Payne v. Milwaukee Sanitarium Foundation, Inc.

260 N.W.2d 386, 81 Wis. 2d 264, 1977 Wisc. LEXIS 1160
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1977
Docket75-405
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 260 N.W.2d 386 (Payne v. Milwaukee Sanitarium Foundation, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Payne v. Milwaukee Sanitarium Foundation, Inc., 260 N.W.2d 386, 81 Wis. 2d 264, 1977 Wisc. LEXIS 1160 (Wis. 1977).

Opinion

ROBERT W. HANSEN, J.

It was not too long ago that hospitals for the mentally ill were known as asylums for the insane. Emphasis was upon the custodial aspect of the institutionalization — barred windows, locked doors, straitjaekets and physical restraint to prevent inmates from harming themselves or others.

Today, with more known about the cause and cure of mental illness, the mental hospital has become primarily a treatment facility. While maximum security units are retained, the primary emphasis is now upon therapy and rehabilitation. An attending psychiatrist’s order that a particular patient be assigned to an open or closed unit represents a balance of both protection and treatment.

When Gladys Payne came to the Milwaukee Psychiatric Hospital, she brought with her a long history of depression, including at least one suicide attempt. Despite this history the psychiatrist assigned to her at the hospital ordered her placed in Sleyster Hall, an entirely open facility where she would be permitted to light her own cigarettes, walk around the grounds unattended, and certainly go to the bathroom without someone going with her. The aim of the treatment, Dr. Hansen testified, was “to balance safeguarding her person against such a restrictive ever-watchful hovering approach that she would lose all initiative and feel lost.”

Dr. Hansen testified that the patient’s condition appeared to improve somewhat during her stay in Sleyster Hall. However, when she was observed standing before an open window contemplating suicide, Dr. Hansen re *271 evaluated her therapy and ordered her transferred to the maximum security unit. There she was under constant surveillance. She could not leave the locked ward, and she was not permitted to light her own cigarettes. In this restrictive environment her condition deteriorated. Her family testifed that she became even more depressed and withdrawn. Once again, balancing the two aims of protection and rehabilitation, Dr. Hansen transferred her to a less restrictive unit where she could light her own cigarettes and, if the doctor so authorized, could move about the hospital grounds unattended.

Dr. Hansen knew that on Kradwell 3 Mrs. Payne would be permitted to have matches and to light her own cigarettes. He made no orders to the contrary. Instead, his effort to balance therapy with protection took the form of special orders with respect to her freedom of movement. To begin with he ordered her to be accompanied when she left the hospital building to walk around the grounds. Later he amended that order to permit this patient to walk the grounds unattended, and to be given passes for visits to relatives. Still later the psychiatrist directed that she be accompanied when she left the ward. Finally, even after an incident in which she tried to jump out of a car on her way back to the hospital, he permitted her to be unattended about the hospital and grounds.

The nonsuits granted by the trial court with respect to Drs. Hansen and Josephson are not challenged on this appeal. Therefore, the negligence of Drs. Josephson and Hansen in permitting known suicidal patients to have matches or in assigning Mrs. Payne to Kradwell 3, where they knew she could have matches, or in failing to make orders to insure more careful supervision, is not before the court on appeal. What is before us on this appeal is the denial of defendant hospital’s motion for nonsuit and the sufficiency of the evidence to support a verdict *272 finding the hospital, through its attendants on Kradwell 3, causally negligent. This, however, brings us to the issue of whether the supervision given by the hospital staff to this patient, including the freedom to go to the washroom unattended, are matters requiring expert testimony to establish negligence.

The duty of care owed a patient by a hospital in this state is one of ordinary care under the circumstances. 1 However, in applying this standard, there is to be recognized a distinction between medical care and custodial or routine hospital care. 2 Where the patient requires professional nursing or professional hospital care, then expert testimony as to the standard of that type of care is necessary. 3 However, the standard of nonmedical, administrative, ministerial or routine care in a hospital need not be established by expert testimony. 4 The issue, then, is whether the negligence alleged in this complaint “must, like in malpractice cases, be proved by expert testimony.” 5 As to the treating psychiatrist, the clinical director and the staffing corporation, the trial court held that expert testimony as to standard of care was required. We would not quarrel with that finding if it were before us for review. But we fail to see why the *273 same conclusion is not required as to the identical claims of negligence made against the hospital.

Dr. Josephson, the clinical director, testified: “The policy at the hospital was that patients could possess matches and smoking material except in Kradwell 2-B which was the maximum security unit and the admissions unit unless a doctor’s order indicated otherwise.” [Emphasis supplied.] Dr. Hansen transferred Mrs. Payne from the maximum security unit to the Kradwell 3 unit where he knew she could have smoking materials, and he gave no orders limiting her access to smoking materials. Her assignment to Kradwell 3 and his subsequent order that she be permitted to go unattended about the institution were medical judgments on his part as to the proper balance of freedom and confinement most likely to be therapeutic for Gladys Payne. In an offer of proof rejected by the trial court Dr. Hansen testified that supervision of Mrs. Payne should avoid an “ever-watchful hovering approach” that would make her “lose all initiative and feel lost.” 6 That medical judgment and a claim of negligence based upon it must be established by expert testimony, whether the claim is directed to the treating psychiatrist or to the hospital that carried out this directive.

The evidence shows that in permitting Mrs. Payne to take her coffee with her to the bathroom unattended on April 1, 1970, the two attendants on duty were super *274 vising Mrs. Payne in conformity with the most recent order of the treating psychiatrist that the patient be permitted to leave the unit unattended and unaccompanied. Without question this order of March 30, 1970, contemplated that Mrs. Payne could go to the bathroom and remain there for ten minutes without someone going along to observe her. Where an attending psychiatrist specifically ordered a suicidal patient to be unattended, an eastern court held that, in the absence of some notice to the staff that a suicide attempt was imminent, the hospital, as a matter of law, was not negligent if the patient used this freedom to leave the ward and harm himself. 7

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Bluebook (online)
260 N.W.2d 386, 81 Wis. 2d 264, 1977 Wisc. LEXIS 1160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-milwaukee-sanitarium-foundation-inc-wis-1977.