University of Louisville v. Hammock

106 S.W. 219, 127 Ky. 564, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 17, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 219 (University of Louisville v. Hammock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
University of Louisville v. Hammock, 106 S.W. 219, 127 Ky. 564, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 160 (Ky. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Settle

Affirming.

The appellee, Addie Hammock, recovered a verdict and judgment'for $1,000. damages in-the court below against the appellant, University of Louisville, .for [566]*566injuries to her person alleged to have been received while a patient in its infirmary at the hands of a demented or partially demented patient of the same institution, who, it was charged, had negligently been permitted to escape from his room and keeper, wander into that of -appellee, and assault her and maltreat her.

Failing to obtain in the lower conrt a new trial, appellant asks of this court a reversal of the judgment- in quéstion upon three grounds: (1) That it was not sued in its true corporate name; (2) that no negligence was shown, and that the verdict returned by the jury was contrary to law and flagrantly against the evidence; (3) that appellant is a charitable institution and by reason thereof exempt from liability for the torts of its agents or servants.

As to the first proposition, little need be said. Obviously . appellant was sued and judgment recovered against it as the “University of Louisville,” when its true corporate name was and is the ‘ ‘ President and Trustees of the University of Louisville,” but the misnomer cannot be objected to for the first time on appeal. It should have been made in the circuit court by answer or affidavit in the nature of a plea in abatement, setting forth the misnomer and disclosing the true name of the defendant. When this is done, the plaintiff may amend his petition, and then proceed against the defendant in his true name, L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Hall, 12 Bush, 131; Teets v. Snider Heading Mfg. Co., 120 Ky. 653, 87 S. W. 803, 27 Ky. Law Rep. 1061; Pike, Morgan & Co. v. Wathen, 78 S. W. 137, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1264; 14 Ency. of Plead. & Prac. 295. The record shows that the corporation sued was the same corporation that owned and Controlled the hospital in which appellee sus[567]*567tained her injuries; and, as it failed to object in the circuit court to the improper corporate name given it or to disclose its true corporate name and there made defense on the merits, it is estopped to complain that judgment went against it in the name by which it was sued.

In our opinion the second contention of appellant is equally without merit. There was testimony conducing to prove negligence on the' part of appellant and its employes in charge of the hospital, and that such negligence was the proximate cause of appellee’s injuries. The facts, as disclosed' by the evideneé, wefe, in substance, that appellee, a married woman, who was laboring under a serious illness, a*nd greatly prostrated thereby, had placed herself in the hospital at the instance of her physician. She was a pay patient, and had the right to expect of appellant and its employes in charge? of the institution careful and skillful nursing and treatment such as her case particularly required. Indeed, the sick leave their homes and enter hospitals because of the superior treatment there promised them. On the day after appellee entered the hospital, its manager received as an inmate thereof a patient known as Dr. Meador, who was at the time afflicted with delirium tremens, a disease resulting from the excessive, habitual 'use of intoxicating liquors. This patient was placed in a room of the hospital on the floor beneath that occupied by appellee. At 10 p. m. of the same day Meador became so uncontrollable that he overawed the single female nurse in whose eharg’e he had been left, and, escaping from his room, passed through the hall of the building and upstairs, talking in a loud voice and using profane language. Upon reaching the upper floor, he entered the room [568]*568occupied by appellee, .and approaching the bed where she was lying, seized her by the arms, struck and bruised her person, ,and dragged her from the bed, to her great fright and injury, Meador was finally captured, removed frqm the room, and securely tied by two nurses with the assistance of a negro porter, and a little later was returned to and confined in his own room. Whatever. may have been his condition at other times, Meador, according to the evidence, was manifestly violent, uncontrollable, and delirious, if not actually crazy, when he .escaped from his room and entered .that of appellee and assaulted her. He was a large man of more than 200 pounds weight and great physical strength. Howard, the negro porter, admitted that he was .physically unable to cope with him without assistance. The fact that physicians had disagnosed Meador’s case as delirium tremens before he entered the- hospital, and that such was his disease when received. there, was known to one, of the.physicians in charge of the hospital, to its head nurse, Miss Parsons, and two other nurses of. the. institution, one of whom was Miss Zeigier, from whose custody he escaped just before appellee was assaulted by him. One of the nurses admitted that sh&.yms directed by Meador’s physician not to make, an entry on the hospital chart of liis true malady, and this direction she, obeyed, thereby concealing the fact that the patient was afflicted with delirium.tremens. Whether Meador manifested a disposition to, become. violent between the time of his admission to the hospital .and the time of his breaking away from the nurse does not definitely, appear from the evidence, but his disease being known, as it was, to a physician of the .institution, its head nurse, and two of her assistants, when Meador was received, [569]*569and their further knowledge, especially that of the physician, that a person so afflicted might reasonably be expected to become violent, uncontrollable, and dangerous at any time, ought to have induced them to take such reasonable precautions with reference to his control or confinement as would have prevented his inflicting injury upon other inmates of the hospital. Yet this powerful man, crazed from the excessive use of spirituous liquors, and by reason of that fact uncontrollable and dangerous, was left in an insecure apartment and in charge of a single woman, who. was utterly powerless to restrain him. Under these circumstances, it would seem to a reasonable mind that what happened was to have been expected, if not inevitable. There was therefore some evidence of negligence to go to the jury, and, in the light of that evidence, we do not feel called upon to declare' that the verdict finding appellant guilty of negligence was unauthorized. It cannot be denied that the attack made by Meador upon appellee was disastrous to her. If we accept her version of tlie matter, and it is not materially contradicted, the only wonder is that, in her physically, weak and nervous condition, she was not frightened to death "by the cries arid violence of the madman. Much of the testimony went to show, not only that her illness was immediately and greatly aggravated, but that her health was, to some extent at least, permanently impaired thereby. In view of these facts, the amount recovered cannot be regarded excessive.

Appellant’s third contention, that it is a charitable, institution and by reason thereof exempt from liability for the negligence of its servants, is in conflict with more than one decision of this court. The hospital in which appellee received the injuries com[570]*570plained of is an adjunct of the appellant’s school of medicine, known- as the “University of Louisville,” and is maintained principally because of the advantages it affords to the students and professors of that institution.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 219, 127 Ky. 564, 1907 Ky. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/university-of-louisville-v-hammock-kyctapp-1907.