Tocchetti v. Cyril & Julia C. Johnson Memorial Hospital, Inc.

36 A.2d 381, 130 Conn. 623, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 207
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 10, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 36 A.2d 381 (Tocchetti v. Cyril & Julia C. Johnson Memorial Hospital, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tocchetti v. Cyril & Julia C. Johnson Memorial Hospital, Inc., 36 A.2d 381, 130 Conn. 623, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 207 (Colo. 1944).

Opinion

Ells, J.

This is an action for damages for the death of the plaintiff's intestate, a baby, allegedly caused by the negligence of the defendant hospital, a charitable corporation, in using faulty, worn out, defective and discarded equipment, in failing to inspect the equipment, and in using a hot-water bag it knew to be defective. The defendant filed a general denial, and pleaded charitable immunity in a special defense. There was a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff has appealed, claiming errors in the charge.

The principal facts are not in dispute. The baby was born at the hospital on May 26,1942. In the early morning of June 5 an experienced graduate nurse, who had been in charge of the nursery for eleven years, noticed that the nursery seemed cold, and attempted to use an auxiliary electric heater provided for the purpose of giving additional heat when needed, but found it to be out of order. She then obtained a hot-water bag which was hanging on a nail in the utility closet across the hall from the nursery. The closet was lighted by a 25-watt electric light bulb. Although she did not notice it at the time, the bag had a v-shaped tear at least an inch long in the upper third, on the fiat surface, of it. She partially filled the bag with hot water, none of which escaped while the bag was in her hands. She squeezed and crumpled that portion of the bag which was not filled with water, in order to expel the air therefrom, and then inserted the stopper and placed the bag at the foot of the baby's bassinet. The hot water leaked out of the hole, severely burning the baby, and as a result she died on June 9 of toxemia or poisoning from the burns. *625 About two weeks prior to June 5 a nurse in the employ of the hospital had found this bag, in the same defective condition, in the same utility closet, and, knowing that the bag was beyond repair and unfit for normal use, she threw it into a trash can in the closet without otherwise destroying it, and without replacing it.

The defendant is a public charitable corporation. Its hospital rules do not contain specific regulations concerning the furnishing, maintenance or use of small equipment and supplies for hospital purposes, or any detailed rules concerning the inspection thereof or the destruction of faulty equipment. It has a board of trustees, and an executive committee consisting of three trustees which has general charge of the internal affairs of the hospital under authority conferred by the trustees. This committee has not formulated detailed rules concerning the purchase, maintenance and supply of small equipment, the inspection of it at regular intervals, or the destruction of faulty equipment. The duty of purchasing such equipment was left to the superintendent, whose competency is not in question. It was the custom and practice of the superintendent, and, under her, the nurses, to attend to the caring for and inspection of the smaller items of medical equipment, including hot-water bags. After the original acquisition, it was left to the particular nurse who happened to use a hot-water bag to inspect it before using it. It was also the custom and practice of the defendant hospital to allow the superintendent, and, under her, the nurses, to discard such defective equipment not reasonably susceptible of repair, when found by them, and to replace it. The hospital had no specific rule for the destruction of defective equipment.

The defendant’s claims of proof as to the matters involved in this appeal are essentially the same as stated *626 above, except that the hospital rules followed the ordinary and usual custom obtaining in hospitals generally, and that hdspitals customarily do not provide for routine inspection of small equipment, for the reason that doctors and nurses are trained not to rely on the inspection of another person but rather to make their-own inspection at the time they use each piece of equipment. -■

There is no claim of proof that perfect hot-water bags were not available to the nurse on the morning in question. .

It has long been the law of this state that a public charitable hospital is not liable for injuries sustained by a patient as- a result of the négligent conduct of physicians and nurses employed by it, in the selection of'whom it exercised due care. Hearns v. Waterbury Hospital, 66 Conn. 98, 123, 33 Atl. 595. In Cohen v. General Hospital Society, 113 Conn. 188, 198, 154 Atl. 435, we- said that the Hearns deoision was in accord with the great weight of authority both in England and this country, but held that, where the plaintiff was not a patient of the hospital but at most an invitee who had gone there to take a patient home, the defendant hospital owed him the duty which any landowner owes to an invitee who comes- upon the premises. In Cashman v. Meriden Hospital, 117 Conn. 585, 587, 169 Atl. 915, we were asked to reconsider the position we took in the Hearns case. We said: “The courts are practically agreed that a charitable institution is not respbnsible to those who avail themselves of its benefits for any injuries that may be sustained through the negligence or torts of its managers, agents and servants.” We repeated this statement in Boardman v. Burlingame, 123 Conn. 646, 653, 197 Atl. 761.

It is apparent that if there was negligence in the instant case, but the negligence was that of a nurse *627 or of the superintendent, the plaintiff cannot recover damages from the defendant hospital. The plaintiff claims, however, that the complaint alleges, and the claims of proof tend to prove, (1) administrative negligence in failing to supply, maintain and use suitable equipment, as distinguished from liability for the negligent conduct of nurses or doctors in the administration of personal attention to patients; and (2) the negligent performance or nonperformance by a nurse of a nondelegable duty of the hospital corporation, as distinguished from negligent performance of a nurse’s own duty as such. This distinction is well illustrated by comparison between the Cashman case, supra, and this one. In each the injury arose from a hot-water bag, but in the former the claimed delict was the use of water which was too hot, but contained in a serviceable bag, while here it is the maintenance and provision for use, by the corporation, of a defective bag, which leaked and caused the injury.

Error is assigned only in that the court’s instructions concerning these claims were inadequate and incorrect in law. The court accurately stated the claims of negligence contained in the complaint and then instructed the jury that the defendant was not liable for any personal negligence of a doctor or nurse or superintendent, and that the jury must consider only the question whether the plaintiff had proven what is called “corporate” negligence in one or more of the ways alleged in the complaint. It defined personal negligence as an act of negligence done on the person’s own responsibility and of his own motion, as distinguished from an act, even though negligent, done by, because of, and in conformity to, the direction of the board of trustees or the executive committee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 A.2d 381, 130 Conn. 623, 1944 Conn. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tocchetti-v-cyril-julia-c-johnson-memorial-hospital-inc-conn-1944.