of these witnesses is to the effect that the primary condition of the patient was measles, which caused the middle ear abscess or infection from which arose an absorption into the blood stream causing septicemia and endocarditis, which caused her death, these conditions being complicated with bronchitis and bronchial pneumonia.

, It appears that the antitoxin administered to the patient as a routine precaution produced no reaction, thus indicating that she did not have diphtheria. All of the attending physicians swore that she did not have diphtheria.

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Related

Post v. Crown Heights Hospital, Inc.
173 Misc. 250 (New York Supreme Court, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
251 A.D. 601, 297 N.Y.S. 991, 1937 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-v-board-of-managers-of-the-binghamton-city-hospital-nyappdiv-1937.