Southern Methodist Hospital & Sanatorium v. Wilson

46 P.2d 118, 45 Ariz. 507, 1935 Ariz. LEXIS 251
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1935
DocketCivil No. 3545.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 46 P.2d 118 (Southern Methodist Hospital & Sanatorium v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Methodist Hospital & Sanatorium v. Wilson, 46 P.2d 118, 45 Ariz. 507, 1935 Ariz. LEXIS 251 (Ark. 1935).

Opinion

*509 LOCKWOOD, C. J.

Max Eugene Wilson, a minor, hereinafter called plaintiff, brought suit through his guardian ad litem, Beryl E. Wilson, against the Southern Methodist Hospital and Sanatorium of Tucson, a corporation, hereinafter called defendant, to recover damages for personal injuries, which were claimed to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant. It was alleged that plaintiff was seriously burned and injured through the negligence of some person or persons in defendant’s employ; the particular person responsible being unknown to the plaintiff. These persons were designated by the fictitious names of Doe and Boe, and were never served; the case being conducted as one against the defendant only. The defendant answered, denying the allegation of negligence and setting up that it is, and was at all times concerned, a corporation incorporated for the conducting of a hospital and sanatorium in the city of Tucson as a charitable and religious institution, and that it at all times conducted and still conducts such hospital and sanatorium as such an institution; that it has no capital stock or stockholders, and that its affairs are conducted by a board of commissioners; that it was not organized for the purpose of profit, and is not authorized to and never has made any profit or gain whatever; that it is supported by voluntary contributions by the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and its varied organizations, by outside contributions, and by reasonable charges made to patients whenever they are able to pay such charges; and that its entire income is expended in the conducting of its hospital aforesaid. It further alleged that at the time of the injury to plaintiff it had exercised, and at all times did exercise, due care and caution in selecting the physicians, surgeons, nurses, attendants and employees in and about its hospital. To this answer *510 plaintiff replied, putting in issue the allegations as to the religious and charitable nature of the institution.

At the trial the following facts appeared: The mother of plaintiff, then about to be confined, had arranged with the defendant, through her physician, to be cared for at defendant’s hospital during her confinement, and shortly before the birth of plaintiff was taken to the hospital. After the birth of plaintiff he was taken from the room in which he was born to another used for the purpose of caring for infants after birth, and there placed in a basket used to hold newly born infants. While in the basket, in some manner unknown to any of the witnesses who testified, he suffered a very severe burn, the evidence tending to show that it occurred by reason of his contact with a hot water bottle. There was no serious denial by defendant that those burns must have been the result of the negligence of some person, and the reasonable conclusion is that it was someone employed by defendant as. a nurse or attendant. The medical testimony tends to show that the burn was of a very severe nature, and that it will impair the physical condition of plaintiff to a considerable degree most of his life; the only possible chance for escape from such a result being the rather doubtful one of one or more operations. The evidence further shows that plaintiff’s mother expected to pay and had contracted to pay for the services which she received during her confinement in defendant’s hospital.

In support of its defense that it was exempt from liability as a charitable institution, defendant introduced its articles of incorporation and showed by uncontradicted evidence that in the conduct of its hospital, while it made a charge against patients who had the ability to pay, it treated as many as it could who were not able to pay, or could only pay a part of the usual charges, and that it took care of what are *511 usually called charity patients so far as possible in the same manner as the patients who paid its charges. It also appeared that the charges it did make were not based upon the idea of making a profit; that it never did make a profit therefrom, and that whatever sums it thus received were entirely insufficient to maintain the institution, so that for the purpose of continuing its operations it received contributions from the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and others who desired to aid in its maintenance.

When the case was submitted to the jury, however, the court instructed it, among other things, as follows:

“ . . .You are instructed that under the law you must return a verdict for plaintiff; that in doing that you will disregard all evidence in this case concerning the charitable or religious nature and character of this defendant and consider the facts in the this case the same as if said Southern Methodist Hospital and Sanitorium of Tucson were a private institution and not religious or charitable. In other words, gentlemen, that this defendant is a charitable institution is no defense in this case. If the defendant, ... accepted the mother of Max Eugene Wilson as a pay patient, . . . and attempted to care for her upon the basis of her paying for such care and attention . . . , under the law the defendant is liable. ...”

There are some twenty-eight assignments of error, but since, in our opinion, the case must be determined upon questions raised by the instruction just quoted, we think it unnecessary to set them forth at length. These questions may be thus stated: (1) Is a hospital, maintained as a charitable institution and not for profit, exempt from liability for the negligence of its employees, when such negligence results in injury to any of its patients, if it has used reasonable care in the selection of such employees? (2) If it is, does the fact that plaintiff was a paid patient alter the rule in regard to defendant’s liability? (3) If charitable *512 institutions are exempt under the circumstances set forth in the above question, is defendant such an institution?

We consider first the rule in regard to the exemption of charitable institutions from liability, as stated in the first question. This is a matter of first impression in Arizona, and for this reason we are at liberty to review the cases passing upon such questions and adopt such rule as seems to us most consistent with reason and justice, unhampered by any previous expression of our own upon the subject. Upon an examination of the authorities it appears that there is an irreconcilable conflict therein, but that the overwhelming weight, so far as numbers are concerned, supports the general doctrine of exemption from liability. Indeed, this is frankly conceded by counsel for plaintiff, but they insist that the rule for which they contend, although decidedly the minority one, is better founded upon reason than the contrary one. So far as we have been able to discover, the only jurisdictions which hold that charitable institutions are liable for the negligence of their employees on the same basis as private profit making corporations are Rhode Island, Alabama, Oklahoma, Minnesota, Florida and perhaps Georgia. Glavin v. Rhode Island Hospital, 12 R. I. 411, 34 Am. Rep. 675; Basabo v. Salvation Army, 35 R. I. 22, 85 Atl. 120, 42 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1144; Tucker v. Mobile Infirmary Assn., 191 Ala. 572, 68 So. 4, 13, L. R. A.

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Bluebook (online)
46 P.2d 118, 45 Ariz. 507, 1935 Ariz. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-methodist-hospital-sanatorium-v-wilson-ariz-1935.