Wadsworth v. McRae Drug Company

28 S.E.2d 417, 203 S.C. 543, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 116
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 10, 1943
Docket15600
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 S.E.2d 417 (Wadsworth v. McRae Drug Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wadsworth v. McRae Drug Company, 28 S.E.2d 417, 203 S.C. 543, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 116 (S.C. 1943).

Opinion

Circuit Judge E. D. Eide, Acting Associate Justice,

delivered the unanimous Opinion of the Court :

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant for the sum of $2,000.00 (actual damages). The action was commenced on or about February 4, 1939, and was tried before Hon. G. B. Greene, presiding Judge, and a jury at the February, 1943, term of the Court of Common Pleas for Chesterfield County.

The complaint alleges that the defendant, a South Carolina corporation, engaged in the operation of a retail drug store at Chesterfield, by reason of the action of its drug clerk in putting drops of an alleged “injurious liquid” in plaintiff’s left eye, caused the total destruction of the sight thereof and *545 the impairment of the sight of his other eye. It is further alleged that the action complained of was negligent and willful, and the prayer of the complaint is for the sum of $50,000.00 damages. The amended answer of the defendant contains a general denial and certain special defenses.

During the course of the trial the Court overruled defendant’s motion for a nonsuit at the close of plaintiff’s testimony, and also overruled the defendant’s motion for a .directed verdict at the close of all the testimony, except that a verdict as to punitive damages was directed. (The demurrer of the defendant, raising similar questions, had been overruled just before the trial.) The case was submitted to the jury as to actual damages upon a charge by the Court to which no exception is made. And, as above stated, a verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $2,-000.00.

The exceptions of the defendant are four in number, and according to the statement in the appellant’s brief there are three questions presented as follows, each of which will be considered by us:

1. “Can a corporation be held liable for injuries resulting from medical services negligently performed ‘ by an unlicensed employee, under the circumstances disclosed in this case?”

(The phrase “unlicensed employee” evidently means that the drug clerk was not licensed to practice medicine, for it is admitted that he was a duly qualified pharmacist.)

2. “Should the trial Judge have granted defendant’s motion for a direction of verdict on the ground that the testimony fails to show a causal connection between the acts of defendant’s agent relied upon and the loss of sight sustained by the plaintiff ?

3. “Did the trial Judge err in refusing to bring into the cause as defendants the surviving directors and liquidating trustees of the defendant corporation, upon a showing that *546 the charter of said corporation had been cancelled and the property of the corporation disposed of?”

Before discussing these questions it will be well for us to take at least a glance at the high lights of the evidence. And, as would be expected, the testimony is in some respects definitely conflicting.

The plaintiff testified in his own behalf that on the night of March 18, 1938, H. H. Hickman (a drug clerk employed by the defendant corporation as its manager, and incidentally an officer of the corporation) was in the place of business of the plaintiff in Chesterfield, he and Mr. Hickman being personal friends, and that Hickman told him: “You have got a case of sore eyes. Come to the store and I will give you something that will clear them up by in the morning.” The plaintiff was in fact troubled with sore eyes, and he says that after a short time he went to the defendant’s drug store, and referring to Hickman’s conduct says: “And he prepared something or another and I paid him for it and he told me to come back and have a seat, and he took a medicine dropper and put it in my eye, and it was so painful when he put it in there until, he did not put it in my right eye, and he said, ‘I have put the wrong medicine in your eye,’ and he asked Dr. Teal'what must he do, and Dr. Teal told him to put soda in my eye. That is what occurred right there.”

Dr. Teal, who is referred to by the plaintiff, was the president of the defendant corporation and was himself a physician.

The plaintiff further testified that he spent a painful and sleepless night,- and that in a short time he entirely lost the sight of his left eye in which the drops had been put, although he immediately consulted physicians, and that he continued to suffer great pain in that eye, and that his right eye had also been affected.

He further testified that some time after this occurrence he returned to the drug store and asked Mr. Hickman what *547 it was that he had put in his eye “that put my eye out,” and that Hickman replied “that he put boric acid in my eyes.” In this connection it should be stated that boric acid admittedly would not have injured plaintiff’s eye.

In the excerpt from plaintiff’s testimony above quoted he states that he paid for the medicine, and later in his testimony says that the amount paid was a dime, that being the charge made by Hickman “for the stuff he put in my eye.”

One Arthur Davis, a person employed by the plaintiff in his filling station and grocery store, testified that he had a conversation with Mr. Hickman shortly after the occurrence in question, and that Hickman told him (quoting from the testimony) “that ‘I made a slip-up on Mr. Wadsworth’s eye.’ I said, ‘How,’ and he said, ‘I put the wrong medicine in his eyes.’ ” It appears that several doctors treated the plaintiff and that one of them testified in his behalf, and that'three others were sworn in behalf of the defendant.

Mr. Hickman testified for the defendant at length in regard to the occurrence. He admits he told the plaintiff that if he would come to the store he would give him something that would “clear them up,” referring to the plaintiff’s eyes. And he says that when the plaintiff came into the store the following took place: “The only thing he said was he had come to get something for ‘my eye,’ and I told him to come back in the prescription room and asked him to sit down, I would put some drops in his eye to clear it up, and I reached up on the shelf and got this bottle that was labeled saturated solution of boric acid.”

Mr. Hickman says that he allowed the drops to stay in plaintiff’s eye about two minutes and then looked in the eye “and saw grayish pus in the corner of his eye,” and that this was the reason why he asked Dr. Teal, who was in the store at the time, to look in the eye, and that Dr. Teal did so, and suggested that a saturated solution of soda should be used for the pus, and Hickman says that he also dropped some of that in plaintiff’s eye. He further states that he made no *548 charge whatsoever, and that plaintiff did not pay him or offer to pay him anything. And Hickman denies the statement of plaintiff and his witness, Davis, to the effect that he admitted he had used the wrong medicine.

It also appears from the testimony of Mr. Hickman that the third day after the occurrence in question he poured down the sink the remainder of the liquid contained in the bottle which he says was labeled boric acid and from which he administered the drops in plaintiff’s eye.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Baird v. Charleston County
511 S.E.2d 69 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 S.E.2d 417, 203 S.C. 543, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wadsworth-v-mcrae-drug-company-sc-1943.