City Hospital of Akron v. Lewis

192 N.E. 140, 47 Ohio App. 465, 16 Ohio Law. Abs. 684, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 402
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 16, 1934
DocketNo 2338
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 192 N.E. 140 (City Hospital of Akron v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City Hospital of Akron v. Lewis, 192 N.E. 140, 47 Ohio App. 465, 16 Ohio Law. Abs. 684, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 402 (Ohio Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

*686 OPINION

By WASHBURN, PJ.

At the conclusion of all of the evidence, the defendant asked the court to arrest the case from the jury and enter a judgment in its favor, “or, in the alternative, that the court instruct the jury to return a verdict against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendant,” which motion' was overruled and an exception noted.

Among other errors complained of, it is *687 urged that the court should have granted said motion.

Inasmuch as the plaintiff did not in his petition claim that the defendant had in its employ incompetent nurses or attendants and did not claim in the petition as a ground of recovery the negligence of the defendant in the selection or retention of incompetent employees, and inasmuch as no such ground of recovery was alleged or claimed in ■ the reply, evidence relating to such a claim would have been incompetent on behalf of plaintiff in his case in chief. 'In any event, the plaintiff did not introduce any evidence in his' case in chief tending to prove that the defendant failed to use reasonable and ordinary care in the selection or retention of its nurses and other employees, and therefore plaintiff was not entitled to recover on such an issue if it can be said that such an issue was raised by the superfluous and unnecessary reference to the matter in the answer. The case was therefore a simple one. If the defendant1 was a public charitable institution, it was not liable to the plaintiff.'

Whatever may be the law in other jurisdictions, it must be considered as settled in Ohio that, if the trustees of a public charitable hospital exercise reasonable care to select and retain competent physicians, nurses, employees and servants, the hospital is not liable to a patient for damages resulting from the negligence and incompetence of those so selected and retained.

Taylor, Admr. v Protestant Hospital Assn., 85 Oh St 90.

Taylor v Flower Deaconess Home and Hospital, 104 Oh St 61.

Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati v Duvelius, 123 Oh St 52.

“1. The fact that a public charitable hospital receives pay from a patient for lodging and care does not affect its character as a charitable institution, nor its rights or liabilities as such in relation to such patient.”

Taylor, Admr. v Protestant Hospital Assn., supra.

As has been stated, plaintiff alleged in sai'd petition upon which the case was tried, that the defendant was “an Ohio corporation, engaged in the business of conducting, maintaining and operating a hospital.” The answer admitted that the defendant operated and maintained a hospital but denied that it was engaged in conducting a “business.”

The word “business,” used in describing a corporation, denotes a commercial or industrial enterprise or signifies mercantile transactions.

A corporation not for profit — that is, not engaged in conducting a business — may or may not be a public charity; but a corporation for profit cannot be a public charity, and therefore, under the settled law of the state applying to liability of public charitable institutions, there being no allegation in the petition of failure to exercise ordinary care in the selection or retention of employees and attendants, it is apparent that the word “business” was used in said petition as describing a commercial. or industrial enterprise, as distinguished from a public charity.

The trial court, however, apparently chose to regard the issue as to whether the defendant was a business corporation or was a corporation not for'profit, as being raised by the answer, which specifically alleged that it was a corporation not for profit, and the court treated that issue as a defense and charged the jury that the burden of proof thereon was upon the defendant.

As heretofore stated, plaintiff offered no evidence in his case in chief tending in any manner whatever to show that the defendant was negligent in employing or retaining incompetent employees and attendants, and furthermore he offered no evidence tending to prove that the defendant conducted its affairs as a business or commercial enterprise; but in the introduction of defendant’s evidence, the plaintiff developed some evidence which he claims tended to prove that, while the defendant was admittedly organized as a corporation not for profit, it was in fact operated as a business, as distinguished from a public charity, and also that it was negligent in the selection or retention of the employees or attendants whose negligence was the cause of plaintiff’s injuries..

Was such evidence developed as’ to require that the case be submitted to the jury?

The charter, constitution apd by-laws of the defendant definitely proclaim it to be a corporation not for profit, organized to conduct a public charity, and if in connection therewith consideration be given to the evidence as to how its affairs have been conducted, we find that its buildings were erected and the hospital equipped by donations and voluntary contributions made by persons interested in hospital work; that though a corporation, no stock has ever been issued or can be issued and no dividends have been paid or can be paid; that the defendant receives and cares for per *688 sons who are able and persons who are unable to make payment for the care and services rendered, and receives and cáres for charitable cases “without distinction of race, nationality, color, sex, religious sentiment or opinion” and has never turned away a person who required care, treatment and nursing; that it receives some patients at a stated, fixed or agreed compensation, and has a regular schedule of prices for such persons; that a majority of its patients are of that class, and that they agree in advance to pay for hospital service; that the sums so received are used solely in paying the expenses, and cost of running the hospital, including the care of charity patients, and that the hospital is operated from money so received, together with such benevolent gifts and donations as it is able to obtain by solicitation or voluntary'donations and from endowments which yield a small yearly return; that the amount received from pay patients is not sufficient to pay the running expenses of the hospital; and that the hospital could not operate without the free services of the physicians and others connected with the hospital.

It is true that the evidence as to the organization and operation of the defendant, aside from its charter and by-laws, comes from witnesses interested in and connected with the defendant, but their testimony is not disputed, and there is nothing in the record tending to affect their credibility or cast suspicion upon their testimony and we do not find that any conflicting inferences may be drawn from their testimony or that there is any weighing of evidence involved.

Some courts may hold that under such circumstances the credit to be given to such testimony should be left to a jury, but we think the weight of authority and the better rule is that it was the duty of the trial court, and now is the duty of this court, to declare’the law applicable to the facts so fully and definitely established.

Jerke v Delmont State Bank, 72 A.L.R. 7.

26 R.C.L., ‘.‘Trial,” §80, p. 1075.

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Bluebook (online)
192 N.E. 140, 47 Ohio App. 465, 16 Ohio Law. Abs. 684, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-hospital-of-akron-v-lewis-ohioctapp-1934.