Tedesco v. Weirton General Hospital

235 S.E.2d 463, 160 W. Va. 466, 1977 W. Va. LEXIS 256
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1977
Docket13655
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 235 S.E.2d 463 (Tedesco v. Weirton General Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tedesco v. Weirton General Hospital, 235 S.E.2d 463, 160 W. Va. 466, 1977 W. Va. LEXIS 256 (W. Va. 1977).

Opinion

McGraw, Justice:

This action is on plaintiffs appeal from judgments of the Circuit Court of Hancock County entered on a jury verdict for defendant and denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. The complaint claims damages arising from *467 defendant’s negligence causing injuries to plaintiffs decedent while she was a patient in defendant hospital on June 25, 26, and 27, 1971.

The basic issues on appeal are limited to errors claimed to have been committed by the trial court in striking five statements from plaintiffs Exhibit No. 1. This exhibit is defendant’s hospital record relating to plaintiff’s decedent while a patient in the hospital, stipulated in the trial record as “a copy of the original records maintained at Weirton General Hospital” and shown to have been authenticated and kept under hospital control. The five statements deleted from the hospital record by the trial court are:

“Husband states patient has been drinking heavily.”
“Getting up to bathroom, patient states she slid to floor.”
“Patient states she got her foot caught in sheets.”
“While in bathroom, patient stated she ‘hit her head on the silver bar’.”
“Patient asking to have bedjacket removed.”

Counsel for plaintiff contends the statements “are admissible exceptions to the hearsay rule under the shop-book rule.”

Counsel for defendant contends “that the entire hospital chart should have been excluded as hearsay or, in the very least, the expressions of opinion in the various diagnostic interpretations and findings should likewise have been deleted.” Counsel for appellee asserts this contention as a cross-assignment of error, but does not press his contention in his brief and arguments.

Stipulation of the entire hospital record was discussed at a pre-trial conference and, at the commencement of the trial, the trial court stated: “Let the record show that the authenticity and proper control of plaintiffs Exhibit No. 1 is stipulated.” Counsel for defendant then *468 added: “As being a copy of the original records maintained at Weirton General Hospital.” The hospital record thus became a part of the trial record, but with the five statement entries deleted therefrom by the trial court. Copies of the hospital record, absent the deletions by the trial court, were furnished to the jury for jury room deliberations. Butler v. Smith’s Transfer Corporation, 147 W. Va. 402, 128 S.E.2d 32 (1962); 73 Am. Jur. 2d, Stipulations, §§ 17 and 18 (1974). The trial court’s deletions are here in issue and we are asked to decide whether the deleted entries are properly admissible in evidence in this action.

Of the five statement entries deleted from the hospital record by the trial court, apparently on its own motion, one statement is by decedent’s husband — “Husband states patient has been drinking heavily” — and the other four statements are by the patient, now deceased.

Plaintiff’s complaint alleges the decedent “was admitted (to the defendant hospital) under a diagnosis of chronic alcoholism with impending DTs, diabetes, questionable mild congestive heart failure and anxiety neurosis.” During her hospital stay, she was “the recipient of tranquilizers and drugs.” She “was in a lethargic state.” The complaint alleges that decedent was neglected and was allowed and obliged to fend for herself in the hospital despite knowledge by hospital personnel of her condition. She fell on three different days, the last fall resulting in “injuries to her right orbital area.”

Different rules and practices prevail in the several jurisdictions as to the admissibility of statements, utterances and communications in the area of hearsay evidence. The Virginias, common law jurisdictions, developed and employed the shopbook rule and later the regular business entries rule. Note, 39 W. Va. Law Quarterly 174 (1932); Note, 24 Va. L. Rev. 814-821 (1937); Thayer, Cases on Evidence 507-587 (2d Ed. 1900); 5 Wigmore on Evidence, _ § 1536 (Chadbourn Ed. 1974).

Following development and employment of the shop-book rule in Virginia,

*469 “Around the beginning of the nineteenth century another practice arose of admitting the regular entries of deceased or otherwise unavailable persons. One of the first American cases was decided in Virginia. Now according to the generally accepted view, a business entry is admissible when, among other things, the entrant is unavailable. The types of unavailability being death, insanity, and absence from the jurisdiction. There has been added to this list commercial unavailability, that is, the entry is admissible where the commercial inconvenience in calling the witness outweighs its utility. An example of this latter form of unavailability is where the entry is made by one person in the regular course of business, recording an oral or written report, made to him by one or more persons in the regular course of business, of a transaction lying in the personal knowledge of the latter. There is no objection to receiving that entry under the exception to the hearsay rule of books of original entry, provided the practical inconvenience of producing on the stand the numerous persons thus concerned would in the particular case outweigh the probable utility of doing so. In this instance Virginia and West Virginia have brought the law into accord with business practice without the aid of statutory enactment.
“Therefore, subject to these guarantees of trustworthiness, entries made in the regular course of business are admissible under both the shopbook rule and the entry in the regular course of business rule. Only one distinction between them is apparent, that is, a necessity must be shown to admit third person’s books, while no necessity need be shown to admit party books.
“Although the courts have laid down a liberal common-law rule and have done away with many unreasonable restrictions, failure to distinguish the shopbook rule from the regular entry rule has resulted in some confusion, as for example *470 when a court summarily admitted third person’s books when there was no necessity, yet cited the shopbook rule.” Nash, The Law of Evidence, Virginia and West Virginia, Section 150 (The Michie Co. 1954).

In the federal practice, Federal Rules of Evidence, effective July 1, 1975, Rule 803(6) largely controls the admissibility of records of a regularly conducted activity. 1 Many states have enacted the Uniform Business Records as Evidence Act, as drafted by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws. 2 Other jurisdictions have varying statutes and rules clar *471 ifying the law as to the admissibility of business records in evidence. Keller v.

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Bluebook (online)
235 S.E.2d 463, 160 W. Va. 466, 1977 W. Va. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tedesco-v-weirton-general-hospital-wva-1977.