Illinois Central Railroad v. Cash's Administratrix

299 S.W. 590, 221 Ky. 655, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 810
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 1, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 299 S.W. 590 (Illinois Central Railroad v. Cash's Administratrix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Central Railroad v. Cash's Administratrix, 299 S.W. 590, 221 Ky. 655, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 810 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Logan

Reversing.

Robert Cash vías an employee of appellant residing in Padncab, Ky. He was stricken with a serious case of pneumonia, and, upon Ms application, he was admitted for treatment to the hospital at Paducah conducted by the Illinois 'Central Hospital Department. At the time he was admitted he was seriously ill. He was placed in a private ward and two special nurses were assigned to his case, a day nurse and a night nurse. He received medical attention from the doctors, whose duty it was to give such attention to patients in this hospital. In spite of the attention he received he grew worse. On one occasion, two or three days before his death, he left his bed and went to a toilet on the same floor in the rear of the building. He was admonished about having done this and promised that he would not do it again. He went to the *658 hospital on Tuesday, February 23, 1926, and on Friday, following, the disease had progressed until he became delirious. About TO' o’clock on Friday night he was wildly delirious and left his -bed. It required the combined strength of Dr. Buenafa, an interne in the hospital, and several nurses,'to return him to his béd. A restraining sheet was then placed on him by the interne and the nurses. This was to prevent his moving about on the bed or from again getting out of the bed. The restraining sheet is made of strong cloth, with holes for his arms and legs, and straps for fastening under the bed, so that the patient may be securely ‘ held in place. After the restraining sheet had been placed on him and a .sedative administered by a hypodermic injection, he became quiet and apparently ^lumbered. The special nurse, Miss Roundtree, was left in charge of him, and from time to time the interne and other nurses called at her room and saw the patient apparently sleeping quietly. This condition continued for about an hour when he suddenly aroused, freed himself from the restraining sheet, so frightening his nurse that she screamed, but before others could come to her assistance he leaped over the screen between the window and his bed and immediately jumped through a second story window, which was open at the time, and fell, to the pavement below, thereby sustaining serious injuries.

Other nurses hastened to the room and finding him gone they went immediately to him where he was lying on the pavement under the window. He was picked up and carried into the waiting room and there examined by the doctors before he was returned to his room.'. The restraining sheet was again placed on him and the next morning an hour or. more prior'to his death lie succeeded in partially releasing himself from the sheet. He died on the morning of Saturday, February 27,1926. He was 26 years of age and a fireman for appellant. He was a man of great strength and his weight is placed by different witnesses at from 180 pounds to 200 pounds.

His wife, Georgia Cash, was appointed .administratrix of his estate, and she instituted this suit against the Illinois ‘Central Railroad Company, Virgil Powell and Will T. Dowdall. She 'alleged in her.petition that the appellant owned and operated a hospital in Paducah, Ky., for compensation and profit to itself, and that Virgil *659 Powell and W. T. Dowdall were physicians and surgeons in charge of, managing, controlling, and directing the maintenance and operation of the hospital. She alleged that Robert Cash at the time of his death was entitled to the care and attention while in the hospital necessary to protect him from injury to himself. It is denied by appellant that it operates the hospital, and it is alleged that the hospital is operated by the Illinois Central Hospital Department, a separate organization, and that the hospital is purely a charitable institution.

For the present we will lay these questions to one side and first ascertain whether- there is liability, assuming that appellant operates and controls the- hospital and that it is not a charitable institution. If appellant is not responsible, although it might be established that the hospital is not a purely charitable institution, and although it might be established that appellant owns, operates, and controls the hospital, it will not be necessary for us to determine these questions.

The negligence alleged in the petition will be considered carefully as the case has been fully developed on all points by the able counsel representing both sides. Nothing seems to have been overlooked. The acts of negligence set out in the petition may be summarized as follows:

(1) That Robert Cash “was critically and seriously ill, and, while there, became delirious, and, when not watched and cared for by attendants, would leave his bed and unconsciously leave the room, and on one or more occasions prior to the time of his death, of which the defendants had knowledge, had done so. Defendants each and all knew of her decedent’s delirious and probable violent manner and condition prior to his fall and thereat.”
(2) That the hospital authorities “had been importuned to allow the relatives of decedent to stay with and aid in the care .and attention necessary to protect him from injury to -himself, but each and all of the three defendants refused to allow any of them to remain or be present with her decedent to aid in furnishing to him the care and attention necessary the night of, and prior to, his fall and death.”
(3) That “all of the defendants, with gross carelessness and negligence, failed to provide com *660 petent or sufficient nurses or attendants to care for him and prevent her decedent, who was delirious and violent, and known to each of the defendants to then be so, from causing injury to himself.”
(4) That defendants “so failed to provide any means whatsoever to prevent her decedent leaving and escaping from said room while in a then known delirious and violent condition, and so failed otherwise to furnish protection to her decedent against his' injuring himself, or to properly care for him, while and when each and all of said defendants knew of her decedent’s then delirious and violent condition, though it was their duty to do so.” -

It is then alleged, that, by the joint and concurring gross carelessness and negligence of the Illinois Central Railroad Company and its agents and employees 'and of Yirgil Powell and W. T. Dowdall in doing and failing to do as set forth in the petition, they, and each of them, caused and permitted her decedent to jump or fall from a second story window of said hospital of the defendants, a distance of 30 feet or more, which fall resulted in the serious injuries mentioned, and which caused or produced within a few hours thereafter his death.

In an amended petition appellee alleged another ground of negligence as follows:

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299 S.W. 590, 221 Ky. 655, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-central-railroad-v-cashs-administratrix-kyctapphigh-1927.