Hernández Rivera v. Government of the Capital

81 P.R. 998
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 30, 1960
DocketNo. 11344
StatusPublished

This text of 81 P.R. 998 (Hernández Rivera v. Government of the Capital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hernández Rivera v. Government of the Capital, 81 P.R. 998 (prsupreme 1960).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Serrano Geyls

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There is no dispute as to the facts in this action for damages. Arranged in chronological order they are as follows:

On April 25, 1951 Marta Iris Hernández Rivera, a three year old girl, entered the Hospital of the Capital, an institution of public charity. She was suffering from a disease which later proved to be meningitis. She was placed in the children’s ward under the care of Dr. José E. Sifontes, hospital physician. The ward consisted of two rooms, one with sixteen beds and another with nine. Helen Gutiérrez de Soto, a graduate nurse, was in charge of both rooms with the help of Dolores Dones, a nurse’s aide. The principal duties of the nurse’s aide were to clean and change the children’s clothes and to prepare their meals and feed them. When she was not busy with these matters she watched the smaller room.

Since her confinement Marta Iris underwent a treatment of Chloromycetin, luminal, and serum, the amount of these medicines being modified according to the patient’s condition. She was seriously ill the first few days, but since May 1 the immediate danger of death had passed, although she was not completely well. Her temperature had fluctuated daily and on May 3 it read 100°F at 8 o’clock a. m. and 99° at 4 p. m. The normal temperature is 98.6°F. The pulse rhythm and her breathing had also fluctuated, but on May 3 they were close to normal. She was injected luminal when [1001]*1001she was in a state of hypertension, if a physician so authorized. On April 30 and May 1 she was not given luminal but it was administered to her again on the evening of May 2 “to quiet her” because “she was screaming a lot and was very restless.” That same night the child had “given a scare” to Mrs. Soto, the nurse, when she attempted to climb a folding screen which separated her bed from those of other patients. The nurse saw her and lowered her from the screen and after this incident she was injected luminal upon one of the doctor’s orders.

On the evening of May 3, Mrs. Soto was in charge of 23 patients, “children and babies,” fourteen of whom were in the room with Marta Iris and nine in the other room. Among them there were at least four seriously ill: one with encephalitis,1 another with tuberculous meningitis, another recently operated who was being administered serum and had to be watched for removing it and another “seriously ill” who required applications of external heat. Marta Iris occupied the fourth or fifth crib in the center of the room, entering from the right. The crib, like all other hospital cribs, had side rails but no lid whatsoever. The child wore a nightgown which had a string in the upper part, around the neck. That was the usual garment for sick children.

During the afternoon of May 3, Marta Iris was restless, crying and moaning. Her restlessness increased after 8 o’clock p. m. Shortly thereafter —there is no evidence of the exact time — since the child was screaming and restless, Mrs. Soto tied her hands and feet, in the shape of a cross, to the side rails of the crib. This, however, upset the patient further and the nurse untied her about two minutes later. Then the child “turned on her stomach and remained apparently quiet” but not asleep. “The children, when we tie them, are afraid to be tied, and remain apparently quiet [1002]*1002because they don’t want to be tied up again.” It was customary for the hospital to tie restless children and the nurses did not need a doctor’s permission to do so.

As soon as the child calmed down, the nurse raised the side rail of the crib, turned off the light in the room and stepped into the adjoining room.2 The rooms were separated by a transparent glass. From her position the nurse could see “all the children in general” but not Marta Iris “directly.” Besides, she did not look through the glass because she was changing the serum of a very sick child who had just been operated. During all that time the nurse’s aide was outside the two rooms, preparing the children’s bottles in a separate kitchen.

About five minutes after she had left Marta Iris the nurse was called by Dr. Sifontes. She went with the doctor to the place where the child’s crib was located and found her dead, hanging by the string of her nightgown. The string-had caught in a small screw on one side of the crib when the child had apparently tried to climb down. The death was caused by “asphyxia or strangulation.”

Dr. Sifontes had been making one of his several night rounds to examine the patients. He used a flashlight to light the cribs because the desk light was not sufficient to “notice . . . the finer things that enter into a patient’s observation.” On that round and at 8:45 p. m. he found Marta Iris in the afore-described position. In his opinion the child had died five or ten minutes earlier because her temperature was normal and there was no rigidity in the body. After verifying the death, he notified the nurse immediately.

On several occasions the child’s mother and grandmother had volunteered to care for the patient at daytime or nighttime and they were turned down saying that “there were [1003]*1003more than enough nurses there” and that there was no risk whatever for the child. It was stipulated by the parties that the Hospital Regulations prohibited that persons not belonging to the personnel attend the patients.

The trial judge dismissed the complaint because in his judgment it was “a lamentable and unfortunate accident for which the defendant cannot be held liable.” He added that “in this case the evidence does not indicate any negligence on the part of the defendant.” The appellant adopts the opposite view.

We shall immediately dispose of several questions which do not require discussion. In the first place, it is known that by law and the decisions on the matter, the Government of the Capital is liable for the negligent acts of its employees and officers performed iii the discharge of their duties.3 That liability is not altered when the negligent acts are committed while rendering a service, which, as in the present case, is offered gratuitously.4 It is so admitted by the defendant. In the second place, neither the Government of the Capital nor the Director of the Hospital are charged with negligence in the selection of the employees and officers who acted in this matter. The parties expressly stipulated so. Finally, it was not alleged in the suit nor was evidence presented as to negligence of the defendants in the discharge of their purely professional duties. Therefore, we do not have to face the thorny problem, which has so often divided American courts, of the scope of the liability of a public or private hospital for the actions of its employees and officers, and other persons who practice within the pre[1004]*1004mises, performed strictly within the scope of their professional competence.5

The facts as stated raise the sole question of whether the defendant Government of the Capital, acting through some of the employees and officers of the hospital, was negligent in failing to give the child Marta Iris Hernández Rivera the necessary vigilance, protection, and care.

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81 P.R. 998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hernandez-rivera-v-government-of-the-capital-prsupreme-1960.