Meadows v. McCullough

132 S.E. 194, 101 W. Va. 103, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 148
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1926
Docket5519
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 132 S.E. 194 (Meadows v. McCullough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meadows v. McCullough, 132 S.E. 194, 101 W. Va. 103, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 148 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

*104 Woods-, Judge:

From a judgment of tbe circuit court of Raleigh county, on tbe verdict of a jury awarding plaintiff $315.00 damages, in an action of assumpsit, tbe defendants prosecute tbis writ of error.

Tbe testimony discloses substantially tbe following state- of facts: Tbe two defendants (physicians and surgeons) are and have been for a number of years tbe owners and operators of a general hospital in tbe City of Beckley, known as tbe Beckley Hospital; that as such owners and operators, some years prior to this action, they entered into a contract with tbe Beckley Coal & Coke Company, a corporation, engaged in mining and shipping coal; that by said contract they agreed to accept into said hospital and treat tbe employees of said corporation, who became ill or were injured in tbe mine, and for said hospital services and treatment tbe corporation assessed each of its employees $1.00 per month, which amount was deducted from tbe earnings of said employees and paid to defendants by said corporation monthly. Tbe plaintiff in this case was an employee of tbe corporation, and bad been for some months prior to bis injury hereinafter stated, and bad paid to tbe coal company tbe said $1.00 per month in tbe manner above set forth. On the 7th day of June, 1923, about two o’clock, P. M., tbe plaintiff was seriously injured in tbe coal mines of said corporation while engaged in his duties as brakeman, having been caught between tbe bumpers of tbe cars and mashed through bis hips and pelvis. He was immediately conveyed to tbe defendant hospital, where be was received, treated and operated on, some of tbe broken bones removed and bis wounds dressed. He remained and was treated there for about thirty hours, when be was removed by bis father and friends to tbe King’s Daughters’ Hospital and there treated until be recovered and was discharged. He paid for tbe services received at tbe last mentioned hospital $315.00. Tbe action here is to recover said amount so paid on tbe ground of breach of bis contract with tbe defendant corporation hereinbefore mentioned, under tbe authority of § 2, Ch. 71, Code.

*105 The declaration consists of two counts. In each, after a recital of the injury and the duty of the defendant hospital under its contract, the breach thereof is set out in these words:

In violation of their agreement with this plaintiff (said hospital) then and there refused to receive this plaintiff into said hospital, and to give or furnish to him there or at any other place, their professional services as such physicians and surgeons, even necessary in order that this plaintiff’s life might be saved, and thereupon, it became and was necessary for this plaintiff then to be received, eared for and treated by a physician and surgeon in some other hospital of like kind and character in order that he might not lose his life as the result of said injuries.”

Then follows the recital of his removal to the King’s Daughters’ Hospital, his treatment there, and' the expense entailed because of such service.

The defendants insist that the refusal of the hospital to receive this plaintiff is the gravamen of the breach. That inasmuch as the fact that he was received and treated therein is uncontroverted in the proof, that the court should have directed a verdict for the defendant. It will be seen that in addition to the last mentioned allegation, each count contains the charge that the defendant hospital then and there refused “to give or furnish to him there or at any other place, their professional services as such physicians and surgeons, even necessary in order that this plaintiff’s life might be saved, etc.” The case was tried on this latter theory of the breach of the contract, as the one instruction given by the court on behalf of the plaintiff shows. We are unable to see any merit in the defendants’ restricted interpretation of the breach. It would be exceedingly technical to so construe it. This leaves for consideration the defense interposed fhat the evidence does not support the verdict.

The issue is narrowed down to whether the defendant hos--pital gave and furnished to the plaintiff such professional services, while in such hospital, and necessary professional treatment, as was ordinarily furnished and as implied in the contract, at hospitals of like kind and character in the same *106 community, under like circumstances? The learned court in effect so instructed the jury. This is in substance the true test. Dye v. Corbin, 59 W. Va. 266; Lawson v. Conaway, 37 W. Va. 159; Kuhn v. Brownfield, 34 W. Va. 252. It is an admitted fact that he was received in the defendant hospital and remained there for thirty-six hours. According to the physicians and nurses, who are uncontradicted, his temperature on arrival there was 96°, nearly 3° below normal. He was bleeding profusely and was in an. extremely shocked condition. He was put in the first room that could be gotten into-The hemorrhage was controlled by heavy dressing at that time. He was given morphine with stimulants applied, and it was two hours before he could be gotten in condition to be operated on. The physicians felt that if he were taken to the operating room at once and given a general anaesthetic he would die. The pelvis was crushed. Part of the bones jabbed out through the skin, and there was a wound on the right side which admitted the physician’s hand when he was in the operating room. Through this opening a great many pieces of broken and crushed bone were removed. Strips of packing made out of gauze were used to stop the hemorrhage. The urethra was torn, not entirely in two, but partially. He was eatheterized on the table and he was put to bed. He was admitted at two-thirty o’clock and taken to the operating room at four thirty. Ether was administered, the operation performed, and the patient was removed from the operating room at five o’clock. His condition was very serious. The stimulant was kept up. He was eatheterized the-next morning. He passed very little urine as he had little to pass. His kidneys had bled and were shocked. He was eatheterized, and the next afternoon (Friday) the physicians failed to get a catheter inserted. A trocar to cut with was tried. The plaintiff showed the mark of this operation to the jury when he .testified. The plaintiff was removed from the defendant hospital about eight o’clock, Friday evening. This removal is sought to be justified by a conversation that an uncle of the injured man claims to have had just about dark (Thursday) with one of the doctors at the hospital. This witness went *107 there to learn of his nephew’s condition. He stated that the doctor told him: “He is hurt bad. He is going to die. There is nothing we can do for him. ’ ’ Both physicians at the hospital deny this conversation. The witness got in touch with the plaintiff’s father, who arrived at the hospital about four o’clock, Friday evening. The father testified that Dr. McCol-lough told him that his son could not live and that they had done “all they could for him.” He thereupon caused plaintiff to be removed to another hospital.

The physicians at the other hospital upon making an examination of plaintiff found his bladder was much distended.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.E. 194, 101 W. Va. 103, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meadows-v-mccullough-wva-1926.