Walls v. Boyett

226 S.W.2d 552, 216 Ark. 541, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 572
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 6, 1950
Docket4-9079
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 226 S.W.2d 552 (Walls v. Boyett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walls v. Boyett, 226 S.W.2d 552, 216 Ark. 541, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 572 (Ark. 1950).

Opinion

Minor. W. Millwee, Justice.

Mrs. Dorothy Bell Schultz was critically injured in an automobile accident in or near the City of Blytheville, Arkansas, about 2:00 a. m. January 5, 1946, and died nine days later. The car in which she was riding at the time with some other young people was being driven by her “date,” Raymond Crawford. Mrs. Schultz was taken to Walls Hospital, which is owned and operated by appellant, Dr. J. M. Walls, in the City of Blytheville. She remained at the Walls Hospital until two days before her death, when she was removed to another hospital.

Appellee, Ethel Boyett, mother of Mrs. Schultz, qualified as administratrix of her daughter’s estate and brought suit against Raymond Crawford, driver of the automobile, Tra Crawford, owner of the car, appellant, J. M. Walls, as owner of Walls Hospital, and Virgil Walls, business manager of said hospital. The complaint charged that the negligence of Raymond Crawford in the operation of the automobile, coupled with the negligent acts and lack” of proper attention and treatment by appellant, Dr. J. M. Walls, resulted in the death of Mrs. Schultz. Dr. Walls and Virgil Walls were also charged with false imprisonment by refusing to permit Mrs. Schultz to be removed to another hospital.

At the time of submission of the ca.se to the jury all defendants and issues in the case had -been eliminated bv demurrer, or other pleadings, except the charge against appellant for alleged negligence in the treatment' and attention given deceased while a patient in the hospital. The liability of appellant for damages was limited by the able trial judge to compensation to deceased’s estate for conscious pain and mental suffering, if any, sustained by deceased as the result of the negligent conduct of the appellant. In this connection the jury was instructed that there was no testimony showing that appellant was in any way responsible for the death of Mrs. Schultz, and that the burden was upon appellee not only to show that appellant or the hospital attendants were negligent in the treatment and attention given, but also to prove that damages resulted from such negligence.

The jury returned a nine to three verdict in appellee’s favor for $500. On this appeal from the judgment rendered on the verdict, appellant has abandoned all assignments of error except those which assert that the evidence was insufficient for submission of the case to the jury and that the trial court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for appellant. There is no cross-appeal.

Appellee alleged in her complaint that when her daughter was taken to appellant’s hospital, she was placed in a corridor open to the public gaze where she remained until the eighth day without medical treatment except for occasional hypodermics.

Mrs. Schultz was admitted to Walls Hospital about an hour after the accident. The hospital was crowded and there was no regular room available. Mrs. Schultz was placed upon a metal folding cot in a room which had formerly been used as a doctors’ dressing room and lounge. She was removed to a private room and placed on a regular hospital bed when such room became available two days later.

According to the testimony of appellant, which appears to be undisputed, Mrs. Schultz was suffering from a fractured skull, a massive brain hemorrhage, broken back, partly severed spinal cord, fractured right arm and paralysis from her shoulders down. She had three lacerations across one side of her throat exposing the jugular veins with the small jugular severed and her tongue was cut almost in two. She also had one collapsed lung as a result ol previous tubercular trouble. Appellant and the surgical nurse were summoned upon Mrs. Schultz’s arrival at the hospital. Appellant, with the nurses’ assistance, sutured the lacerations, reduced the fractured arm by application of a plaster splint, administered tetanus antitoxin and sedatives and removed broken glass from several parts of the patient’s body. The next morning appellant noticed the development of pneumonia which was soon cleared up by penicillin shots.

Appellee and her sister remained with her daughter most of the time while she was in the hospital. In her testimony appellee made numerous charges of mistreatment and inattention. Many of these were in the nature of conclusions of a worried and distraught mother and were shown upon her own cross-examination to be without substantial basis in fact. She testified that her daughter was placed upon a cot without a mattress; that she was not properly washed and bathed; that appellant should have operated on her head; that there was no need for the plaster cast on her arm; that X-rays should have been made; that the patient had no bowel movement; that she was not fed; and that she was neglected generally by attendant nurses. On cross-examination, she stated that she was not making any criticism of appellant for putting a cast on deceased’s arm; that the nurses would come in and give deceased shots and take her temperature; that she was given glucose and penicillin shots, which cured the pneumonia; and that they tried to give her epsom salts through her nose but she would not take it.

Slie further testified on cross-examination: “Q. Yon have told ns though they hadn’t done anything— A. He hadn’t. Q. But yon are charging him with— A. I ain’t charging him with nothing. He’se over the nurses. He had them doing the things. He got mad because I got a room — that would be the truth. He couldn’t take it. He just went right out and didn’t say a word. Q. Yet they were there working with your daughter, trying to help her? A. After he had seen it. That’s all I could say. Q. But you forgot to tell us they had done that? A. No, sir; I didn’t forget.' Yon just didn’t ask me. You forgot to ask me that. I know everything they done. Q. Are you remembering the fact that penicillin was given repeatedly? A. They gave her about two shots of it. They said they done had it broke. Q. And if they gave more than two shots of penicillin you have forgotten it then? A. No. That’s the onliest time they give her anything, unless she got to hollering so loud. Then they would come in and give her a hypo. Q. If the doctor were to tell you that repeated hypodermics, taken in your daughter’s condition, would be dangerous to her recovery, would you believe that? A. They ought to know what they are doing, but they really gave her them. Q. I thought you were objecting because they didn’t give them often enough. A. Didn’t give what often enough? Q. Didn’t give her hypodermics often enough. A. No, I didn’t object because they didn’t give them often enough. I didn’t object to that. It looks like they could have given her something besides a shot. If they had just done something, tried to get her better, or take any interest in her. Mr. Reid, it was the interest part. They didn’t take any more interest in her, no more than if she had been a hog. Q. You mean giving her hypos they didn’t take any interest in her? A. I didn’t think the nurse should give her a s*hot and then walk on out. I didn’t reject nothing — anything they done. Not one thing. Q. And in giving her the glucose they were not taking an interest in her? A. If they had only tried to do something for her. I knew she needed it. I had to take so much myself. She was starving to death.

“Q. Tell me just exactly now what is your criticism? What did they do, or didn’t do, to your daughter that you complain of? A. Mr. Reid, I can’t even tell you how that was — how they were to me.

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Bluebook (online)
226 S.W.2d 552, 216 Ark. 541, 1950 Ark. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walls-v-boyett-ark-1950.