Emory University v. Lee

104 S.E.2d 234, 97 Ga. App. 680, 1958 Ga. App. LEXIS 859
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 14, 1958
Docket37128
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 104 S.E.2d 234 (Emory University v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emory University v. Lee, 104 S.E.2d 234, 97 Ga. App. 680, 1958 Ga. App. LEXIS 859 (Ga. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

Quillian, Judge.

For the sake of clarity and convenience of expression the plaintiff in error, Emory University, will be referred to as the defendant, and the defendant in error, Clarence W. Lee, as the plaintiff, the parties having occupied those respective relations to the case in the trial court.

The defendant relies upon only one of the three general grounds of the motion for new trial, that the verdict was not supported by evidence.

The defendant contends, first, that its employees who were charged with the care of the plaintiff on the occasion when he was injured, according to the undisputed evidence, exercised ordinary care in attending him, and their treatment of him was in accord with usual and accepted practices of the medical profession; secondly, that the evidence adduced on the trial did not support the essential allegations of the petition that the plaintiff, while a patient in the defendant’s hospital and for several hours prior to the incident resulting in his injuries, “had no knowledge of what was going on about him and was incapable of making any decision whatever and was incapable of controlling his actions so as not to cause himself or others bodily harm,” and that the defendant through its employees, was aware of his mental condition and for that reason due him special care to prevent him leaving his bed and being injured.

The first of these contentions is without merit, because the expert medical testimony on this point was in conflict'.

It was the opinion of several doctors that the defendant’s employees, the intern, nurses and orderly who were charged with the plaintiff’s care treated him in accord with the usual and approved medical practices in not restraining him and állowing *688 him to arise from his bed,- depart' his room, roam through the corridors some 65 -to 86. feet, enter a utility room and to stand upon a'chair from-which'position he fell or. jumped-through a window. This opinion was predicated upon the doctor’s view that the plaintiff suffering from a myocardial infarction must not be physically restrained. This view was concurred in by Doctors Kitchens, Heard, Shinall and Cunningham.

It was the opinion of Dr. Shinall that it was better for a patient with a heart condition to be permitted to fall -26 feet from a window' and sustain a broken thigh and other injuries than to physically restrain him.

■ Dr. Edward K. Russell, a witness for the plaintiff testified in answer to questions propounded to him in reference to restraint of patient suffering from a myocardial' infarction incapable of exercising discretion: “May I-amend that answer by saying that normal—that recognized standards of medical practice, I think I recall that—recognized standards of medical practice would indicate that the .proper thing to do in such a situation is to get the patient back to bed with as little harm or stress.to him as possible. Q. How would you get the patient back in bed? What method would ordinary medical practice call for? A. -I think, I answered that a moment ago when I stated that the thing to do would be to try to replace him in bed by. using persuasion, drug, and, if necessary, physical restraint, probably in that order. Q. In this order, in other words, persuasion first, by speaking with him? A. Yes, sir. Q. Second, by sedation? A. Yes, sir. Q. And third by physical restraint? A. That is correct. Q. What type of sedation would be used? A. ■ I can’t answer that question without knowing a little bit about previous..medication and the patient’s response to medication. Q. It would be according to a particular case, then? A. It would be according to this particular case we are assuming. Q. Now, assuming that after you go in the room and find the patient getting up out of the chair with the stool in his hand, - and assuming the facts asked in the previous question that you answered, that the patient started out of the room, what would you then do, or what would be normal medical practice to then do? A. Had it not *689 already been done, certainly, normal medical practice would have us call for help. If help -is already present, I-.think to use such help—correction—if help is already present, normal medical .practice, I am sure, would- indicate that the use of such help in preventing the patient from walking out of the door with the stool would be proper. Q. And if persuasion and medication would not help, then physical restraint would be necessary? A. Again, this-gets into the realm of how disturbed this patient is. Perhaps the doorway is not the place.at which you restrain the patient, but, depending upon .the degree of activity and the success you had with persuasion or with drugs by that time, physical restraint somewhere along the line here would be in order. Now, I can’t, on an assumed problem of this sort, I can’t say whether-the doorway is that point or not. Q. Well, assuming the patient left the room and began walking up the hall, would physical restraint be necessary then in normal medical practices? A. I think so. I think so because in so doing, his physical activity certainly increases by virtue of the fact he carries and waves a stool in addition to the fact he is doing more walking than we like for acute myocardiac infarctions to do, and I think at the point he begins to do both of those, at least by that point, physical restraint.may be well in order. Q. Normal medical practice would call for restraint somewhere along the the line, is that your testimony? A. Yes. Q. It is advisable for a patient to, who has had a great deal of heart damage in the beginning, is it advisable for three—we will say for a doctor, oxygen therapist, orderly and nurse—four of them to converge on that patient and to physically pick him up and put him back in bed? Rather than to what? Q. I mean rather than to let him walk down the hall and say tire himself by his own exertion so he could then be returned to bed? A. Waving a stool? Q. Yes. A. If efforts during such a plan you have are made to calm -his fears or persuade him to the right place is—for him is in bed, I think it might- be proper under those circumstances, three people, four people. Q. After the efforts to persuade him to return? A. If . those efforts—-Q. Had been exhausted. A. If those efforts are continued, I think it might be the proper thing to do. Q. But you wouldn’t say whether *690 that would be at the end of twenty feet, fifty feet, or a hundred feet; it would be for the exercise of the judgment of the people on the spot at the time? A. Yes, sir, it is someone’s judgment and the person who is responsible is the man there at the time. Q. I believe you stated also that Mr. Lee’s condition as the result of his heart condition alone was sufficient to make him totally disabled? A. Approaching one hundred percent.” The doctor also expressed the opinion that the plaintiff should not have been left alone in his room.

Now it appears that Dr. Kitchens while sworn by the plaintiff, testified under Code (Ann.) § 38-1801 as the defendant corporation’s employee, but the legal effect of his testimony conflicting with that of Dr. Russell would have been the same if they had both been sworn as the plaintiff’s witnesses generally.

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.E.2d 234, 97 Ga. App. 680, 1958 Ga. App. LEXIS 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emory-university-v-lee-gactapp-1958.