Welsh v. Mercy Hospital

151 P.2d 17, 65 Cal. App. 2d 473, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 731
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 14, 1944
DocketCiv. 7041
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 151 P.2d 17 (Welsh v. Mercy Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welsh v. Mercy Hospital, 151 P.2d 17, 65 Cal. App. 2d 473, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 731 (Cal. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.—

The plaintiff was a patient in the Mercy Hospital in Sacramento. While a nurse was lowering the bed in which the patient was reclining, by means of a mechanical device attached to the frame of the bed, the plaintiff extended her right arm and unwittingly placed her hand beneath the metal bar as it descended, crushing her third finger. The plaintiff was not familiar with that contrivance and the nurse, who observed her extending her arm, failed to warn her of the danger. The cause was tried by the court sitting without a jury. Findings were adopted favorable to the plaintiff. A judgment was rendered against the hospital for negligence in the sum of $3,686.35. From that judgment this appeal was perfected.

The appellant contends- that the findings and judgment are not supported by the evidence; that the record shows as a matter of law that neither the hospital nor its nurse was *476 guilty of negligence which was the proximate cause of the injury, and that, on the contrary, the plaintiff’s injury was due solely to her own contributory negligence. It is also asserted that the appellant was deprived of a fair and impartial trial by refusal of the court to continue the trial so as to permit the presence of the nurse as a witness. The deposition of the nurse was received in evidence.

The plaintiff, Lyda Welsh, who was a woman 65 years of age, became a patient at the Mercy Hospital in Sacramento on May 27, 1942. She was assigned to a hospital bed in room number 350. The head of the bed was adjacent to the wall of her room. A small table stood near the head of the bed on her left hand side. To the metal frame of the bed there was attached a mechanical device which was operated by hand for the purpose of- raising or lowering the bed upon which the patient reclined. The device is equipped with a steel bar which enters a groove along the side of the metal frame of the bed. That lever or bar is ordinarily concealed from the view of the occupant of the bed by the mattress and bedclothes. The plaintiff testified in that regard: ‘ ‘ Q. Was there any part of the mechanism that showed itself or protruded up that you could see? A. No.” The plaintiff had no previous knowledge of the danger or the manner in which that mechanical device was operated. She so testified. It is true that the head of the bed was raised on one occasion while she was a patient in the hospital, but she paid no attention to that operation and knew nothing of its arrangement or danger. In response to the question “What attention did you pay to that?”, she replied, “I did not pay any.”

A minor operation was performed on the plaintiff the night before the accident occurred. On the evening of May 29th, just prior to the accident, the head of plaintiff’s bed was elevated. Miss Katherine Riley was a trained and registered nurse who had been employed by the appellant for several years. She fully understood the character and danger of the bed adjusting device which caused the accident. She was assigned as plaintiff’s nurse. When she entered room 350, at about 11 o’clock p. m. on May 2'9th, Mrs. Welsh asked her to lower the bed so that she could go to sleep. In compliance with that request the nurse went to the head of the bed on plaintiff’s left side, standing between the bed and the *477 little table, facing the wall, and without warning plaintiff of the danger, she proceeded to lower the bed. The nurse said, in her deposition, that:

“I grasped the head of the bed, the frame of the bed, with my left hand, and I picked up the piece that comes out of the groove with my right, and in this way I had to turn my back to her slightly; . . . After I had started to raise the bed out of the groove, she turned over more towards her right side and reached down with her right hand towards the— I thought at the time,—the table at the side of the bed. . . . She told me after the accident that she had meant to help. . . . She apparently caught the tip of her finger between the middle edge of the bed, the mattress ring and the middle edge of the main part of the bed, as it was lowered, or in the bar that comes down into the groove. . . . She pulled her hand out as the bed was just about this far up (indicating). That is why I believe it was the bed metal on the mattress and the bar that goes down into the groove, which would form kind of a ‘V’ going down and would be narrower. . . . She got back on her elbow, put her hand down like this (indicating), it would be just about even or a little below her shoulder, and she was sitting up in the bed. . . . When I noticed her I believed at the time she was reaching towards something on the side table.”

It will be observed from the preceding quoted evidence of the nurse that she saw the plaintiff extending her right arm over the edge of the bed. She said “After I had started to raise the bed out of the groove, she turned over more towards her right side and reached down with her right hand.” Yet the nurse failed to warn the plaintiff of the danger of placing her fingers under the descending lever or bar.

The following morning, in the presence of the nurse and a student nurse of the hospital, the plaintiff said, 1 ‘ She realized it was not my fault, or she didn’t blame me, or one or the other of those statements.” In explanation of that statement the plaintiff testified: “She [the nurse] was terribly distressed. I felt sorry for her, and I was afraid she might lose her job. ... I knew she didn’t mean to do it.”

As a result of the accident the end of plaintiff’s finger was amputated. That operation was followed by infection, “considerable disuse of the finger on the end, and a definite loss *478 of power in that hand. . . . There was secondary infection,” and the possible necessity of “the removal of the additional portion of the finger.” The plaintiff suffered great pain.

The evidence does not appear to be conflicting to any material extent. The court found that plaintiff’s injuries resulted proximately from the negligence of the appellant and its nurse in carelessly lowering the head of the bed without warning the patient of the danger of the mechanical device, and that “plaintiff was free of any fault or negligence.” From the judgment which was accordingly rendered in favor of the plaintiff, this appeal was perfected.

We are of the opinion the findings and judgment are adequately supported by the evidence. As a patient who paid for her treatment and care in the Mercy Hospital, the plaintiff was an invitee toward whom the hospital was required to exercise ordinary care in providing a bed and attached devices reasonably safe and free from danger. (Mautino v. Sutter Hospital Association, 211 Cal. 556 [296 P. 76].) While it is true the owners of the hospital are not insurers of the safety of its patients, it nevertheless owes them the duty to exercise ordinary care to see that the premises and equipment are in safe condition. It is also true that there is ordinarily no liability for injuries received from defects or dangers which are obvious and known to the injured person, and which may be avoided by the exercise of reasonable prudence on his part. (Mautino v. Sutter Hospital Association, supra.) As the caption to an elaborate note found in 22 American Law Eeports, at page 341, says,

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Bluebook (online)
151 P.2d 17, 65 Cal. App. 2d 473, 1944 Cal. App. LEXIS 731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welsh-v-mercy-hospital-calctapp-1944.