New Biloxi Hospital, Inc. v. Frazier

146 So. 2d 882, 245 Miss. 185, 1962 Miss. LEXIS 544
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1962
Docket42452
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 146 So. 2d 882 (New Biloxi Hospital, Inc. v. Frazier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Biloxi Hospital, Inc. v. Frazier, 146 So. 2d 882, 245 Miss. 185, 1962 Miss. LEXIS 544 (Mich. 1962).

Opinion

*189 Ethridge, J.

This action was brought in the Circuit Court of Jackson County by Allein Frazier, the widow, and the two minor children of Samuel Y. Frazier, deceased, for his negligently caused death. The defendants were Dr. George F. Smith, a resident of Jackson County, and the New Biloxi Hospital, Inc. (called Hospital), a Mississippi corporation domiciled at Biloxi in Harrison County. The suit was based upon Smith’s negligent treatment of *190 Frazier in tlie emergency ward of the Hospital; and upon the negligence of the Hospital’s nurses and employees in attending and caring for Frazier after he was brought to the emergency room of the Hospital. Plaintiffs dismissed their claims as to Dr. Smith. The cause proceeded to trial against the Hospital, and it was followed by a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs of $10,000.

I.

The Hospital contends the trial court erred in overruling its motion for a change of venue to Harrison County, after plaintiffs took a nonsuit as to Smith. Plaintiffs propounded interrogatories to the Hospital and Smith. They were answered by both defendants. Dr. Smith’s answer admitted he was a resident citizen of Jackson County. Before that, the Hospital filed its application for a change of venue to Harrison County, averring that Smith was a resident citizen of Hinds County and not of Jackson County. Hospital’s counsel was advised by plaintiffs’ attorneys that Smith had not moved his family from Jackson to Hinds County. Hence the Hospital withdrew its previous motion for a change of venue, because Smith was still in the suit.

When the case was called, both sides announced ready, the jury was placed in the box and was accepted by plaintiffs. However, at that time plaintiffs’ counsel dismissed their action, after settlement, against Dr. Smith, the resident defendant of Jackson County. After that occurred, the Hospital moved for a change of venue to Harrison County. That motion was overruled. The court stated the jury was placed in the box and accepted by plaintiffs, and it felt the case had proceeded “thus far”, and the corporate defendant was not entitled “to such change of venue at this time”.

There was no error in denial of the change of venue. Where there are two defendants, suit may be *191 brought in the county of the residence of either. Miss. Code 1942, Rec., Sec. 1433; Indianola Cotton Oil Co. v. Crowley, 121 Miss. 262, 83 So. 409 (1919). In 1940 the Legislature enacted present Code Sec. 1441, which provides that where an action is brought “of which the court. . . has jurisdiction of the subject matter, but lacks venue jurisdiction,” the suit shall not be dismissed because of improper venue, but may be transferred to the correct venue. Miss. Laws 1940, Ch. 233. This is a general statute applicable to all defendants (individual and corporate) in which a case is brought in the wrong venue. See Dunn, Venue in the Circuit Court, 29 Miss. L. J. 1 (1957); Dunn, Venue and Jurisdiction in the Circuit Court, 30 Miss. L. J. 352 (1959). However, a civil action may be commenced in the county of the residence of either defendant. Code Sec. 1433. And Sec. 1441 applies only where the trial court “lacks venue jurisdiction”.

In the instant case, when the suit was brought, the Circuit Court of Jackson County had jurisdiction both of the subject matter and also venue jurisdiction. The action was filed in good faith against both Dr. Smith and the Hospital. The declaration contained substantial charges of negligence by Smith as well as by employees of the Hospital. Smith’s answer admitted he was a resident of Jackson County. The Hospital’s defense in this case was based in part on an assertion that, if there were negligence, it was that of Dr. Smith. This is reflected by one of the Hospital’s instructions to the jury. In short, this action was begun in the Circuit Court of Jackson County in good faith and on substantial grounds against both Smith and the Hospital. There is no evidence of fraud or bad faith in the fixing of venue in Jackson County. The evidence reflects the contrary. Before impaneling of the jury, plaintiffs settled with the resident defendant, Smith, and took a voluntary nonsuit against him.

*192 Under these circumstances, the question is whether the action may he maintained in Jackson County against the non-resident, defendant Hospital, despite a dismissal against the resident defendant, Smith. We think it can.

Considering the Mississippi statutes and decisions as an entirety, the pertinent rule may he summarized in this way: Where an action is properly brought in a county in which one of the defendants resides, it may be retained notwithstanding there is a dismissal of the resident defendant, provided the following exists — the action was begun in good faith in the bona fide belief that plaintiff had a cause of action against the resident defendant; the joinder of the local defendant was not fraudulent or frivolous, with the intention of depriving the non-resident defendant of his right to be sued in his own county; and there was a reasonable claim of liability asserted against the resident defendant. Read v. Renaud, 6 S. & M. 79, 14 Miss. 79 (1846); Howard v. Ware, 192 Miss. 36, 3 So. 2d 830 (1941); Dukes v. Sanders, 239 Miss. 543, 557-558, 124 So. 2d 122 (1960); Forman v. Miss. Publishers Corp., 195 Miss. 90, 14 So. 2d 344 (1943); 92 C. J. S., Venue, Sec. 96(b), pp. 800-801; 56 Am. Jur., Venue, Sec. 31; Anno., 93 A. L. R. 949, 952 (1934).

The instant case falls squarely within the above principles. When the suit was commenced, the Circuit Court of Jackson County had jurisdiction of the subject matter and the venue was correct. Plaintiffs brought the action in good faith in the bona fide belief that they had a cause of action against Dr. Smith, there was no fraud, or frivolous joinder of the resident defendant, and plaintiffs asserted a reasonable claim of liability against him. Under these circumstances, a later settlement with Smith, the resident defendant, did not deprive that court of venue and jurisdiction of the action. Read v. Renaud, supra; Christian v. O’Neal, 46 Miss. 669 (1872).

*193 II.

On the issue of liability, the weight of the evidence supports the jury’s verdict. Sam Frazier was a 42 year old Negro man, who had lost his left eye and his left arm, jnst below the elbow, during World War II. He and his wife had two young children.

On the night of April 29, 1960, sometime between 10 and 10:30 p. m., he was shot by Junior Wright with a shotgun, in the stump of his left arm. The blast made two large holes in the upper arm' and tore away the brachial artery. Frazier lay in an alley until he was picked up by an ambulance shortly before 11 p. m. He bled considerably at the scene, and on the ambulance cot during the five minute trip to the New Biloxi Hospital, Inc. Ambulance attendants carried him into ■ the emergency room, where one of the Hospital’s nurses just looked at him and walked away. He was bleeding profusely at that time.

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 2d 882, 245 Miss. 185, 1962 Miss. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-biloxi-hospital-inc-v-frazier-miss-1962.