Thomas v. Corso

288 A.2d 379, 265 Md. 84, 1972 Md. LEXIS 931
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 17, 1972
Docket[No. 201, September Term, 1971.]
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 288 A.2d 379 (Thomas v. Corso) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Corso, 288 A.2d 379, 265 Md. 84, 1972 Md. LEXIS 931 (Md. 1972).

Opinion

Barnes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellants, Dr. Robert J. Thomas and Frederick Memorial Hospital, two of the defendants below, appeal from a judgment entered on May 17, 1971, against them for $99,609.24 by the Circuit Court for Montgomery County (John P. Moore, J.) in favor of the appellees, Mida Belle Corso, as surviving spouse of Faust Q. Corso, deceased, individually and as administratrix of her deceased husband’s estate, and the five children of Mr. and Mrs. Corso. There was a verdict in favor of the remaining. appellee, Robert Lee Miller, Jr., one of the defendants below: and a judgment was entered in his favor for costs.

The principal questions on this appeal are (1) whether the trial court erred in declining to grant motions for directed verdicts and for judgments n.o.v. in favor of (a) Dr. Thomas and (b) the Hospital; (2) whether the trial court erred in its instructions to the jury in regard to alleged contributory negligence of the decedent Corso as a bar to recovery against Dr. Thomas, and (3) whether this Court should remand the case for a new trial on the issue, of liability for the introduction of additional evidence. We have concluded that the trial court did not err and that we should not remand the case for- the purpose mentioned. We will accordingly affirm the judgment.

On the evening of January 8, 1969, Corso and John R. Lyons, employees of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, attended a union meeting of the Brotherhood of Railway Carmen (AFL-CIO) at its union hall in Brunswick, Maryland. When the union meeting concluded at approximately 8:30 p.m., Corso drove his automobile with Lyons as a passenger to a social gathering of the union being held at Coates Restaurant, located on *87 Maryland Route 180, approximately two miles from the union hall. When they arrived at the restaurant, Corso discovered that the restaurant parking lot was filled to capacity and Corso parked along the side of Route 180 opposite the front of the restaurant at approximately 9:15 p.m. While at the restaurant, Lyons testified that Corso consumed shrimp and two cups of beer. The cups would hold four to five ounces of beer. After purchasing some shrimp and ice cream for his family, Corso, with Lyons, left the restaurant at approximately 10:30 p.m. to go home in the Corso automobile. When they walked outside, it was sleeting. They then crossed the road to the parked automobile and began to prepare to clear the freezing rain from the front windshield and the rear window. Lyons was standing near the left rear fender of the car and Corso was near the left front fender. Both were standing approximately two feet off the paved portions of the road. While standing there, Lyons observed an automobile approaching from the west on the side of the road where the Corso car was parked. He warned Corso of the approach of this car, and Corso acknowledged his notice of the approaching vehicle. The next thing Lyons remembered was a loud sound. He turned and saw Corso flying through the air, as if rolled up over the fender of an automobile. He then saw him down the road about 35 or 40 feet. He did not see the car actually strike Corso. The automobile was driven by the appellee, Miller, who stopped some 100 feet from the point of impact and returned to the scene of the accident. Within a few minutes, State Trooper Victor E. Wolfe arrived. Miller claimed that he saw no one on the road where the collision occurred, but heard a thump when going between 35 and 40 miles per hour, after which he came to a stop down the road. Both Trooper Wolfe and Miller testified that Corso was lying in the road some 40 feet from the Corso automobile. The thump was a loud one and left a good sized dent in the right front fender of the Miller car some two or three feet from the headlight. The aerial was also broken.

*88 When Lyons got to Corso, he found him unconscious with blood coming out of his nose and mouth. He heard that Corso had regained consciousness before the ambulance arrived. Trooper Wolfe found Corso conscious, vomiting on the highway and complaining of pain in his right hip.

The Hospital record indicates that Corso was brought to the Emergency Room at 11:10 p.m. in the Brunswick Ambulance. Miss Constance M. Halter, a registered nurse, who was on duty in the Emergency Room, checked Corso’s blood pressure, pulse and respiration. In the Emergency Room record, written by Nurse Halter, she stated: “Was hit by an automobile. Complaining of ‘numbness’ in the right anterior thigh. Does not appear deformed and is able to move the right leg. Has abrasion of the frontal scalp.” She noted, “p. 84, r. 26, B.P. 80/60.” At 11:25 p.m. the record indicates B.P., “90/60”; at 11:35 p.m., “100/60.” For treatment, she noted, “Demerol 100 mg. I.M. at 11:30 P.M., abrasion cleaned, Dr. R. J. Thomas at 11:25 P.M.” with disposition to “200 Hall 11:45 P.M.” Dr. Thomas signed the record but nothing was filled in for diagnosis. In explanation of the record, Nurse Halter explained that “I.M.” meant “intramuscularly” and that the reference to Dr. Thomas meant that she telephoned him at 11:25 p.m. to notify him of this new patient, what happened, his complaints and his vital signs. This was done because it was her duty to notify the doctor on call of any patient coming to the Emergency Room and to tell him what happened to the patient, his complaints and vital signs and then to carry out the doctor’s orders. All she knew about the collision was that Corso had been hit by an automobile and that was all she could tell Dr. Thomas about it. It had to be the doctor’s decision on whether to admit the patient. Dr. Thomas instructed Nurse Halter to admit Corso as a patient and what to have done with him, as recorded on the “Doctors’ Orders” sheet of the Hospital record. Nurse Halter denied that Dr. Thomas requested her to keep Corgo in the Emergency Room for observation, as Dr. *89 Thomas testified, and hence she had Corso admitted and transferred to 2 Main Hall at 11:45 p.m. She also denied that Dr. Thomas had asked her whether he should see Corso or that she had told Dr. Thomas that she did not think he needed to see Corso, as Dr. Thomas testified.

The Hospital has no residents or interns. The medical staff consists of private practicing physicians. From the medical staff, service is provided for the Hospital’s Emergency Room through a system of “on-call rosters.” The physicians make themselves available on a voluntary, rotating basis to treat patients who are brought to the Emergency Room. After the Emergency Room Nurse has telephoned the physician then on-call of the incoming patient’s vital signs, it is the duty of the physician to diagnose the patient’s condition, prescribe treatment and to determine whether admission to the Hospital is necessary.

Nurse Halter testified that Corso had been covered with blankets. She did not take Corso’s pulse after the initial finding of 84 because that seemed normal so that she was not concerned with it at the time. She was, however, concerned with his blood pressure as indicated by the fact that she took it every 10 minutes and admitted that her first blood pressure reading was low. She denied that she told Dr. Thomas of the blood pressure reading of 100/60 as he testified she did. Her recollection would appear to be correct in that the 100/60 reading was taken at 11:35 p.m., whereas she telephoned Dr. Thomas at 11:25 p.m. when the blood pressure reading at 11:15 p.m. was 80/60 and at 11:25 p.m.

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Bluebook (online)
288 A.2d 379, 265 Md. 84, 1972 Md. LEXIS 931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-corso-md-1972.