Vaughan v. Memorial Hospital

130 S.E. 481, 100 W. Va. 290, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 247
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1925
Docket5394
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 130 S.E. 481 (Vaughan v. Memorial 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
Vaughan v. Memorial Hospital, 130 S.E. 481, 100 W. Va. 290, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 247 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

Prom an order of the circuit court of Mercer county setting aside a verdict for the plaintiff and. awarding defendant a new trial, the plaintiff prosecutes this writ of error.

On April 5, 1923, plaintiff, W. A. Vaughan, a coal miner, by reason of a fall of slate and coal, sustained an injury to *292 his right foot' — two bones near the first and second joint of the second and third toes being broken. On April 7th he was taken to Memorial Hospital, defendant, for treatment, under whose care he remained until discharged some weeks later. During said period of treatment his foot and ankle were encased first in a wire cast, then a plaster of paris cast. The latter was worn until it became loose, by reason of the swelling in the injured member having subsided, when a second plaster of paris cast was made. These casts, according to plaintiff, did not extend out beyond the broken parts of the foot. After discharge from treatment, plaintiff’s foot became swollen, accompanied lOy severe pain. He consulted a doctor at Matoka, who made an X-ray examination, disclosing the fact that the bones were not knitted. He later came to Charleston, where the bones were removed.

The first ground of defense urged by the counsel for the defendant hospital is that it is not responsible for any default on the part of the physicians Todd and Rixey, they being independent agents; that, if this defense fails, there was no negligence in the diagnosis and treatment of the plaintiff’s injury by said physicians. .

A hospital incorporated and conducted for private gain, for the benefit of its stockholders, is liable in damages to its patients for negligence or misconduct of its officers and employees. Jenkins v. Charleston General Hospital & Training School, 90 W. Va. 230; Hogan v. Hospital Co., 63 W. Va. 84; Brown v. La Societe Francaise, 138 Cal. 475; Railroad Co. v. Wood, 95 Tex. 223; 13 R. C. L. 949. The purely private character of the defendant is practically admitted; the certificate of incorporation under the laws of West Virginia being in evidence in the case. The capital invested is like capital invested in any other corporation conducted for profit. In its contracts it stands upon the same basis as any other contractor, and, as to employees and third persons, it is subject to the same general rule, respondeat superior. Jenkins v. Hospital, supra. The plaintiff and defendant were brought into relation with each other through the agency of the employer of the former, the Weyanoke Coal & Coke Company. There he received the surgical and medical care to which he *293 was entitled under tbe rules and regulations of tbe State Compensation Commissioner, tbe expense of sucb treatment and care to be paid out of tbe Workmen’s Compensation Fund. Tbe application (Form C. D. 12) to tbe State Compensation Commissioner for payment of said medical, surgical and hospital treatment afforded plaintiff was rendered in the name' of tbe defendant. It included the item for tbe operation on tbe plaintiff’s foot by tbe physicians Todd and Rixey. It appeared in evidence that said doctors are tbe managers of the defendant hospital; that tbe X-ray machine used in the hospital for examination of this plaintiff’s injury was the property of the institution. Under these conditions, the authorities cited hold that the said defendant cannot absolve itself from the obligation it owed to the plaintiff patient to furnish him proper treatment, on the claim that the physicians who treated him, at its instance, were independent contractors. In view of this, the court erred in submitting the question of whether the medical and surgical treatment was rendered the plaintiff by the physicians on their own account to the jury, in instruction number three, given to the jury at the instance of the defendant. It was likewise error to refuse instruction number one requested by the plaintiff, which told the jury that a hospital incorporated and conducted for private gain or the benefit of its stockholders is liable in damages to its patients for negligence or misconduct of its officers and employees.

It is settled law in this state in this class of cases that a physician or surgeon is bound to bestow such reasonable and ordinary care, skill and diligence as physicians and surgeons in the same general line of practice ordinarily have and exercise in like cases, time and locality being taken into consideration; and that a physician is bound to exercise the average degree of skill possessed by the profession in such locality. This holding is in accord with the great weight of authority elsewhere. We think it may be said to be the generally accepted doctrine that a physician is not required to exercise the' highest degree of care or skill and diligence possible, in the treatment of an injury, or disease, unless he has by special contract agreed to do so. In the absence of *294 suck special contract, he is only required to exercise such reasonable and ordinary skill and diligence as are ordinarily possessed and exercised by the average of the members of the profession in good standing, in similar localities and in the same general line of practice, regard being had .to the state of medical science at the time. Dye v. Corbin, 59 W. Va. 266; Lawson v. Conaway, 37 W. Va. 159; Kuhn v. Broomfield, 34 W. Va. 252; 3 Wharton & Stille’s Med. Juris. (5th Ed.) Sec. 473; Gramm v. Boenar, 56 Ind. 497; Small v. Howard, 128 Mass. 131; Hathorn v. Richmond, 48 Vt. 557; Pelky v. Palmer, 109 Mich. 561. The general rule just stated, however, does not make the physician in any sense a warrantor or insurer of the success of his treatment, in the absence of a special contract to that effect. Lawson v. Conaway, supra; Kuhn v. Broomfield, supra. The following quotation from Judge (now Chief Justice) Taft, in Ewing v. Goode, (C. C.) 78 Fed. 442, is apropos here: “A physician is not a warrantor of cures. If the maxim ‘res ipsa loquitur’ were applicable * * '* and a failure to cure were held to be evidence, however slight, of negligence on the part of the physician or surgeon causing the bad result, few would be courageous enough to practice the healing art, for they would have to assume financial liability for nearly all the ‘ills that flesh is heir to.’ ”

Instructions numbers two and three of the plaintiff and number one of the court, embodied the foregoing principles of law, and were properly given to the jury as the law of the case. Instruction number four offered by the plaintiff was properly refused. It would have told the jury in effect that the physician was responsible for an error of judgment, without qualification, in the treatment of the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.E. 481, 100 W. Va. 290, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughan-v-memorial-hospital-wva-1925.