Methodist Hospital v. Ball

362 S.W.2d 475, 50 Tenn. App. 460, 1961 Tenn. App. LEXIS 146
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 28, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 362 S.W.2d 475 (Methodist Hospital v. Ball) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Methodist Hospital v. Ball, 362 S.W.2d 475, 50 Tenn. App. 460, 1961 Tenn. App. LEXIS 146 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

• CABNEY, J.

The plaintiff below, Charles P. Ball, Administrator, recovered a judgment of $25,000 for the alleged wrongful death of his son, Charles P. Ball, Jr. The hospital has appealed in error.

The son, aged 16, was injured about 11:20 P.M. on the night of October 31, 1958, while riding as a passenger in an automobile driven by his mother, Mrs. Charles P. Ball. Also in the automobile were a young lady, Miss Joy Blakely and a young man, Jordan Moore, both teen-age friends of young Ball.

The young people had attended a Halloween party at the G-raceland Baptist Church in Whitehaven, a suburb *464 of Memphis, Tennessee. After the party they went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ball. Charles Ball, Jr., did not have a driver’s license. He requested his mother to drive his friends home. She agreed. Jordan Moore was sitting on the right front seat beside Mrs. Ball; Charles on the right rear seat and Joy Blakely on the left rear seat. About five minutes after they left home the automobile driven by Mrs. Ball was struck a severe blow at or about the right rear door by another automobile.

Mrs. Ball and the three teen-agers were taken to the emergency room of the defendant, Methodist Hospital, in Memphis, Tennessee. Mrs. Ball and Miss Blakely received cuts and bruises but were less seriously injured than were Jordan Moore and Charles P. Ball, Jr. Young Moore and Miss Blakely were carried to the hospital in one ambulance and Mrs. Ball and her son in another. Moore and Ball were on stretchers. Miss Blakely and Mrs. Ball were ambulatory.

Young Moore and young Ball were left on stretchers in the main portion of the emergency room. There were three cubicles adjoining the main emergency room which can be closed by curtains for the examination of patients. Joy Blakely was placed on a table in the first cubicle. There was a private patient being treated by a Dr. McLarty in the second cubicle and Mrs. Ball, the mother of the deceased, was placed on a table in the third cubicle, the one farthest from the main emergency room where young Ball was left on a stretcher just inside the doorway from the parking lot.

The Methodist Hospital was crowded and only one bed was available. The intern and the nurses in charge of the emergency room determined that young Moore who *465 bad brain injuries was the most seriously injured of the four and he was given the one available bed in the hospital. He died the following day.

Young Ball was carried into the emergency room of the Methodist Hospital about 11:45 P.M. and remained on a stretcher in the emergency room near the door until about 12:30 A.M. when the intern in charge of the emergency room gave instructions to the ambulance driver to take young Ball to the emergency room of the John Gaston Hospital. John Gaston Hospital is operated primarily as a charity hospital by the City of Memphis.

The records of the John Gaston Hospital show that Charles Ball, Jr., was received in the emergency room at 12:45 A.M. on November 1 and died about fifteen minutes later.

The plaintiff’s declaration alleged that Charles P. Ball, Jr., died as a concurrent result of injuries he sustained in the automobile accident on October 31, 1958, and the failure of the defendant hospital to exercise such reasonable and ordinary care toward the son as his condition required after it received him as a patient.

The declaration further averred that following the automobile accident plaintiff’s son was delivered on a stretcher to the emergency room of the defendant hospital by ambulance; that defendant’s employees knew, or in the exercise of reasonable and ordinary care could or should have known, that he had sustained serious injuries including a lacerated liver which was causing blood to enter into the abdominal cavity and that he was in a state of shock; that the defendant, through its agents or employees, failed to take his pulse properly; failed to examine him properly; failed to administer any proper *466 treatment; that it was negligent in these failures; that it falsely accused him of being drunk; that it forcibly and negligently caused him to be strapped to a stretcher, evicted from its emergency room and transported to the John Q-aston Hospital where he died a short while after arrival; that it negligently ejected him from its hospital under circumstances evincing a complete and utter disregard of the duties owed by it to him, thereby causing and/or hastening and/or contributing to bringing about his death; that its acts and conduct were gross and wanton.

In addition to a plea of general issue the defendant also filed special pleas in which it denied that anything it did or failed to do contributed to the death of the deceased; denied that it failed to exercise such reasonable and ordinary care toward him as his condition required; and denied that it received young Ball as a patient; while admitting that the young man came to its emergency room by ambulance it denied that the intern on duty knew or in the exercise of reasonable or ordinary care could or should have known that the plaintiff’s son had suffered a lacerated liver which was causing blood to enter the abdominal cavity; and it denied that the son was in a state of shock while in its hospital.

Further the defendant pleaded that while the intern on duty, Dr. Walter H. Murphy, was busy working with young Moore who seemed to be more seriously injured, young Ball tried to get off the stretcher; that his pulse and blood pressure were taken and were found to be within normal range and when young Ball persisted in his efforts to get up Dr. Murphy let him be restrained to keep him from falling from the stretcher or otherwise hurting himself.

*467 Further the defendant averred that the decision by Dr. Murphy to admit young Moore to the hospital and to transfer young Ball to another hospital was in the exercise of medical judgment and was not negligence; that Dr. Murphy thought the plaintiff’s son was in fair condition and it would be safe enough for him to be transferred. The defendant further averred that the act of physically restraining plaintiff’s son was done pursuant to the exercise of medical judgment and was for the protection of plaintiff’s son and was not negligently done.

The defendant specifically denied that it failed to take the pulse of plaintiff’s son properly; denied that it failed to examine plaintiff’s son; denied that plaintiff’s son was ever admitted to its hospital as a patient; denied that it negligently failed to administer any proper treatment to plaintiff’s son; denied that it violated any duty owed by it to plaintiff’s son; denied that it caused or hastened or contributed to the death of plaintiff’s son; denied that it aggravated the pain, suffering, or mental agony or anguish of plaintiff’s son; denied that the acts or conduct of its agents, servants, or employees were gross or wanton; denied that it was guilty of any of the acts of negligence alleged in plaintiff’s declaration, but averred that if it committed any such act complained of, such act was pursuant to the exercise of medical judgment and was not negligence; and it denied all allegations of the plaintiff’s declaration not theretofore admitted or denied.

There was a lengthy and hard-fought trial before the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
362 S.W.2d 475, 50 Tenn. App. 460, 1961 Tenn. App. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/methodist-hospital-v-ball-tennctapp-1961.