Papini v. Alexander Sanitarium, Inc.

55 P.2d 270, 12 Cal. App. 2d 249, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 1018
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 3, 1936
DocketCiv. 9942
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 55 P.2d 270 (Papini v. Alexander Sanitarium, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Papini v. Alexander Sanitarium, Inc., 55 P.2d 270, 12 Cal. App. 2d 249, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 1018 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

NOURSE, P. J.

The plaintiffs sued for damages resulting from the death of their son, Joseph Papini, and had a verdict for $3,500. The defendants appeal from the judginent on the verdict raising two points—that the evidence is insufficient to show negligence on their part, and that the verdict is excessive. ■ • ¡

The record discloses a complete failure of proof ’ in both instances. The action was founded on the theory that the defendants, who conduct a private sanitarium for nervous diseases at Belmont, were negligent in their supervision of a patient named Boliva, and that because of such negligence, Boliva attacked Joseph Papini with a razor blade and a table fork inflicting upon him wounds from which he died. The charges of negligence are found in the fifth and sixth paragraphs of the complaint. They allege that Boliva was by the Superior Court in San Francisco "duly adjudged , dangerously insane”,.and was “committed” to the defendants’ sanitarium, and that the defendants knew that he was suffering from a “form of insanity known as homicidal mania” and that unless restrained might at any time violently attack other patients, and that he had “on previous occasions attacked other persons and was a dangerous person to be at large or unrestrained”. In paragraph six it was alleged that by reason of the carelessness and negligence of the defendants in failing to protect Joseph Papini from “the homicidal tendencies and mania and attack” of Boliva, the latter, on the 24th day of December “procured a razor blade and^a table fork and then and there attacked said Joseph Henry Papini” inflicting upon him wounds from which death proximately resulted on the 3d day of January, 1934. The undis *251 puted evidence not only fails to prove these material allegations of the complaint, but in almost every instance it completely disproves them.

The facts disclosed by the evidence are that Boliva had been injured in the course of his employment and was seeking compensation before the state industrial accident commission While these proceedings were pending, physicians in charge of the case recommended that he be placed in the defendants ’ sanitarium, and be permitted to freely mingle with the other patients. This was done with full knowledge and sanction of his guardian and the physicians in charge. In the month of November, 1933, he was called before the industrial accident commission for further hearing, and at that time assaulted the attorney for the insurance carrier. Testimony was offered that this assault was deliberately provoked by the attorney for the purpose of instituting insanity proceedings against Boliva, but this was denied by the attorney when called as a witness in this case. The undisputed evidence is that Boliva became angered at the conduct of the attorney and that immediately after the assault the latter filed a charge in the Superior Court of San Francisco and endeavored to have Boliva adjudged insane. The only portion of those proceedings which appears in the record is the judgment ordering that Boliva be “discharged from custody”. Evidence was offered that his guardian thereafter returned him to the sanitarium with instructions that the judge in the insanity proceedings had ordered that he be paroled in the custody of Ms guardian and that the sanitarium was directed to place him under constant guard. The bailiff of the court in the insanity proceedings testified to conversations which he had had with the judge in the insanity proceedings relative to what should be done in regard to his care and custody after he had been discharged. The incompetency of all this testimony is so apparent that no further comment is required, but the - only testimony offered, both competent and incompetent, completely disproves plaintiffs’ allegation that Boliva had been “duly adjudged dangerously insane”. There is no evidence that he was “committed” to the sanitarium. The only evidence is that he was taken there by his guardian and that the cost of his maintenance was paid by his insurance carrier. There is no evidence of any character that any of the defendants knew that he was suffering from any form of insanity *252 known as “homicidal mania” and no evidence that the patient had that disease or that he was suffering from any disease other than amnesia, which is a loss of memory.1 There is no evidence that the defendants knew that unless restrained he might violently attack other patients, or that they knew that he had attacked other persons on previous occasions, or that he was a dangerous person to be at large or unrestrained. The only evidence as to the knowledge of the defendants of a previous attack is that they had information from his guardian and from Boliva himself that the assault committed at the hearing before the industrial accident commission was provoked by the party assaulted. There is no evidence that they knew or had any reason to believe that this claim ¿f justification was disputed until the witness testified in this ease. There is no evidence that the defendants carelessly or negligently allowed Boliva to wander through the sanitarium unrestrained or that they did anything other than a reasonable person would have done under similar circumstances with the information which they had of the mental condition! of the particular patient. The undisputed evidence is that he came' to the sanitarium as an “amnesia” patient only. If he was “dangerously insane” the lunacy commission and th$ insanity court found to the contrary, and the defendants cquld not be. charged with knowledge of what did not exist.

Coming to the allegations of paragraph six, there is no evidence that Boliva procured a razor blade or that he used a razor blade in an attack upon Papini, and there is not a particle of evidence to prove that Boliva attacked Papini with a razor blade, a table fork or in any manner whatsoever. The only facts proved are that Boliva, Papini and another 'patient were eating their lunch in the men’s sitting room, that some of the attendants heard a scream, and Papini was seen looming out of the room with a cut on his neck. Attendants entered the room where the three patients had been eating, and found Boliva with a table fork in his hand. From this the plaintiffs assume that Boliva attacked Papini and caused the injuries complained of. The only possible theory upon which this assumption could be based is that an inference might be drawn from the fact that Boliva had a table fork in his hand immediately after the injuries were inflicted, but this inference would be immediately dispelled by the presumption that a criminal attack was not committed. If inferences are to be *253 indulged in, it is just as reasonable to infer from the evidence that Papini had often threatened suicide, that these wounds were self-inflicted. Aside from all inferences and presumptions, it was necessary for the plaintiffs to prove that the assault was made as they alleged, and that it was not provoked by the conduct of the patient.

The award of damages is without any evidentiary support. Papini was 35 years of age, his father 75 and his mother 56. He had suffered with hemophilia since he was four years old. The plaintiffs owned a fruit ranch at Coloma, and their son helped them about the ranch until September 3, 1931, when he was taken to defendants’ sanitarium for treatment for, his mental condition. Because of his physical ailment he was unable to do any hard work, and had already passed the period of life expectancy of patients of that type.

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Bluebook (online)
55 P.2d 270, 12 Cal. App. 2d 249, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/papini-v-alexander-sanitarium-inc-calctapp-1936.