Covington ex rel. Covington v. Wyatt

'.Adams, J.

The ground of the relief sought by the plaintiff is the defendant’s disregard of certain statutes, alleged-.- to be mandatory, contained in chapter 118, Art. 14, of Consolidated Statutes. This article, entitled “Inflammation of Eyes of Newborn,” is a transcript of the Public Laws 1917, ch. 257. Such “inflammation” is defined in C. S., 7180; and in section 7181 it is provided that any person attendant on or in any way assisting an infant or the mother of an infant at childbirth, or at any time within two weeks'after childbirth, knowing the condition, shall make réport thereof to the local health officer. Section 7182 declares it unlawful for any physician or midwife practicing' midwifery to neglect or otherwise fail to instill or have instilled into the eyes of a newborn babe, immediately upon its birth, two drops of a solution prescribed or furnished by the State Board of Health. The solution prescribed contains one per cent of silver nitrate. The duties of the local health officer and of the State Board of Health are set forth in sections 7183 and-7184. Section 7185, deals with the treatment of patients in hospitals and institutions: “It shall be the duty of physicians, midwives, or other persons in attendance upon -a case of child*370birth in a maternity home, hospital, public or charitable institution, in every infant’s eyes, within two hours after birth, to use the prophylactic against inflammation of the eyes of the newborn specified in this article, and to make record of the prophylactic used. It shall be the duty of such institution to maintain such records in cases of inflammation of the eyes of the newborn as the State Board of Health shall direct.” The next section is 7186 : “Whoever, being a physician, surgeon, midwife, obstetrician, nurse, manager, or person in charge of a maternity home or hospital, parent, relative, or person attendant upon or assisting at the birth of aiiy infant, violates any of the provisions of this article shall he deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof be fined in a sum not less than ten dollars nor more than fifty dollars, and, if possessed of the required amount of property, subject to suit by the parent or guardian of the child for damages resulting to the child; and if such a suit shall be brought the establishment of the fact that the physician or midwife did not place the drops in the child’s eyes within two hours of its birth shall be accepted as prima facie evidence of the physician’s or midwife’s responsibility for the injury of the disease to the eye or eyes of the child. It shall be the duty of the prosecuting attorney to prosecute all violations of this article.”

It is the plaintiff’s contention that in their application to the evidence these statutes impose liability upon the defendant without regard to the question of his negligence — that is, that the defendant’s duty was absolute; and as a counter argument the defendant urges the interpretation that his duty was not absolute but relative, and that neither the letter nor the spirit of the statutes authorizes a civil action for damages resulting from an effort to obey the law. The several provisions relied on by the respective parties may be considered in the light of these contentions.

The statutes contemplate diverse contingencies. As we construe them, some of the provisions impose duties in cases of childbirth in the maternity ward of a hospital; others impose duties when the birth occurs elsewhere. It would seem that the latter class of cases is within the purview of section 7182. It was developed by the testimony of the plaintiff’s witnesses that the purpose of instilling the solution is to provide against .the possibility of venereal infection in the parent or to destroy germs which, due to such infection, may get into the eyes of the child. The primary object is the prevention of blindness and disease of the eyes. If the physician neglects or otherwise fails to instill or to have instilled the proper solution into the eyes of the child immediately ■upon its ’birth, and blindness or a diseased condition of the eyes by reason of such neglect or failure results from the cause which the in*371stillation was intended to prevent be may be liable in damages. Tbe duty of trying to comply witb tbe statutes may be absolute; but tbis is not equivalent to saying tbat tbe statute imposes upon a physician tbe absolute and unqualified duty of seeing tbat tbe solution contains exactly one per cent of silver nitrate. In practical effect tbe duty, if beld to be absolute in tbis sense, would require of the physician tbe necessity in every case of preparing bis own solution or of analyzing tbat which should be procured from the most competent and reputable sources. Tbis, evidently, is not tbe object of tbe law.

Tbe unlawful act denounced in section 7182, is tbe delinquency of the physician or midwife; but in section 7185, a duty is prescribed, not only for them, but for other persons in attendance upon childbirth in a maternity home or hospital. By section 7186 any physician, . . . nurse, ... or other person attendant upon or assisting at the birth of an infant who violates tbe provisions of Article 14 shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and may be subject to a suit for damages. In the last two sections tbe prescribed duty is required indiscriminately of tbe physician, tbe nurse, and others. But tbe duty is no more absolute here than under section 7182, tbe word “absolute” signifying certainty in administering tbe precise solution prescribed by the State Board of Health. If tbe prescribed duty is not absolute in its terms liability in damages will not necessarily be inferred from failure to instill tbe prescribed solution where an effort is made in good faith to comply with tbe statutes. For these reasons tbe judgment dismissing tbe first cause of action is affirmed.

Tbe second cause is based upon tbe doctrine of negligence or malpractice. Tbe allegations are tbat tbe plaintiff’s injury was caused by tbe defendant’s negligent failure to use tbe prescribed solution and by bis substitution therefor of a solution containing a larger percentage of silver nitrate. But tbe plaintiff contends tbat without regard to tbe usual standard of tbe prudent man tbe violation of a statute is a wrong which becomes actionable when there is established tbe essential element of proximate cause. After reviewing apparent discrepancies in some of our decisions tbe Court beld in Ledbetter’s case tbat tbe failure, without legal excuse, to obey tbe provisions of a statute or ordinance imposing a public duty is negligence, which, if tbe efficient cause of an injury, entitles tbe plaintiff to recover. Ledbetter v. English, 166 N. C., 125. Tbis familiar principle has been recognized in a number of subsequent decisions. Zagier v. Express Co., 171 N. C., 692; Stone v. Texas Co., 180 N. C., 546; Albritton v. Hill, 190 N. C., 429; Gillis v. Transit Corporation, 193 N. C., 346; Peters v. Tea Co., 194 N. C., 172. In our view of tbe case it is not necessary to go into a minute discussion of tbe *372rationale of proximate cause. We may grant that under these and other cases if the duty enjoined by the statutes were absolute or unqualified in the sense given above and the defendant’s breach of the statutes were proved or admitted as the proximate cause of the injury, the principle advanced would be available to the plaintiff; but, as we have said, the duty is not absolute, as in the cited cases. In these circumstances the specific question is whether the defendant is liable in damages under the general principles pertaining to malpractice.

Ordinarily the engagement of a physician who undertakes to treat a patient implies (1) that he possesses the degree of learning, skill, and ability requisite to the practice of his profession, (2) that he will exercise ordinary and reasonable care in the application of his knowledge and skill, and (3) that he will use his best judgment in the treatment and care of his patient. Brewer v. Ring, 177 N. C., 476; Thornburg v. Long, 178 N. C., 589; Nash v. Royster, 189 N. C., 408.

Whether the defendant’s conduct measured up to this standard of duty becomes material only in case the responsibility of providing the prescribed solution devolved upon him; and in determining the latter point we must return to the evidence.

At the suggestion of the defendant the plaintiff’s mother went to a hospital of her own selection, the physician’s bill and the hospital’s bill being entirely distinct. She was attended by a graduate nurse (employed by the hospital) who had served in hospitals in Greenwich, Newark, and Atlantic City. In the Baptist Hospital were maternity wards, and rooms into which newborn infants were taken. The plaintiff was in a room of the latter class, in which were the medicine cabinet, the instrument cabinet, supply closets, and a table supporting the bassinet in which the infant lay. The nurse was engaged in the usual course of her business in the hospital; she had not been selected or employed by the defendant. She inquired of him whether she should put the drops into the baby’s eyes, and receiving an affirmative answer she went to the medicine cabinet and took out a bottle labeled “silver nitrate.” The percentage was illegible. .Knowing that a solution of only one per cent .was usually kept.there she filled a dropper with the stronger solution unfortunately and instilled it while the. defendant held open the infant’s eyes. It is shown by the plaintiff’s evidence that according to the practice prevailing among physicians of good reputation- before and since, the statutes referred to were enacted the solution is frequently, and-in fact is usually, instilled by the nurse.

It is to be borne in mind that the solution was kept by the hospital in a medicine cabinet-for convenient use; it was under the control of the hospital; under control o.f the nurse. Authority to administer . it -was *373given the nurse equally Avith the physician. It is contended that the defendant was free either to discharge the imposed duty himself or leave it to be discharged by the- nurse; that he left it to her; and that he was absolved from responsibility. Without a definite decision of this question it may be obseiwed that as the hospital undertook to furnish a. nurse for the mother, and medicines, appliances and instruments, there is no evidence which discloses such culpability or malpractice on the part of the defendant as should subject him to liability in damages. If follows that there was no error in dismissing .the second cause of action.

There are several exceptions to the testimony, but in their application to evidence Avhicli ivas material and relevant to the questions involved they are untenable and must be overruled. Judgment

Affirmed.