O'Quin v. Baptist Memorial Hospital

201 S.W.2d 694, 184 Tenn. 570, 20 Beeler 570, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 411
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 201 S.W.2d 694 (O'Quin v. Baptist Memorial Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Quin v. Baptist Memorial Hospital, 201 S.W.2d 694, 184 Tenn. 570, 20 Beeler 570, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 411 (Tenn. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Justice; Prewitt

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit for damages for personal injuries resulting in the death of Clovis Higgins by being shot by two Memphis police officers while a patient of the defendant, Baptist Memorial Hospital. There was a jury trial, and at the close of the plaintiff’s proof the court sustained the defendant’s motion for a peremptory instruction and dismissed the suit of the plaintiff. On appeal in error to the Court of Appeals that Court reversed the judgment of the trial court, holding that there was evidence of negligence on the part of the hospital. Certiorari has been granted and argument heard.

The negligence complained of is that while the deceased, Clovis Higgins, was a pay patient in the hospital and temporarily deranged he was shot by two police officers of the City of Memphis who had been summoned by employees of the hospital to restrain him.

On February 19,1941, the deceased, a young man about 29 years of age, was brought to the hospital by his father and brother from his home near Forrest City, Arkansas. He was assigned to a room in the hospital late in the afternoon and was in fairly good condition at that time. The record discloses that the deceased was carried to the hospital for treatment of epilepsy, from which he had suffered for some time. His physician in Arkansas advised his father to come to Memphis and consult a prominent diagnostician, resulting in the deceased being placed in the hospital. It seems that after the deceased entered *573 the hospital sometime daring the early part of the night he was given a spinal pnnetnre. The father and brother remained with him. The father was a rather elderly man hat the brother was middle-aged, strong, and weighed aboat 180 poánds. In the early morning aboat 5 or 5:30 the deceased became restless and anraly and insisted on patting on his clothes, which he did. He thereapon left his room and'started down the hall andi entered the room of another patient which caased a distarhance, and he then went on down the stairway, and when he reached the groand floor, instead of going oat, he went down to the basement, where the heating eqaipment of the hospital'is located. The basement is a large room in which there are three large boilers and a lot of pipes and electrical machinery. After the deceased left his room, his brother nndertook to stop him and a scaffle resalted, and the deceased hit his brother on the arm. When the deceased entered the boiler room there were several other people there — employees of the hospital — bat Joe Cannon seems to' have been the only person who later saw the shooting; the others having left harriedly. After the scaffle between the deceased and his brother, some one at the hospital telephoned the police department and in aboat five minates two policemen appeared and went on down the steps to the boiler room. When the officers arrived the father and brother were at the basement stairway near the entrance to the boiler room, and the father said to the officers that his son was oat of his. mind and not to hart him, and the officers replied that they woald get him. When the policemen entered the farnace room the deceased picked ap an old water pipe aboat foar feet long and strnck one of the policemen and broke his arm, and then .tnrned and walked aroand in the boiler room and advanced on the second policeman, who told *574 Mm to stop two or three times, which the deceased did not do but continued to advance on him with the pipe, and when the deceased had reached a distance of about 10 or 12 feet from the second policeman, the latter shot him four or five times and killed him instantly.

It appears that there were two other patients in the room assigned to the deceased, who did not have a special nurse, but his father and brother stayed in the room with him, not as nurses, but to care for him if he needed attention and because they though! he would be better satisfied if they remained with him.

The witness Joe Cannon, fireman at- the hospital, was the only eyewitness to the shooting, and he testified substantially to the facts as stated above.

The defendant hospital denies liability (1) because it is a charitable institution and therefore not liable for the negligence of its agents and servants, and (2) also because the policemen were not its agents in the matter wherein deceased lost his life.

The hospital cannot avail itself of the first defense, because the freedom from liability extends no further than the protection of the trust property. Hammond Post No. 3, Inc., American Legion, v. Willis, 179 Tenn. 226, 165 S. W. (2d) 78. In that case this Court said at pages 232 and 233 of 179 Tenn., at page 80 of 165 S. W. (2d):

“In Baptist Memorial Hospital v. Couillens, 176 Tenn. 300, 140 S. W. (2d) 1088, 1091, in an opinion by Mr. Justice Chambliss commenting on the rule in other states denying immunity to charitable trusts against torts of their servants, it was said:

“ ‘However, we are constrained to abide in principle by the rule which this Court has followed since Abston v. Waldon Academy, 118 Tenn. 24, 102 S. W. 351, 11 L. R. A., (N. S.) 1179, and which is followed by the overwhelming *575 majority of the Courts in other jurisdictions and adopted in the recent “Restatement of the Law of Trusts”,— that a beneficiary of a charitable trust may not subject the trust property to the satisfaction of his claim for tort based on the negligence of its servants. . . . But we feel justified by previous holdings in this State (for example, Gamble v. Vanderbilt University, supra, [138 Tenn. 616, 200 S. W. 510, L. R. A. 1918C, 875,] where an office building was operated for profit) and by modern conditions prompting a changing public policy, in restricting this immunity to such property only as is directly and exclusively used in the operation of the trust, as distinguished from that incidentally held and employed in the effort to earn or provide funds for carrying on the work of the trust.’

“Various reasons have been given for the immunity granted charitable institutions. As said by Chief Justice Green in Lincoln Memorial University v. Sutton, 163 Tenn. 298, 43 S. W. (2d) 195, 196: ‘The idea is that the tolerance of such liabilities might eventuate in the destruction of the charity and discourage donors, to the detriment of the public welfare. ’ ”

We are of opinion that the defendant hospital cannot escape liability simply on the ground that it is a charitable institution.

The defendant also contends that the policemen were not its agents when they came to the hospital and took the life of the deceased.

In our view of the case it is not necessary for us to weigh the evidence and determine whether the deceased was making such a deadly assault upon the policemen as would justify the latter in taking his life as the situation , appeared to them at the time. This consideration would *576 only apply if under the facts it appeared that the policemen were the agents of the defendant hospital.

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W.2d 694, 184 Tenn. 570, 20 Beeler 570, 1947 Tenn. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oquin-v-baptist-memorial-hospital-tenn-1947.