Von Eye v. Hammes

147 F. Supp. 174, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4097
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedAugust 10, 1956
DocketCiv. 2841
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 147 F. Supp. 174 (Von Eye v. Hammes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Von Eye v. Hammes, 147 F. Supp. 174, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4097 (mnd 1956).

Opinion

DONOVAN, District Judge.

This tort action to recover, damages for' personal injuries sustained by and resulting in disability to plaintiff is now before the Court on alternative motion by defendant Mounds Park Hospital for judgment notwithstanding the verdict returned for plaintiff in the sum of $39,-380, or for a new trial;

Seeking to vaeáte the judgment, defendant contends:

1. The verdict and the judgment entered thereon are contrary to the evidence ; .

2. The judgment is contrary to law; *176 3. The trial court erred in certain rulings and instructions.

A verdict was directed by the Court on motion therefor by the defendant doctors. The defendant Mounds Park Hospital was the only remaining defendant, and for convenience the present parties to the instant case will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant.

Discussion of defendant’s points made in support of the alternative motion will be in the order above set forth.

1. Is the verdict and judgment contrary to the evidence?

Defendant, urging this point, thereby challenges the weight and sufficiency of the evidence as a basis for the verdict; hence a summarizing of the facts is in order.

At the time it was determined that a neurological examination and diagnosis of plaintiff by competent neurologists was indicated, plaintiff resided with her husband and their three children (five, four and two years of age at trial) on a farm at Miller, South Dakota. She described her condition before hospitalization in this manner:

“I would get depressions. I would cry. * * * I would wander around, not knowing much what I was doing. * * * I had no perspective. * * *. I felt like killing myself. * * * I took the kids away in the truck. I had blackouts. * * * I didn’t have them adequately dressed. * * * Well, it was chilly weather, * * *. I put them in the truck and drove for miles. * * * They were crying terrible.”

Plaintiff’s sister, Frances Rydel, was a registered nurse employed part time at defendant’s hospital, in the City of St. Paul, Minnesota. It was decided that plaintiff, accompanied by her mother, would journey to St. Paul to seek her sister’s advice. The sister arranged for plaintiff to meet Dr. Hammes, Sr., at defendant’s hospital. A history and examination was made by defendant doctors who were specialists in “nervous and mental diseases”, on October 12, 1954, and she was assigned (quoting the testimony of Dr. Hammes, Sr.):

“to a room [in] the open ward where we have nervous and mental patients. * * * There is a closed ward where the very disturbed patients are kept. * * * That is what we might call the exclusively psychiatric ward. * * * She [plaintiff] had the same kind of a room that every patient had on the second floor where the window is barred. * * * [I gave orders as to what privileges plaintiff might have] after I reviewed the history * * * and after I had examined her.
* * * * * *
“My diagnosis was a schizophrenia with paranoid tendencies * * *. A schizophrenia is a mental disorder occurring more frequently in young people, which is commonly known to the laity as a split personality. Those patients frequently develop delusions, hallucinations of sight and hearing, and if they manifest persecutory ideas, like this patient had, we call them schizophrenia with paranoid tendencies. Sometimes these patients go into what we call a catatonic stupor, so that they lie in bed and have their eyes closed and are resistive and have to be tube fed and sometimes water has to be drawn, which is just one phase of the schiz-. ophrenia.
******
“And on the 5th of November I ordered the electric shock treatment ■ — that was the only one that she had — and I said if patient is willing to take it; and also ordered her to sit in the sun parlor an hour in the forenoon and the afternoon because she felt her restrictions, and I thought it would help her to have a little more activity by walking out into the sun parlor and sitting there and visiting with other patients. And an order like that did not mean *177 that she needed a nurse, She could go out there alone.
******
“Deciding whether a patient should go in an open ward or a closed ward, regardless of the type of mental illness they have, depends entirely upon the character of the sick ideas that they have, any manifestation of suicidal tendencies, danger to harm themselves, or disturbances, so that it disturbs other patients, in the other rooms, and reactions of that type. If a schizophrenic has those tendencies, or shows disturbed states, or has to be fed with a tube because they will not eat, those people should be placed in the closed ward. But the average cooperative patient who controls himself well, in my opinion they are safe in the open ward.
******
“Q. Why did you not order this plaintiff put in restraints ? A. Because there was no need of it.
“Q. And will you give us why you came to that conclusion? A. She — neither in her history as given by her and by her sister was there any evidence of any tendencies that she might harm herself or might harm others. From the day that she came into the hospital she was a cooperative patient. She did what we asked her to do. She had these distressing ideas, which at times dominated her, but never to the point where we felt that there was any danger that she might either harm herself or harm anybody else.
******
“Q. So far as you now know from all sources, were all of the orders of you attending physicians, the three of you, carried out by the hospital? A. As far as I know, all the orders that were written by my son and by Dr. Norman and myself were carried out”. 1

The attending physician testified that it was up to the nurses to see that plaintiff did not leave her room. 2 On October 22, 1954, her attending physician testified plaintiff “seemed suspicious. Wants door closed tightly because some one might be listening outside. * * * Deep insulin shock” was prescribed on October 29th and on November 1st the attending physician ordered “no insulin until further orders.” By November 5th she appeared hostile. 3 On November 5th Dr. Hammes, Sr., ordered “an elec *178 tric shock treatment in the morning if patient is willing to take them. * * * May sit in sun parlor one hour in the forenoon and in the afternoon * * * [and] they usually are allowed to go to the bath room.”

Dr. Hammes, Sr., and his associates, Dr. Hammes, Jr., and Dr. Norman conferred and discussed plaintiff’s case. As part of the standard treatment nurse Frances Rydel was requested not to attend plaintiff on account of her being plaintiff’s sister, and in that respect quotes the attending physician as saying:

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Bluebook (online)
147 F. Supp. 174, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/von-eye-v-hammes-mnd-1956.