Mary Day Nursery, Children's Hospital v. City of Akron

189 N.E.2d 745, 90 Ohio Law. Abs. 457
CourtSummit County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 15, 1961
DocketNo. 226705
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 189 N.E.2d 745 (Mary Day Nursery, Children's Hospital v. City of Akron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mary Day Nursery, Children's Hospital v. City of Akron, 189 N.E.2d 745, 90 Ohio Law. Abs. 457 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1961).

Opinion

Introduction

Caris, J.

The plaintiff-hospital, an Ohio corporation not for profit, operating a hospital in the City of Akron brings this suit against the City of Akron, a municipal corporation, and the Board of County Commissioners of Summit County, Ohio, a quasi-public corporation, for the recovery of certain hospital care for an alleged indigent patient, claiming that one Lorain Miller, an indigent minor child, is eligible for poor relief under the law of the State of Ohio and that on March 22, 1960, the said minor child had been brought to its hospital for emergency treatment. The plaintiff claims that it complied with all the conditions precedent to fixing the liability of the defendants for hospital services and care rendered to said infant. Upon this hospitalization, the plaintiff alleges, the child remained for emergency services and treatment until March 26, 3 960, as alleged, or March 28 as stipulated.

Plaintiff further asserts that on or about July 20, 1960, it [459]*459again admitted said infant to its hospital for emergency treatment and again complied with the aforesaid conditions precedent, and that the child remained in its hospital for necessary emergency services and treatment until July 26, 1960.

Plaintiff claims further that the said infant was born June 13,1957, as the illegitimate child of one Equilla Miller, who then lived in the City of Peoria in the State of Illinois, and that while said child was but a few weeks old the said Equilla Miller, its mother, placed it with one Betty Roberts, the great-aunt of the child, living at 728 Diagonal Road in the City of Akron, Ohio. The plaintiff further alleges that this great-aunt, Betty Roberts, has received no compensation for caring for said infant and that she, Betty Roberts, stands in the place of parent to the infant, and the plaintiff claims judgment for these two periods of hospital care.

The defendant, the City of Akron, has answered, admitting its corporate character and otherwise denying the claims of the plaintiff, further asserting affirmatively that Equilla Miller, the mother of the infant in question, has not now nor ever had a legal settlement in the State of Ohio.

The defendant, the Board of County Commissioners of Summit County, Ohio, filed an answer setting forth as a first defense that the plaintiff has not exercised its statutory remedy by way of appeal from the decision of the defendant or its agents on the determination of eligibility of the infant for poor relief.

Further the defendant-County Commissioners by way of answer denies that the infant is an indigent minor child eligible for poor relief under the laws of this state; denies that the plaintiff has complied with all conditions precedent to imposing liability on the answering defendant; denies that plaintiff admitted to its hospital said infant on or about March 22, 1960, for services and treatment until on or about March 26, 1960, and again on or about July 20, 1960, until July 26, 1960.

Further, the Board denies that the infant was born June 13, 1957, as the illegitimate child of Equilla Miller living in the City of Peoria aforesaid, and denies further that while said child was but a few weeks old the mother delivered said child to Betty Roberts aforesaid and denies that said Betty Roberts, [460]*460the great-aiint, was without compensation for caring for this infant. Further, the answering defendant makes general denial.

On the issues so made up, the case was on October 18, 1961, submitted to this Court.

Finding of Facts

The Court finds that Lorain Miller at trial time was an infant of about the age of three years and was born in Peoria, Illinois, the illegitimate child of one Equilla Miller who resided there, about June 13, 1957. About three weeks after the birth of the infant her mother brought her to Betty Roberts, a great-aunt, and entered into a contract with Betty Roberts, alleging the mother’s inability to support the child, by which Betty Roberts agreed to keep the child and care for the same as though it was her own child. The mother, in the contract, agreed to seek employment and pay the aunt for the care and keep of the child at the rate of One Dollar per day beginning July 17, 1957 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 7). No compensation whatsoever was paid to Betty Roberts for the care of the child although she has continuously, up to the date of the submission of this action, cared for the child as her own; disciplining the child, giving it her love and affection and providing it with all necessaries of every kind save and except the hospitalizations, which are the subject of this action. The mother left these parts within two or three weeks without stating her destination or honoring her contract. It may be presumed she returned to Peoria, but in any case her whereabouts are ever since unknown.

It is clear from the evidence that said Betty Roberts stood in loco parentis to said child. Betty Roberts, herself, has never claimed any poor relief either for herself or for the infant in question save such hospitalizations.

On March 21, 1960, as Mrs. Roberts was bathing the child, the child began to cry and to turn her head from side to side. Mrs. Roberts then noticed that the child’s mouth was pulled over to one side and she called the plaintiff hospital who advised her to bring the child to the hospital, which she did. After their examination they advised Betty Roberts to take the child home and call the family doctor. Mrs. Roberts then took the child to the Akron Clinic. They examined her, referred her to the family doctor who, in turn, sent her again to the plaintiff-[461]*461hospital where she was received on March 22, 1960. Dr. F. T. Fiedorek of Akron was the attending physician in question at the time of her admission in March to the Children’s Hospital. He testified by affidavit that at the time of the child’s admission it was his opinion that she needed immediate close medical observation and hospitalization to determine the nature of her illness, which he tentatively classed as facial palsy, and what, if any, immediate treatment was indicated (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1).

It appears from the evidence that the infant was admitted to the plaintiff-hospital on March 22, 1960, and that physical examination on admission revealed an incomplete closure of the right eye, a weakness of the superior and inferior palpebrae, which indicated a right facial weakness. There was also a deviation of the lips and jaw to the left and, while a provisional diagnosis on admission was made of right facial palsy, there was still left the possibility of intracranial tumor or lesion to be ruled out. An ear, nose and throat consultant saw the patient in the hospital and a diagnosis of incomplete right facial paralysis was finally settled upon, a condition known as Bell’s Palsy. Dr. Tannehill, the pediatric resident at the plaintiff-hospital, testified that the admission to the hospital was definitely necessary because of the possibility that the paralysis of the child’s face was a manifestation of some severe disorder of the central nervous system but that at the close of the six-day hospitalization there was reasonable assurance that the ailment was a peripheral nerve palsy (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2). The child was finally discharged on March 28, 1960.

In July the child, while at play, fell down and hurt her wrist and her attending physician was Dr. William M. Davis of Akron, a specialist in the field of orthopedic and traumatic surgery.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Carter v. Reese (Slip Opinion)
2016 Ohio 5569 (Ohio Supreme Court, 2016)
Scappatura v. Baptist Hospital of Phoenix
584 P.2d 1195 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 N.E.2d 745, 90 Ohio Law. Abs. 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mary-day-nursery-childrens-hospital-v-city-of-akron-ohctcomplsummit-1961.