Mosley v. METHODIST HEALTH SYS. FOUNDATION INC.
This text of 776 So. 2d 21 (Mosley v. METHODIST HEALTH SYS. FOUNDATION INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Pennie MOSLEY, Individually and as Tutrix of Her Minor Daughter, Victoria Mosley
v.
METHODIST HEALTH SYSTEM FOUNDATION, INC. d/b/a Pendleton Memorial Methodist Hospital.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*22 Darleen M. Jacobs, Jacobs & Sarrat, New Orleans, Louisiana, Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellant.
Suzanne P. Keevers, Metairie, Louisiana, Counsel for Defendant/Appellee.
Court composed of Judge JAMES F. McKAY, III, Judge MICHAEL E. KIRBY, Judge PATRICK M. SCHOTT, Pro Tem.
KIRBY, Judge.
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
On February 13, 1997, fourteen-year-old, Victoria Mosley, went to visit her grandmother in the Intensive Care Unit at Pendleton Memorial Methodist Hospital. Victoria Mosley sustained personal injuries due to a slip and fall in her grandmother's room. Pennie Mosley, Victoria's mother, filed suit against Pendleton on behalf of her fourteen-year-old daughter, Victoria. Plaintiff alleged that she slipped and fell in urine because a nurse negligently failed to connect a tube attached to the patient's Foley catheter.
Victoria Mosley was treated at the emergency room at Methodist Hospital immediately following her accident, at no charge. Thereafter, she treated with Dr. Essam Elmorshidy, a Board Certified Orthopaedic Surgeon. Upon examination by Dr. Elmorshidy, Victoria Mosley reported back pain, left hip pain, left knee and left foot pain.
Trial on the merits was held before the Honorable Robin M. Giarrusso. Pennie and Victoria Mosley each testified that after the accident she saw "a little tube" disconnected from the patient's Foley catheter and leaking urine on the floor. Neither witness could say when the catheter was last serviced by a nurse before the fall. Both testified that many relatives were visiting Theresa Mosley that evening, going in and out of the patient's room just prior to the fall.
Diane Larmann, R.N., a board certified critical care nurse, testified for defendant. She said that she cared for Theresa Mosley on February 13, 1997 from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. She took vital signs at 6 p.m., measured urine output at that time, and emptied the urometer into the gravity collection bag. She testified that she had a good, lighted view of the floor and that she noticed no liquid on the floor. Diane Larmann explained that the urometer and the collection bag are one unit. There are no holes or "disconnections" possible when emptying the urometer into the collection bag. Nurse Larmann further testified that if a Foley catheter was not connected to the urinary collection bag, urine would leak into the patient's bed, not on the floor. She testified that the fall was reported to her by Victoria Mosley and two others at 6:18 p.m. However, the hospital's accident report stated that it occurred 6:40 p.m. *23 Upon inspecting the collection bag after the accident, Nurse Larmann observed a small amount of urine that had leaked onto the floor. Ms. Larmann's recollection and trial testimony was consistent with the interview she gave to an investigator shortly after the incident.
Using the burden of proof for an accident on a merchant's premises, the court awarded judgment in favor of defendant hospital and against Pennie Mosley on July 14, 1999. The judge assigned written reasons finding no negligence on the part of the hospital. Plaintiff filed a devolutive appeal, which we now address.
STATEMENT OF THE LAW
LSA-R.S. 9:2800.6 sets the burden of proof in a claim for injuries caused by a condition on a merchant's premises. LSA-R.S. 9:2800.6 expressly applies to "merchants" as defined therein, and hospitals are not covered by that statute. (Emphasis added.) Reynolds v. St. Francis Medical Center, 597 So.2d 1121, 1122 (La.App. 2d Cir.1992); Neyrey v. Touro Infirmary, 94-0078 (La.App. 4 Cir. 6/30/94), 639 So.2d 1214, 1217. Nevertheless, in the trial court's Reasons for Judgment it stated:
When there is a condition on the premises which poses an unreasonable risk of harm, it must still be shown that the hospital either created the condition, or had actual notice of the condition and failed to exercise reasonable care.
This is the burden of proof that LSA-R.S. 9:2800.6 establishes, and as such should not have been used in this case where the accident occurred on a hospital's premises, instead of a merchant's premises.
The proper burden of proof in a claim for injuries caused by a condition in a hospital is set forth in Neyrey v. Touro Infirmary, 94-0078 (La.App. 4 Cir. 6/30/94), 639 So.2d 1214.
A plaintiff in a slip and fall case against a hospital must show the fall occurred and injury resulted from a foreign substance on the premises. Reynolds v. St. Francis Medical Center, 597 So.2d 1121, 1122 (La.App. 2d Cir.1992); LeBlanc v. Alton Ochsner Medical Foundation, 563 So.2d 312, 315 (La.App. 5th Cir.1990); Bordelon v. Southern Louisiana Health Care Corp., 467 So.2d 167, 169 (La.App. 3rd Cir.), writ den. 469 So.2d 989 (La. 1985). The burden then shifts to the hospital to exculpate itself from the presumption of negligence. Reynolds v. St. Francis Medical Center, supra, citing LeBlanc v. Alton Ochsner Medical Foundation, supra. A hospital owes a duty to its visitors to exercise reasonable care commensurate with the particular circumstances. Reynolds v. St. Francis Medical Center, supra at 1123. The hospital must show that it acted reasonably to discover and correct the dangerous condition reasonably anticipated in its business activity. LeBlanc v. Alton Ochsner Medical Foundation, supra at 316.
Neyrey v. Touro Infirmary, 94-0078, (La. App. 4 Cir. 6/30/94), 639 So.2d 1214, 1216.
Applied to this case the proper burden of proof renders a different outcome. The plaintiff proved without a doubt that the fall occurred and injury resulted from a foreign substance on the premises, i.e. the urine from the Foley catheter. Thus, the burden of proof shifted to the hospital to exculpate itself from the presumption of negligence that arises.
Since a floor slick due to liquid on it is unquestionably a dangerous condition, we must ask whether this dangerous condition could be reasonably anticipated in the hospital's activity. We find the answer to this question to be a resounding yes. Whenever there is a Foley catheter with tubes full of urine running along the floor, the fact that liquid may leak onto the floor is reasonably foreseeable. This leads us to our last query, did the hospital act reasonably in discovering and correcting the dangerous condition.
The record tells us that from the nurses' station the nurse could see one side of the *24 patient's bed. However, the Foley catheter was placed in a blind spot, on the side of the bed that the nurse could not see. The hospital records did not concur as to the time of the accident. On the one hand the nurse on duty testified that the accident occurred at 6:18 p.m., while the incident report stated that the time of occurrence of the accident was 6:40 p.m. The nurse testified that she checked Victoria Mosley's grandmother at 6pm, prior to being relieved of a 12-hour shift at 7pm. During the last visit of her shift, the nurse testified that she emptied the Foley catheter bag and noticed no urine on the floor. However, the nurse stated that it was not her job, nor among her responsibilities, to clean the floor.
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