Johnson v. Grant Hospital

286 N.E.2d 308, 31 Ohio App. 2d 118, 60 Ohio Op. 2d 202, 1972 Ohio App. LEXIS 437
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 1972
Docket71-256
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 286 N.E.2d 308 (Johnson v. Grant Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Grant Hospital, 286 N.E.2d 308, 31 Ohio App. 2d 118, 60 Ohio Op. 2d 202, 1972 Ohio App. LEXIS 437 (Ohio Ct. App. 1972).

Opinions

*119 Whiteside, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas directing a verdict for defendant at the close of plaintiff’s case.

The action below was for the wrongful death of plaintiff’s decedent. Such decedent, while a patient at defendant Grant Hospital, committed suicide by jumping from a window on the ninth floor. Plaintiff’s decedent was admitted as a patient to the hospital on May 27, 1968, with a provisional diagnosis of “schizophrenic reaction, schizo-affective type.” This was described as an emotional disorder or as a neurosis, rather than a psychosis. While in the hospital, the decedent apparently told plaintiff, her husband, that she was contemplating suicide, and indicated that she saw him on television telling her to commit suicide. Plaintiff twice asked the nurses on duty to watch his wife closely because 'she was talking about committing-suicide.

At approximately 9 p. m. on May 31, 1968, plaintiff’s decedent was found attempting to jump out of a window of room 916 of the hospital. The nurse on duty, called the decedent’s doctor, who gave the following order: “Please transfer to security room. However, leave door open.” At approximately 10 p. m., plaintiff’s decedent left the security room, went to room 943' of the hospital and again attempted to jump out of a window. The doctor was again contacted and issued the following order: “Lock door at night.”

The following morning there were fewer hospital personnel on duty than normal because it was a weekend, because of absenteeism, and because the nurse in charge was in the emergency room having a sprained ankle attended to. Plaintiff’s decedent was assigned for morning care to a nurses’ aide. After performing this care, the nurses’ aide inquired of a nurse whether the door could be left open and was advised that it could be, but was not advised otherwise as to the patient’s history. The chart contains the following entry as of 7:30 a m.: “Door unlocked to do AM care.” At approximately 8:15 a. m., plaintiff’s decedent *120 jumped from the ninth floor solarium window to her death.

Plaintiff has made two assignments of error: (1) that the trial court erred in directing a verdict at the conclusion of plaintiff’s case, and (2) that the trial court erred in excluding evidence relative to a suicide that occurred at the hospital three days before plaintiff’s decedent’s death. The basis upon which the trial court directed a verdict was stated as being that “reasonable minds could come to no other conclusion than that the evidence shows that the decedent was not insane, was not mentally deranged, was not mentally incompetent and that this is her voluntary act” and that “this voluntary action either was the sole proximate cause of her death or at least partially contributed to her own death.”

There appears to be no Ohio case involving the issue of liability of a hospital for the suicide death of a patient. There is, however, an annotation upon the subject of civil liability for death by suicide in 11 A. L. R. 2d 751 et seq. Commencing at page 775, cases involving liability of hospitals for death by suicide of a patient are collected and discussed. At page 756 in the annotation, it is stated:

“Where an action is brought under a wrongful death statute the general rule is that suicide constitutes an intervening force which breaks the line of causation from the wrongful act to the death and therefore the wrongful act does not render defendant civilly liable. * * *”

In discussing liability of a hospital, later, on the same page, the following statement is made:

“A different situation exists where the alleged liability for suicide is based upon the breach of a specific duty of care owed by the defendant to the person committing suicide, such as the duty of a hospital or its employees to care for a patient or inmate. In such a situation the well-settled rule is that liability exists only if the suicide proximately results from the negligence of the hospital or its employees. Such negligence is in turn held to require proof that the hospital neglected its duty of safeguarding and protecting the patient from any known or reasonably ap *121 prehensible damage from himself by not exercising reasonable care. Various factors have to be taken into consideration in determining whether or not the care extended by the hospital was sufficient under the circumstances to comply with the requirement of reasonable care, the most important of them being whether or not the hospital authorities could reasonably have foreseen that the patient might harm himself.”

These quotations appear reasonably to state the law in a majority of the jurisdictions.

The Supreme Court of Ohio has recognized the duty of a hospital in caring for a patient to take steps to prevent the patient from injuring himself under circumstances where the danger is apparent. See Jones v. Hawkes Hospital of Mt. Carmel (1964), 175 Ohio St. 503; and Burks v. Christ Hospital (1969), 19 Ohio St. 2d 128. The Burks case is similar to this case in that the hospital had apparently followed the procedure that the patient’s doctor testified he wanted, but the Supreme Court held there was a jury issue because of other evidence.

The trial court was correct in his statement that the evidence shows that the decedent was not insane, was not mentally deranged, and was not mentally incompetent. However, the decedent was admitted to the hospital for treatment primarily of emotional, rather than physical, illness. Her condition was variously described as “schizophrenic reaction,” “schizophrenic affective,” “an emotional disorder,” “disturbed,” “depressed,” “nervous,” “delusional,” and “despondent.” The decedent had talked of committing suicide, and defendant’s employees were advised of this. The night before her death, decedent twice attempted to jump out of windows on the ninth floor.

The mere fact that the decedent, on her third attempt, was successful in committing suicide does not render the defendant liable, since a hospital is not an insurer of its patients against injuay or death inflicted by themselves. However, the hospital has a duty, in the care of its patieaats, to exercise such reasonable care and attention for *122 their safety as their known mental condition may require.

We thus find that the duty of a hospital to its patients requires a hospital to use reasonable care to prevent a patient from committing suicide if the patient’s emotional and mental condition is such that a reasonably prudent person would anticipate that the patient would commit suicide unless prevented, and the hospital has knowledge of that condition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 N.E.2d 308, 31 Ohio App. 2d 118, 60 Ohio Op. 2d 202, 1972 Ohio App. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-grant-hospital-ohioctapp-1972.