Miller v. Mohr

89 P.2d 807, 198 Wash. 619
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1939
DocketNos. 27006, 27007. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 89 P.2d 807 (Miller v. Mohr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Mohr, 89 P.2d 807, 198 Wash. 619 (Wash. 1939).

Opinions

Beals, J.

This is an appeal from verdicts and judgments rendered against the Sisters of St. Frances and Louise Mohr, in favor of an infant, Louis Henry Miller, Jr., and in favor of the parents of that child.

This case has been argued once to a Department of *621 this court and twice to the court sitting En Banc. Just prior to the last hearing, respondents filed a motion to strike the statement of facts. This motion is without merit, and the same is denied.

In the second amended complaint in cause No. 27006, Louis Henry Miller and his wife, Bertha Miller, brought an action against defendants, alleging that the Sisters of St. Frances is a corporation, organized under the laws of this state; that this corporation conducts, for profit, a hospital in the city of Tacoma, known as St. Joseph’s hospital; that this hospital is conducted as a business enterprise, and a fee is charged to those who enter the hospital for treatment; and that, in return for the payment of such fee, the corporation represents and holds out to the public that it will furnish the necessary hospital treatment in a skillful and proper manner, through agents who have been selected in a careful and prudent manner by the officers of the corporation.

It was further alleged that, on September 11, 1932, Bertha Miller, at the request of plaintiffs, was admitted to the above mentioned hospital for confinement, upon the payment of the initial admission fee of $32.50; that, September 12, 1932, there was born to respondent a strong, healthy, male child, thereafter named Louis Henry Miller, Jr.; and that, at all times mentioned in this complaint, the child was in the sole care of defendant corporation.

It was averred that defendant Louise Mohr was a student nurse in the employ of the corporation, and was a single person at the time the injuries hereinafter referred to were sustained.

It was pleaded that, when the child was five days old, it contracted a skin disease known as impetigo; that, the child’s mother being unable to care for him, it became and was the duty of defendant corporation *622 to care for him and to use reasonable care in the selection and retention of a competent nurse; that it failed and neglected to provide a competent nurse to care for the child at the time the injuries in question were sustained, but furnished an incompetent and unskilled student nurse, defendant Louise Mohr; that the nurse had little or no training in the care of infants, and at the time of the injuries was so worn out, tired, sleepy, and highly nervous that she was not in a fit condition to care for plaintiffs child; and that the corporation knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence should have known, that the nurse was incompetent and not in proper condition to care for the child.

It was also averred that, September 21, 1932, while the child was under the sole care of defendants, its head was negligently and carelessly permitted to come in contact with some hot object unknown to plaintiffs, causing the child’s head to be seared black and its scalp and skull to be burned to the brain, resulting in a necrosis of the skull; that, at one place in the region of the anterior fontenal, a hole two inches in diameter was burned, at another place to the left of the posterior fontenal a hole was burned three-fourths of an inch in diameter, and at a third place on the left frontal bone of the child’s head there was a burn one-half to three-fourths of an inch in diameter; that these injuries are permanent, and have left the child in such a condition that he requires the constant attention of plaintiffs or of a nurse; that the child will never be able to render that service to plaintiffs which the ordinary child renders towards its parents; and that plaintiffs have incurred doctors’ bills in treating the child’s injuries. Plaintiffs prayed for judgment for damages against defendants.

Defendants demurred separately to this second amended complaint, and these demurrers were over *623 ruled. Defendants then answered, denying generally the allegations of the complaint, and set up an affirmative defense, alleging that the Sisters of St. Frances is a charitable corporation, organized under the laws of this state; that the mayor of Tacoma and the chairman of the board of county commissioners of Pierce county are ex officio members of the board of trustees of defendant corporation; that the corporation owns or is engaged in the conduct of a hospital in Tacoma, known as St. Joseph’s hospital, and has owned and been engaged in the conduct of that hospital for over forty years.

Defendants further alleged that the Sisters of St. Frances is a charitable corporation; that it has no capital stock and is not operating for profit; that no dividends or profits have ever been paid or can be paid to anyone from the operation of the hospital; that its entire earnings are used solely for charitable purposes; that it has at all times rendered necessary services and care without being paid therefor to those unable to pay for the same, setting forth the number of charitable patients cared for, and the reasonable value of the services rendered to such patients, for the years 1931 to 1935, inclusive.

It was further averred that, in connection with the ownership and operation of St. Joseph’s hospital, the Sisters of St. Frances corporation conducts a training school for nurses, where nurses receive professional education and training; that, among the young women who were engaged in taking s.uch nurses’ course of training on September 12, 1932, was defendant Louise Mohr; that she completed her course, graduated from the training school, and was duly licensed to practice as a professional nurse by the state of Washington.

Defendant Sisters of St. Frances also alleged that the corporation supplies as nurses for patients in the hos *624 pital student nurses in the hospital training school, without additional expense to the patient; that all patients are given the right to procure graduate nurses of their own selection, at their own expense; and that plaintiffs were advised by defendant corporation of these arrangments, plaintiffs electing to accept the services of the student nurses and failing to procure a graduate nurse.

It was alleged that defendant corporation maintains in St. Joseph’s hospital what is known as a nursery, wherein all the babies were kept; that Louis Henry Miller, Jr., contracted impetigo, which required that he be removed from the nursery and isolated, to protect the other babies from contracting the disease.

It was also alleged that Louise Mohr, at the time of the accident, had been in professional training as a nurse for nearly two years; that she had received special training in the care of infants; and that she had been given actual charge of the nursery where all the babies were kept, for approximately two months immediately preceding the injury to Louis Henry Miller, Jr.

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Bluebook (online)
89 P.2d 807, 198 Wash. 619, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-mohr-wash-1939.