Garlington v. Kingsley

289 So. 2d 88
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 14, 1974
Docket53675
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 289 So. 2d 88 (Garlington v. Kingsley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garlington v. Kingsley, 289 So. 2d 88 (La. 1974).

Opinion

289 So.2d 88 (1974)

Ben F. GARLINGTON
v.
Daniel M. KINGSLEY et al.

No. 53675.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

January 14, 1974.

*89 Chris J. Roy, Dan E. Melichar, Gravel, Roy & Burnes, Alexandria, for plaintiff-applicant.

Leo Gold, Henry B. Bruser, III, Gold, Hall, Hammill & Little, Alexandria, for defendants-respondents.

Robert L. Kleinpeter, Kleinpeter & Nevils, Baton Rouge, amicus curiae for B. R. General Hospital.

James A. George and Gary L. Boland, Baton Rouge, amicus curiae for Amzy Jackson, Jr.

BARHAM, Justice.

Ben F. Garlington filed a suit for damages against Daniel M. Kingsley, M.D. and the Rapides General Hospital, alleging that both defendants were responsible for residual disability resulting from defendants' lack of attention, improper attention and/or mistakes during the post-operative period following a laminectomy performed by defendant Kingsley. Garlington filed subsequent supplemental and amending petitions making the insurers of the above named defendants parties to the suit and alleging generally that the defendant hospital was additionally negligent in failing to properly supervise, select and train its employees. Defendant hospital filed a motion for summary judgment on grounds that the hospital's status as a charitable institution entitled it to tort immunity. The motion for summary judgment was granted by the trial court and the plaintiff appealed that judgment.

Upon the appeal to the Third Circuit, defendant hospital filed an alternative exception of no cause of action on the basis that plaintiff's petition did not allege ultimate facts which would disclose any actionable *90 negligence on the part of the defendant hospital. Defendant hospital contended that the plaintiff had failed to allege with necessary specificity the manner in which the hospital was negligent in the selection, supervision and training of its employees and the connexity between this negligence and the plaintiff's injury. The Court of Appeal reversed and set aside the trial court judgment granting the motion for summary judgment. However, it decided that defendant hospital's exception of no cause of action was well founded because plaintiff's petition failed to sufficiently allege negligence that would constitute an exception to non-liability of so-called charitable institutions. The court maintained the exception subject to plaintiff's right to amend his petition within thirty days to properly state a cause of action against the hospital.

Upon the Court of Appeal's denial of his application for rehearing, Garlington applied to this Court for writs. We granted certiorari (279 So.2d 693) to consider the issue of the continued viability vel non of the much criticized doctrine of charitable immunity. We accept as correct, for the purposes of our review, the finding of both lower courts that Rapides General Hospital does meet the criteria necessary to claim status as a charitable institution.

Respondents here rely upon the case of Grant v. Touro Infirmary, 254 La. 204, 223 So.2d 148 (1969) for support in urging the applicability of the charitable immunity doctrine which was the basis for the sustaining of the exception of no cause of action. The Grant case was an opinion with only a 3-man clear majority, the other four members of the Court concurring and dissenting on different issues. Three members of the Court dissented particularly from the holding that the doctrine of charitable immunity had legal validity in Louisiana.

The most persuasive argument advanced by relator Garlington, in our opinion, is the fact that positive and express provisions of our Civil Code mandate that: "Every act whatever of man that causes damage to another obliges him by whose fault it happened to repair it.", and that "Masters and employers are answerable for the damage occasioned by their servants and overseers, in the exercise of the functions in which they are employed.". Civil Code Articles 2315 and 2320. In addition, Civil Code Article 2316 provides: "Every person is responsible for the damage he occasions not merely by his act, but by his negligence, his imprudence, or his want of skill."

There is no foundation in civil law for the doctrine of charitable immunity as pronounced by the Court of Appeal cases cited in the Grant majority opinion. The doctrine is not accepted in any foreign jurisdiction, civilian or common law, and though once perhaps a majority view in the common law states of the United States, it is now a fast waning and dwindling minority theory. It had an inauspicious and a not too reputable beginning in the United States in a case arising in Massachusetts in 1876, McDonald v. Massachusetts General Hospital, 120 Mass. 432, 10 years after the repudiation of the doctrine in England.[1] Although the doctrine has been embodied into law for periods of time in many states, voluminous opinions in the various jurisdictions have vainly attempted to find a logical rationale for it.

While it should be sufficient to state that the doctrine of charitable immunity is not the law in the State of Louisiana, there being express codal provisions to the contrary and no statutory authority to support the exception from liability, it may be interesting and perhaps worthwhile to note the "origin and growth" of the doctrine in Louisiana.

*91 In two early cases involving lumber companies which collected dues or fees from their employees to secure medical care for these employees, this Court considered a master-servant relationship of the doctor to the company.[2] Although language and common law citations from these cases are cited by later appellate decisions, neither of these cases is authority for the doctrine of charitable immunity in Louisiana.

The existence of the doctrine in Louisiana, according to the appellate jurisprudence, rests upon the 1922 case of Jordan v. Touro Infirmary, 123 So. 726 (La.App. Orl.). The Jordan case, attempting to absolve the defendant from liability, first gives a statement of facts from which it is difficult, if not impossible, to find the negligence required in malpractice suits. Then, after a discussion of the master-servant doctrine, it concludes that the nurses, including the one alleged to be negligent, were not servants of the hospital but were to be considered "* * * pro hac vice, as the servants of the surgeon." After this positive legal holding and an irrelevant discussion of common law holdings on charitable immunity, that case states in dictum that a charitable hospital cannot be held responsible for the negligence of its nurses.

The majority in Grant indicated that our refusal of certiorari in cases in which various courts of appeal have applied the doctrine "* * * inferentially, if not directly, * * * sanctioned the doctrine * * *". In Jordan v. Touro, supra, we refused writs with the comment: "The decree is correct." There are few weaker affirmations of appellate decisions, for such a refusal adopts no language, reasoning, or law in the case, but sanctions only the decree. That decree can be supported by the factual statement and the court's holding that the nurses were the servants of the surgeon.

A number of later cases, all in the courts of appeal, often in dicta, found authority in Jordan for charitable immunity.[3] While our Courts of Appeal have attempted to create charitable immunity out of dictum, common law, and disregard for positive codal provisions, this Court, prior to Grant, never, by inference or otherwise, adopted this doctrine.[4]

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289 So. 2d 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garlington-v-kingsley-la-1974.