May v. Yurek

168 N.E. 59, 32 Ohio App. 293, 7 Ohio Law. Abs. 645, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 566
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 4, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 168 N.E. 59 (May v. Yurek) 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
May v. Yurek, 168 N.E. 59, 32 Ohio App. 293, 7 Ohio Law. Abs. 645, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 566 (Ohio Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Vickery, P. J.

This action came into this court on a petition in error to the common pleas court of Cuyahoga county.

*294 In the court below, Helen Yurek brought an action against Dr. Sidney May for damages which she alleges were occasioned to her by the conduct or acts of Dr. May. The accident which resulted in this injury, if there was any serious injury, is rather a peculiar one. It seems that Helen Yurek was an employee in a beauty parlor of the Statler Hotel, and that she had a friend by the name of Lillian Eaton, who was a manicurist in the barber shop in the same hotel, and that Miss Eaton was a friend of Dr. May. It seems that Dr. May at this time had a room in the hotel, and he had accepted an invitation to dine that evening with a Mr; Bloch from New York and his lady friend, a woman of some weight, if not substance, and we learn from the arguments of counsel and from the briefs that he was not very desirous of keeping the dinner engage ment with Mr. Bloch and his lady friend, a Mrs. Green, I believe, and desired to gel; out of that engagement. It seems that Mr. Bloch and Mrs. Green were in the doctor’s room in the hotel, and he either invited, or was invited by, Miss Eaton to help her search for apartments, and he suggested that she come to his room and he might make some excuse for getting out of the engagement with his New York friend. She declined, however, to go to the room unless Helen Yurek, the plaintiff below, went likewise. They were both employed, as already stated, in the same hotel, in different departments. When Miss Eaton arrived in the doctor’s room, she found Mrs. Green and Mr. Bloch there, and called Miss Yurek to come to the room. It was some little time before Miss Yurek could come, because, as she advised them, it was against the rules of the hotel *295 for any of the employees to go to the rooms occupied by a guest, but after a second call she did go up to the doctor’s room, and there found Miss Eaton, Dr. May, Mr. Bloch, and Mrs. Green. Miss Yurek, working in a beauty parlor, upon seeing the heavy weight of each of the occupants of the room, Mr. Bloch, Mrs. Green, and Dr. May, was probably surprised, and a conversation was started as to how they could reduce in weight. Mrs. Green, I believe, weighed something like 250 pounds, Bloch was a large heavy man, and Dr. May himself weighed about 185 pounds. Miss Yurek was a slight girl, weighing about 125 pounds. She told them that by proper exercise they could reduce in weight, and she proposed that with the doctor she illustrate how it could be done; so she and the doctor took the floor, and she put .her back to his back, and her right arm through his left arm, and her left arm through his right arm, and then she bent forward and raised him off the floor at an angle of about 45 degrees, and she explained how that would bring the muscles into play and tend to reduce the weight. At this point Dr. May said, “Now I will show you, something,” and with that they reversed the operation, and he bent forward and brought Miss Yurek backward, and stooped so low that he precipitated her over his head onto the floor, which resulted, as the evidence shows, in a dislocation of the neck and other injuries. She became unconscious, and was ultimately treated, and the dislocation was finally reduced, and she then brought this suit to recover damages, alleging, first, two causes of action, or, rather, two grounds upon which she sought to recover : One, that the act of Dr. May was wilfully and *296 maliciously done; the other, that it was negligently done.

Upon the trial of the action, she was compelled to elect, and she elected to proceed on the ground that the act was negligently done, basing it upon negligence rather than upon willful misconduct. The petition was amended so as to conform to this theory of the case, and the petition alleged that the doctor seized her by the neck and threw her over his head, which caused the resulting injuries. The jury returned a verdict for $2,000, which verdict, we are informed, was set aside by reason of the misconduct of the plaintiff, or somebody connected with her, and a new trial was ordered. A new trial was had and heard before a different jury, and a verdict in the same amount was rendered against Dr. May, and it is to reverse that verdict that error is prosecuted here.

The error largely complained of is that there was no evidence in the record to sustain the allegations of the petition, that is, that he seized her by the neck and threw her over his head. The main argument in this is that that implied a willfulness in the doctor’s conduct. The gravamen of the offense is, however, that he threw her over his head and injured her by dislocating her neck. That the result was not more serious, all of these parties are to be congratulated, for from the way this girl fell it is a wonder that her back or neck was not broken beyond repair.

Now, then, was there any evidence of negligence in this case? The court charged the jury that doing what a person ought not to do would be negligence, and we think there is authority for that statement. *297 Now the doctor, the plaintiff in error, is a powerful man, a graduate of Columbia University, a scientist versed in physics and chemistry, and apparently from the words that he said to Miss Yurek, “I will show you something now,” he had in mind that with his strength he could show this little girl a trick which would be amazing to her. Whether or not he intended to throw her clear over his head, with his strong powerful body, is unimportant, for from the manner in which he had this girl on his back he could, with a sudden jerk or impulse, throw her -clear over his head, and that is what he did do apparently from the evidence in this case; or, while he had her up in the air that way he may have slipped and fallen, and the injury have occurred in that way; but, however it was, he was a strong powerful man, and the plaintiff was a comparatively slight girl, though she had strength enough to lift him upon her back, as she explained she could, and as she did do, whereupon he reciprocated with this violent movement which precipitated her over his head, from which the injury resulted. Now, while there is not any evidence to show that he seized her by the neclt, yet he did throw her over his head, and that was the gravamen of the offense charged in this petition.

We think the evidence shows that the injury resulted from this act of the doctor. From what he said one might almost conclude that it was a willful act upon his part, but, inasmuch as she elected to base her claim on negligence, and not upon willful misconduct on the part of the doctor, that is out pf the case. But, if he did this act when he had no right to do it, then of course he would be liable for *298 the result of that act, even though he did not intend it, and nobody thinks for a moment that the doctor intended to injure this girl, even though he may have intended to throw her over his head. The evidence in the record shows that is what he intended to do, because he plainly said that he would show her something now.

After this fall, the girl became unconscious, and was taken home, and was finally taken to “The Clinic,” where Dr.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 N.E. 59, 32 Ohio App. 293, 7 Ohio Law. Abs. 645, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-yurek-ohioctapp-1929.