Hartman v. MEMORIAL HOSP. OF SO. BEND
This text of 380 N.E.2d 583 (Hartman v. MEMORIAL HOSP. OF SO. BEND) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Lorene HARTMAN, Administratrix of the Estate of Russell P. Hartman, Jr., Appellant-Plaintiff,
v.
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL OF SOUTH BEND, Appellee-Defendant.
Court of Appeals of Indiana, Third District.
*584 Thomas H. Singer, Lysohir & Singer, South Bend, for appellant-plaintiff.
Margaret C. Attridge and James V. Donadio, Ice, Miller, Donadio & Ryan, Indianapolis, Herbert H. Bent, Rockhill, Kennedy, Pinnick, Sand, Bent & Pequignot, Warsaw, for appellee-defendant.
STATON, Judge.
Lorene Hartman, as administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, Russell P. Hartman, Jr., sued Memorial Hospital of South Bend for negligence in connection with Russell's suicide, inflicted while he was a patient on the hospital's psychiatric ward. At trial in the Kosciusko Circuit Court, a jury found against Lorene Hartman and for the hospital. Lorene Hartman appeals, alleging the trial court erred in giving over her objection the defendant Hospital's Instructions 1 and 8.
We conclude that the trial court did not err in giving Memorial Hospital's Instruction 1. We conclude further that it did err in giving Instruction 8; however, that error was not so prejudicial as to warrant reversal. We therefore affirm.
I.
The Factual Context
Dr. Edward A. Davis admitted Russell P. Hartman to the psychiatric ward of Memorial Hospital on September 29, 1972, for acute depression. Dr. Davis, Russell's private physician, had admitted him to the ward on an earlier occasion, in February of 1969.
During the afternoon and evening hours of September 29 and in the early morning hours of September 30, Russell experienced alternating periods of calm and distress. Drugs were administered. At 7:00 a.m. on September 30, the personnel changed on the psychiatric ward. Upon reporting for work, orderly Fred Yates was told by a retiring aide that Russell had experienced distress during the night. Yates went to Russell's room, and the two men talked. Nurse Rousseve went to Russell's room about ten or twelve minutes past 7:00 a.m.; she found Russell lying quietly in bed, apparently subdued as a result of medication. Nurse Rousseve talked to Russell, reassured him, and left.
At approximately 7:15 a.m. Russell was found lying on his side, with a paper cup in his hand. He appeared cyanotic and had no pulse or blood pressure. Attempts to revive Russell failed. The cause of death was given as asphyxiation; Russell had committed suicide by causing a small plastic cup to be lodged in his throat.
Lorene Hartman sued the hospital, alleging in her amended complaint that Russell Hartman died as a result of the joint and several acts of negligence of the defendants,[1] who failed to use due care in the diagnosis, care, supervision and treatment of Russell P. Hartman, "who the defendants knew or in the exercise of reasonable care should have known might commit suicide." Lorene Hartman prayed for judgment in an amount that "will fairly and adequately compensate the estate for its loss and also compensate his wife and children for their loss together with the costs of this action and all other proper relief in the premises."
Following trial a jury returned a verdict in favor of Memorial Hospital and awarded it costs.
*585 II.
Instruction 1
Memorial Hospital's tendered Instruction 1, given by the trial court over Lorene Hartman's objection, read:
"In order for the plaintiff to recover in this case, she must prove by a preponderance of the evidence not only that the defendant Memorial Hospital of South Bend breached its legal duty as I have defined it for you, but also that such breach proximately caused the plaintiff's decedent's death and the damages, if any, complained of. Plaintiff moreover may not recover because of decedent's death and damages, if any, which you find would have occurred no matter what nursing and hospital care was rendered to the plaintiff's decedent by the defendant Memorial Hospital of South Bend."
Lorene Hartman objected to the instruction in this fashion:
"The plaintiff objects to the defendant's requested Instruction Number 1 . . on the grounds that the last sentence thereof, beginning with the words, `Plaintiff, moreover, may not recover . .' allows the Jury to decide that the deceased would have committed suicide regardless of the care of the hospital and permits the Jury to thus deliberate on an issue that is not in the lawsuit and on facts that are not in the lawsuit. The Jury is not to be instructed on issues or facts not in the lawsuit."
In Pennsylvania Ice & Coal Co. v. Elischer (1939), 106 Ind. App. 613, 21 N.E.2d 436, the Appellate Court defined the standard of review when an instruction is attacked on appeal as being outside of the issues and evidence:
"[I]nstructions should be relevant to the issues in each particular case and applicable to the facts and circumstances therein. If there were any facts or circumstances in the case, although quite meager, to which the instructions might, upon any view, be pertinent, provided they were correct in the statement of the law, it would not be error for the court to give them, although they were so given to the jury over the objection of the complaining party. Furthermore, it is not every instance where the trial court has given an instruction not applicable to the evidence which will constitute reversible error, but it must be made further to appear that the giving of such instruction tended to injure or harm the complaining party in his substantial rights. [Citation omitted.] In determining whether or not an instruction is applicable to the evidence, it is necessary to consider the evidence in its entirety, together with all reasonable inferences which might be drawn therefrom... ." 106 Ind. App. at 621, 21 N.E.2d at 439.
See also Schlarb v. Henderson (1936), 211 Ind. 1, 4 N.E.2d 205.
It is error for a trial court to give an instruction which is not pertinent to the issues and applicable to the evidence. Baker v. Mason (1968), 253 Ind. 348, 242 N.E.2d 513. And, where it is claimed that an instruction was given upon which there is no evidence, the point of inquiry in determining whether the erroneous instruction was prejudicial is whether the jury was misled. Rondinelli v. Bowden (1973), 155 Ind. App. 582, 293 N.E.2d 812.
Lorene Hartman's theory of recovery was negligence. She was compelled to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Memorial Hospital breached a legal duty owed Russell and that the breach proximately caused his death. The concept of "proximate cause" was thus within the issues raised in the case, for an essential element of recovery in a negligence action is that the injury be the proximate result of a defendant's negligence. St. Joseph Bank & Trust Co. of South Bend. v. Sun Ins. Co. of New York (N.D.Ind. 1974), 380 F. Supp. 890. Celanese Coating Co. v. Blakemore (1975), Ind. App., 324 N.E.2d 268.
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