Margaret C. Hill v. James Walker Memorial Hospital and Orkin Exterminating Company

407 F.2d 1036
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 11, 1969
Docket12822_1
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 407 F.2d 1036 (Margaret C. Hill v. James Walker Memorial Hospital and Orkin Exterminating Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Margaret C. Hill v. James Walker Memorial Hospital and Orkin Exterminating Company, 407 F.2d 1036 (4th Cir. 1969).

Opinion

SOBELOFF, Circuit Judge:

In this diversity action for personal injuries, Margaret C. Hill, plaintiff below, appeals from the District Court’s order granting defendants’ motions for summary judgment. Her complaint alleged that on June 6, 1964, while a paying patient of the defendant James Walker Memorial Hospital, she was frightened when a rat ran across her feet and caused her to fall into a bathtub. Her resultant injuries are alleged to have been proximately caused by the defendant hospital’s negligence “in allowing the presence of rats on its premises” and the defendant Orkin Exterminating Company’s negligence, said to consist of “failure in properly ridding the premises of rats.” The parties stipulated that a contract between Walker Memorial and Orkin, in force at the date of the plaintiff’s injury, obligated Orkin “to accomplish the insect and rodent control sanitation services” at the hospital. 1

In separate Answers to the Complaint, each defendant denied the negligence attributed to it and also set up plaintiff’s contributory negligence as a defense. The hospital pleaded charitable immunity as an additional defense. The parties stipulated that the hospital was a charitable institution carrying insurance to cover any liability imposed upon it by law.

After these stipulations had been entered, the defendants moved for and were granted summary judgment. The hospital based its motion on charitable immunity, while the exterminator’s motion repeated the grounds asserted in its Answer and, paralleling the hospital’s defense of charitable immunity, advanced as an additional reason that as an agent of the hospital it too was entitled to the defense of charitable immunity. For reasons to be stated, we reverse the District Court’s order entering judgment for the defendants and remand the case for further proceedings.

I

After a thorough review of the authorities and reasons underlying the doctrine of charitable immunity, a 4 to 3 majority of the Supreme Court of North Carolina, speaking through Justice Sharp in Rabón v. Rowan Memorial Hospital, Incorporated, 269 N.C. 1, 152 S.E.2d 485 (1967), overruled its long-standing doctrine of immunity insofar as charity hos *1039 pitáis, though not other charities, were concerned. Justice Sharp observed that the preexisting law of the state in regard to liability of charitable hospitals was that “a patient, paying or non-paying, who is injured by the negligence of an employee of a charitable hospital may recover damages from it only if it was negligent in the selection or retention of such employee” and “the fact that a charitable institution has procured liability insurance [does not] affect its immunity. Herndon v. Massey, 217 N.C. 610, 8 S.E.2d 914.” The newly announced rule, abolishing the immunity, is that a hospital “is liable for the negligence of its employees acting within the scope and course of their employment just as any other corporate employer.”

The question requiring our decision is whether the plaintiff’s cause of action, which arose before the Rabón decision, is barred by the doctrine of charitable immunity or whether it may be prosecuted to the extent that the defendant hospital’s trust funds are protected by insurance against an adverse judgment. As stated, it has been stipulated that the defendant hospital’s trust funds are in fact so protected.

We are of course obligated under Erie v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 58 S.Ct. 817, 82 L.Ed. 1188, and its progeny to decide the question as the Supreme Court of North Carolina would if confronted with the issue. In Rabón insurance was not involved, and the court was therefore not called upon to spell out with specificity the effect insurance would have on claims having an earlier origin but reaching the court later. Nor has the North Carolina court been presented with the question in any case subsequent to Rabon. 2 Our task therefore is to determine on the basis of relevant North Carolina authorities, although none is precisely in point, what the North Carolina court would hold if this case had reached that court instead.

We examine first Rabón and Herndon as obviously pertinent to the inquiry. In Rabón, the court declared that the immunity would no longer be available to hospitals in cases arising in the future. It stated:

The rule of liability herein announced applies only to this case and to those causes of action arising after January 20, 1967, the filing date of this opinion. 152 S.E.2d at 499.

On the basis of this declaration of prospectivity, the hospital claims that Rabón has no effect on the law governing the plaintiff’s action because the injury occurred before Rabón was decided. The hospital seeks to treat Rabón as without influence upon this cause of action although the litigation reached the courts after that decision. Under its theory, the rule of Herndon v. Massey that insurance does not affect the immunity is still in full force here, and hence the suit is barred.

We cannot agree that the North Carolina court would accord unabated validity to Herndon in a case like this. Herndon was decided in 1940 when the immunity stood in the courts of North Carolina as an impregnable barrier to recovery. Rabón created a breach in the wall of immunity, and a case reaching the North Carolina court thereafter would necessarily be affected by the dramatic change in public policy. It is not to be supposed that the North Carolina court would fail to take into account the underlying philosophy of its Rabón decision, which is to compensate those injured by the negligence of employees of charitable hospitals while at the same time safeguarding these institutions from the dissipation of trust funds in cases where, relying on the old rule, they had failed to provide themselves with liability insurance. That this is the underlying precept of Rabón is manifested by the court’s refusal of full retroactive application of the new rule only after expressing concern over the *1040 danger to the trust funds of inadequately insured hospitals. Surely this is a clear implication that the new rule of liability for employees’ negligence should be operative where this hazard is not present.

Furthermore, the Rabón court stated that it was following the “procedure” in a number of named states in regard to application of the new rule. 152 S.E.2d at 499. Two of the states cited are Nebraska and Illinois, and we think it highly significant that the rule in both of those states as to causes of action arising prior to the abolition of the immunity is that the immunity is unavailable to the extent that the charity’s trust funds are protected by insurance. Moore v. Moyle, 405 Ill. 455, 92 N.E.2d 81 (1950) ; Darling v.

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407 F.2d 1036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/margaret-c-hill-v-james-walker-memorial-hospital-and-orkin-exterminating-ca4-1969.