Frost v. Des Moines Still College of Osteopathy & Surgery

79 N.W.2d 306, 248 Iowa 294, 1956 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 403
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 13, 1956
Docket49040
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 79 N.W.2d 306 (Frost v. Des Moines Still College of Osteopathy & Surgery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frost v. Des Moines Still College of Osteopathy & Surgery, 79 N.W.2d 306, 248 Iowa 294, 1956 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 403 (iowa 1956).

Opinion

*297 Larson, J.

Plaintiff in her action at law for damages against the defendants Des Moines Still College of Osteopathy and Surgery and Dr. Robert O. Fagen relied upon the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. She alleged that after she was anesthetized for the purpose of an operation on her back and while unconscious and under the exclusive control of the defendants, and when the defendants and each of them and their agents had exclusive control over all the instrumentalities involved, plaintiff was negligently burned on and about her abdomen. Each defendant denied liability and counterclaimed for unpaid hospital and doctor bills. Plaintiff confessed judgment on defendants’ counterclaims and the jury returned a verdict in favor of Dr. Robert O. Fagen and against the defendant Des Moines Still College of Osteopathy and Surgery, later herein referred to as “the hospital.” From a judgment of $6500 less the confessed hospital counterclaim of $478, or $6022, in favor of plaintiff, the defendant hospital appeals.

The record discloses the following facts largely undisputed. Des Moines Still College of Osteopathy and Surgery is an Iowa corporation not for pecuniary profit, and, in connection with a college, a hospital and clinic is maintained in Des Moines, Iowa. In addition to the permissive use of the hospital facilities by various doctors and surgeons, these facilities are used by the hospital employees. This personnel fall's into three categories — professional, semiprofessional, and nonprofessional including students and interns.

Plaintiff suffered a back injury as a result of an automobile accident on January 20, 1953, and took treatments therefor at defendant’s clinic during 1953. Doctor Fagen examined her in November 1953, and advised a back operation. On January 4, 1954, she entered defendant hospital for that purpose. On January 8, 1954, Doctor Fagen performed the operation which began at 9:30 a.m. Present during the operation were Doctor Fagen, the surgeon, Dr. Carl Nagy, the anesthetist, Richard Mayer, D. O., the surgical resident employed by the hospital and assigned by the hospital to assist Doctor Fagen in the operating room, and Ruth Johnston, the hospital’s surgical nurse assigned to assist in the operation. At the time plaintiff was anesthetized *298 two “fellows” who brought her to the operating room, and a student named David Kronish, were still in the room. Whether or not others were there during the operation does not appear, and Doctor Fagen did not recall. Plaintiff was placed on the operating table face down, anesthetized, and as Doctor Fagen retired to the scrub room to scrub for the operation, plaintiff was finally prepped and draped for surgery. Prepping refers to the preparation of the skin in the surgical area including shaving, cleansing and things of that nature. It usually starts a day or so before the operation and is finally completed just before the surgeon operates. Although Doctor Fagen had the right to determine how plaintiff would be prepped, he gave no special instructions and did not know what solutions were used in the final preparation. Doctor Fagen observed nothing objectionable about the prepping and proceeded with the operation, which took four hours. After the operation was completed, a dressing was applied to the surgical area and hospital employees returned her to her room. Doctor Fagen did not see her again until the following morning.

When plaintiff regained consciousness in her hospital room about 7 p.m., the student David Kronish and her husband were present. She immediately complained, “My stomach hurts just terrible”, and David Kronish replied, “Well, no wonder your stomach hurts, we had quite an explosion, you were the calmest one of the four of us.” Later Kronish told her to forget the explosion, that it was a “joke.”

When Doctor Fagen saw plaintiff the next morning he expressed surprise as he observed the burns on her abdomen. He testified there was no explosion during the course of the operation or in his presence. The hospital and Doctor Fagen made no charge for treating this injury which turned out to be first, second and third degree burns. This treatment ceased May 7, 1954. Substantial areas were involved and ugly scars remain, causing plaintiff both physical and mental distress.

Plaintiff tried to find out what happened, but nobody ever told her. No evidence was introduced herein to enlighten us as to what happened. Doctors, according to the nurses’ records introduced into evidence, expressed the opinion that “Blisters on *299 abdomen apparently from ether” were discovered January 9, 1954, at 8:05 a.m. (Emphasis supplied.)

Complaint is made of the trial court’s adverse rulings (1) on appellant’s motion for directed verdict on the ground that the evidence showed that it could not and did not, as a corporation, exercise control or direction over Doctor Fagen, the surgeon, or Doctor Mayer in the treatment of plaintiff, or exercise any control over the instrumentalities used therein; (2) on appellant’s motion to withdraw from jury consideration the allegations of negligence in plaintiff’s petition for the reason that it was not shown to have exclusive control over the instrumentalities alleged to have caused the injury, and for the further reason that plaintiff did not identify the instrumentalities causing her injury, thereby making the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur inapplicable; and (3) on its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict for the same reasons. Complaint is also made that its exception to the court’s instructions as improper were also wrongfully overruled. Because the principal issues are involved in each complaint, they will be discussed as one.

We believe the trial court properly submitted this ease to the jury on the theory of res ipsa loquitur. We believe it properly determined by its ruling that the defendant corporation must answer for the negligence of its servants, agents and employees, and that the defendant corporation had “complete control” over its officers and employees excepting perhaps when they were personally engaged in the professional practice of osteopathy and surgery. We agree that the burden was upon the defendant corporation to produce proof that its officers or employees were not acting for it at the time in question, and that the trial court properly determined that the question as to whether, when plaintiff’s injury was incurred, the defendant corporation or the surgeon, or either of them, was in exclusive control, became a fact question for the jury.

The crux of the case resolves itself around two main issues upon which this court has not previously made pronouncement and upon which there is little authority elsewhere. The first issue, stated simply, is whether or not in eases of this nature and circumstances it is necessary under the doctrine of res ipsa *300 loquitur for plaintiff to prove what instrumentality or instrumentalities caused her injury; and the second, what liability a corporated hospital has for the acts or omissions of its officers, employees or attaches when a patient under anesthesia is injured by the lack of due care while in the hospital for treatment or surgery. Both issues are not without difficulty of solution and were well presented and argued by able counsel.

I.

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79 N.W.2d 306, 248 Iowa 294, 1956 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frost-v-des-moines-still-college-of-osteopathy-surgery-iowa-1956.