D'Amato v. Orange Memorial Hospital

127 A. 340, 101 N.J.L. 61, 1925 N.J. LEXIS 168
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 19, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 127 A. 340 (D'Amato v. Orange Memorial Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D'Amato v. Orange Memorial Hospital, 127 A. 340, 101 N.J.L. 61, 1925 N.J. LEXIS 168 (N.J. 1925).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Walker, Chancellor.

This was a suit in the Supreme Court by husband and wife for injuries sustained by the *62 wife, with the usual consequential damages to the husband. Mrs. D’Amato being a patient at the Orange Memorial Hospital on or about January 22d, 1919, received an injury there under the following circumstances: Being in a wheel chair, recovering from an operation, the nurse in charge attempted to remove Mrs. D’Amato from the chair and place her in bed, and, while the transfer from chair to bed was going on, the patient fell out of the chair and broke her left knee-cap, and sustained other injuries. Mrs. D’Amato remained in the hospital for about five weeks after the accident, and her husband was charged $10.50 a week by the hospital for her board, medical attention and nursing, amounting in all to $129 (including a former sojourn there), of which he paid on account the sum of $77.50. The defendant denied liability, and, at the close of the case, counsel of defendant moved for direction of a verdict in its favor on the ground that no negligence had been shown against the hospital, and that the defendant could not be held liable under the doctrine of respondeat superior; also that the plaintiff Mrs. D’Amato was guilty of contributory negligence, and assumed the risk of the injury, and because the defendant is a charitable organization, and, therefore, not liable for negligence of its physicians and nurses. The trial judge granted the motion and directed the verdict on the latter ground alone.

The defendant hospital is supported, in part, by income from so-called pay patients, and also from private contributions; receives patients regardless of their ability to pay, charges $10.50 a week for ward patients where they can pay so much, otherwise receives what they are able to pay, but the maximum charge does not meet the cost of service, which, at the time in question, was about $28 a week.

The defendant was incorporated under “An act to provide for the incorporation of associations for the erection and maintenance of hospitals, infirmaries, orphanages, asylums, and other charitable institutions,” approved March 9th, 1877. Pamph. L. 1877, p. 159. This act was expressly repealed by the act to repeal sundry acts relating to associations not *63 for pecuniary profit (Pamph. L. 1899, pp. 189, 192; 1 Comp. Stat., p. 129, § 1), but its vested rights, privileges and powers were saved to it by section 2 of that act, and also by the general repealer contained in the act to incorporate associations not for pecuniary profit. Pamph. L. 1898, p. 422; Comp. Stat., pp. 125, 129, § 13.

The defendant, having been organized under an act providing for the incorporation of charitable institutions, is presumed to be a charitable institution unless the contrary appear, and, in this case, there is no such showing. It is unlike the corporation in the case of Carteret Academy v. State Board of Taxes and Assessment, 98 N. J. L. 868, where the academy charged tuition fees equal to those charged by private schools carried on for profit, issued bonds for the purchase of its property, paying six per cent, interest to the bondholders, and paid salaries at the market rate to the head master and assistants. And this court held that the corporation was not fundamentally philanthropic or charitable in purpose, notwithstanding it was organized under the act to incorporate associations not for pecuniary profit, and the assessment of taxes levied upon it was affirmed.

The trial judge, in deciding the motion to direct a verdict for the defendant in the case at bar, took occasion to observe that there was a difference in the decisions in the various states regarding vhe responsibility of charitable hospitals for the negligence of their physicians and nurses, some holding liability, others immunity. And he adopted the' rule which to him was more convincing, namely, that of non-liability ] and in thus deciding we think he was right.

Perhaps the leading case supporting this view is Schloendorff v. The Society of New York Hospital, 211 N. Y. 125, wherein it was held that the relation between a hospital and the physicians and nurses who serve it is not one of master and servant. A hospital maintained as a charitable institution for the care and healing of the sick is not liable for the negligence of its physicians and nurses in the treatment of patients. It remains exempt, though the patient makes some pajanent to help defray the cost of board, and such pay *64 ment is regarded as a contribution to the income of the hospital to be devoted, like its other funds, to the maintenance of the charity.

In Gable v. Sisters of St. Francis, 227 Pa. St. 254, it was held that a charitable corporation is not liable for personal injuries caused by the negligence of a nurse in its hospital, and that it is immaterial that the person injured was a pay patient and that a certain space in the institution was used for the care of pay patients.

In McDonald v. Massachusetts General Hospital, 120 Mass. 432, it was held that a corporation established for the maintenance of a public charrlable hospital, which has exercised due care in the selection of its agents, is not liable for injury to a patient caused by their negligence, nor for the unauthorized assumption of one of the hospital attendants to act as a surgeon. And in the later Massachusetts case of Roosen v. Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, 235 Id. 66, it was held that a public charitable corporation operating a hospital is not liable in an action of tore for the conscious suffering of one of its patients caused by negligence either of its managing officers in selecting incompetent servants or employes, or of servants or employes selected with care. At page 69 the court said that in McDonald v. Massachusetts General Hospital, supra, occurs the cautious statement that the liability of the defendant corporation could extend no further than if there had been no negligence on the part of those who administered the trust and controlled its management, and if due care had been used by them in the selection of their inferior agents, even if injury had occurred by the negligence of such agents, it cannot be made responsible, and (at p. 70), that that sentence was merely precautionary, it bounded the question presented and simply showed the extent of the decision; it did not purport to be comprehensive or exclusive, that the correlative assertion to the effect that there was liability in cases where there had been carelessness on the part of the managers in 'the selection of servants and agents, is neither expressed nor implied; and (at p. 72), it was laid down that the inevitable result of their (Massachusetts) de *65

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Bluebook (online)
127 A. 340, 101 N.J.L. 61, 1925 N.J. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/damato-v-orange-memorial-hospital-nj-1925.