Myers v. Elyria Memorial Hospital Co.

30 Ohio Law. Abs. 674, 1938 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 903
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1938
DocketNo. 891
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 30 Ohio Law. Abs. 674 (Myers v. Elyria Memorial Hospital Co.) 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
Myers v. Elyria Memorial Hospital Co., 30 Ohio Law. Abs. 674, 1938 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 903 (Ohio Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

OPINION

By STEVENS, PJ.

Pauline Myers brought her action against the Elyria Memorial Hospital Company in an attempt to recover fox-personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by her when she was burned by hot water bottles during the period of her hospitalization in the defendant hospital.

To her petition the defendant filed an amended answer, after-having moved and demurred to the petition, in which it set out: first, that the plaintiff was a patient in the defexxdant hospital, a charitable institution, receiving the benefits of the charitable purposes for which defendant was formed, and of the charitable activities in which the defendant was engaged; and, secondly, that the defendant was a complying employer under the provisions of the Ohio Workmen’s Compensation law. Trial to a jury'resulted in a disagreement and discharge of the jury.

During the trial, at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, and at the conclusion of all of the evidence, motions to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant were made and overruled, and, after the disagreement of the jury, a motion for judgment for the defendant notwithstanding the disagreement of the jury was filed and overruled.

The matter is before this court on the claim that the trial court should have rendered judgment in favor of the defendant.

The facts as disclosed by the record in the case are briefly these: At the outset of the trial it was stipulated and agreed by counsel that the Elyria Memorial Hospital Company had theretofore been and then was a corporation not for profit, organized and existing under the laws of the state of Ohio for the purpose of public charity, and that it had theretofore been and then was engaged in the maintenance and operation of a public charitable hospital in the city of Elyria, Ohio, having been so engaged at all of the times mentioned in plaintiff's petition.

[676]*676On September 15, 1935, Pauline Myers, after certain preliminary negotiations between herself and the superintendent of the nurses’ training school of the Elyria Memorial Hospital, entered said training school for training as a nurse.

The contract under which she entered training provided that Miss Myers was to perform such duties in taking care of patients and receiving instruction as might be required of her by her instructors and superiors in the training school and hospital, and in return therefor she was to receive training and instruction in nursing and allied subjects, her room, board and laundry, and hospital and medical care in the defendant hospital, if and when required, plus $5 a month after the completion of her probationary period.

On March 1, 1936, Miss Myers became ill with a streptococcic infection of her throat and was confined in the defendant hospital on March 2, 1936, receiving the medical and nursing care required by her condition. During the forty-eight-hour period after her confinement in the hospital she was critically ill, her temperature on March 3 ranging from 104 to 108.4 degrees — the highest ever observed by the doctors and nurses who attended her. She was in extremis during most of this period, and on seven different occasions during the ten-hour period on March 3 cardiac stimulants were administered in order to prevent her death. During that time she suffered a severe chill, whereupon external heat was ordered by the doctor in attendance, and blankets were placed over Miss Myers’ body and hot water bottles in proximity to her body.

That night or the following day red areas were noticed upon her limbs and one of her feet, which turned out to be burns, and it is to recover for the damage to her by reason of those burns so sustained that this action was brought.

The evidence further shows that for many years, and including all of the period in question, the defendant hospital has complied with the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation law; that it carried Miss Myers as an employee up until May 2, 1936, when she was discharged from the hospital and allowed to go home, upon the basis of an allowance of $26 a month for meals and lodging, and the $5 monthly cash payment to which she was entitled under her contract. The cash payment, however, was discontinued on March 1, 1936.

The catalogue of the nurses’ training school, which constituted a part of her contract of employment, contained this provision:

“Illness. When ill, the students are cared for gratuitously by the hospital and receive the best medical attention available. * * *”

Evidence in the record shows that such hospital and medical treatment was required to be received by student nurses in the defendant hospital.

Appellant suggests that two questions of law are presented by the record in this case:

1. Where defendant has moved for a directed verdict both at the close of plaintiff’s case and at the close of all the evidence in the case, which motions were overruled and the case submitted to the jury, and the jury disagrees and is discharged, has the trial court power, either under §11601, GC, or under our practice as it existed prior to that section, to reconsider said motions for a directed verdict and enter judgment for the defendant? Likewise, has the Court of Appeals power to enter final judgment .for the defendant if entitled thereto as a matter of law?

2. Does a student nurse, working in a public charitable hospital, who is entitled in case of her illness to hospital care and treatment, and, while receiving the same under her contract of employment, is burned by hot water bottles placed in her bed by a hospital nurse, have a right of action against the hospital if it has used due care in the selection of such nurse and has also complied with the Workmen’s Compensation law of Ohio by paying premiums into the state insurance fund, a [677]*677part of which premium is based on the compensation paid to the student nurse either in cash or as board and lodging?

Sec. 11601, GC, provides:

“Judgment Rendered Against Verdict. When, upon the statements in the pleadings or upon the evidence received upon the trial, one party is entitled by law to judgment in his favor, judgment shall be so rendered by the court, although a verdict has been found against such party and whether or not motion to direct a verdict may have been made or overruled, but no judgment shall be rendered by the court on the ground that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence.”

This section of the statute became effective September 2, 1935. Prior to the enactment of the section there had been much confusion among trial and reviewing courts upon the question of whether or not the denial of a motion for a directed verdict at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case or at the conclusion of all of the evidence was a final order from which appeal could be prosecuted. That question, however, has been entirely dissipated by the decisions of the Supreme Court of the state of Ohio in Jacob Laub Baking Co. v Middleton, 118 Oh St 106; Hocking Valley Mining Co. v Hunter, 130 Oh St 333; Cincinnati Goodwill Industries v Neuerman, 130 Oh St 334; Michigan - Ohio-Indiana Coal Assn. v Nigh, Admr. 131 Oh St 405; Hubbuch v City of Springfield, et, 131 Oh St 413; and Murphy v Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co., 132 Oh St 68.

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Related

Persin v. Youngstown
95 N.E.2d 237 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1949)
Colwell v. Dwyer
35 N.E.2d 789 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Ohio Law. Abs. 674, 1938 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-elyria-memorial-hospital-co-ohioctapp-1938.