Stephen Bakker died upon the operating table at a hospital in Grand Rapids, while defendant Apted was administering to him chloroform preparatory to the removal of a tumor by the defendant Welsh. The plaintiff is the father of the deceased, and, after being appointed administrator of the estate of deceased, brought this suit; his counsel stating upon the trial that his claim was under what is known by the lawyers *633and the courts as the “ Death Act.” The trial judge directéd a verdict in favor of the defendants. The case is brought .here by writ of error.
Stephen Bakker was 17 years old. He lived with his father on a farm. He was a large healthy-appearing person. He had a tumor upon his left ear about the size of ■a dove’s egg. Some time before his death he had received treatment, and the tumor nearly disappeared; but prior to the middle of February, 1904, it reappeared, and he came to Grand Rapids to consult some physician about it. He had an aunt about 60 years old and two adult sisters living in Grand Rapids, with whom he went to the office of the defendant Welsh, who was a specialist and had . practiced medicine and surgery a long time. After an ■examination he was told it would be necessary to have a microscopic examination made to determine the character of the growth, and he was sent to Dr. Williams, another ¡specialist, who made an incision and obtained a specimen' from the tumor, and young Bakker returned to his father’s. On the following Saturday or Sunday he again went to the office of Dr. Welsh, accompanied by at least one of his sisters, and was informed of the report made by Dr. Williams, and was told it would be best to have the tumor removed by a surgical operation at the hospital.
The testimony is somewhat conflicting as to what was said. The sister claims Stephen objected to taking an •anaesthetic, and was told there was no danger. The doctor- says that he told him there was always some danger in taking an anaesthetic, but that he advised him to have the operation performed. On Tuesday afternoon Stephen, with his aunt and at least one sister, went again to the office of Dr. Welsh and was sent from there to the hospital, where they all understood an operation should be performed the following day. In the meantime Dr. Welsh had .arranged with Dr. Apted, an expert in the administration of ansesthetics, to administer the chloroform. A careful examination of the heart and lungs of the young anan was made. They appeared to be normal, and in the *634presence of the hospital nurse and the doctors, with the usual appliances for successful operations at hand, young Bakker was put upon the table. Dr. Apted began to administer chloroform by means of the mask and drop method, and had administered about one-third of an ounce, taking from seven to ten minutes in which to do it, and Dr. Welsh was just about to commence the operation, when suddenly the heart of the patient stopped beating. Every means known to the profession was used to revive the patient, but he was already dead. The record shows the father did not know an operation was to be. performed. There were two counts in the declaration-stripped of legal verbiage, the first count stated that Stephen Bakker was a minor and it was known to the defendant Welsh he was a minor, and that it was Dr-Welsh’s duty to inform the father and get his consent before entering upon this operation. The second count charges what is known as malpractice or want of skill in the operation, and that young Bakker died by reason of an improper administration of an anaesthetic. The record, instead of disclosing want of skill in the operation,, shows quite the contrary. We have no hesitancy in saying the trial judge was quite right in so- saying when he. directed a verdict.
We then cometo the question: Are defendants liable in this action because they engaged in this operation without obtaining the consent of the father ? Counsel for the plaintiff are very frank with' the court, and say in their brief:
“We are unable to aid the court by reference to any decisions in point. We have devoted much time and research to this interesting question, but have been unable to find any decisions of a higher court either supporting or opposing the plaintiff’s contention, and we will therefore have to be content by calling the court’s attention te such general reasoning as leads us to take the view herein contended for.”
They then argue at length, and with a good deal of force,, that, as the father is the natural guardian of the child, and. *635is entitled to his custody and his services, he cannot be deprived of them without his consent. We quote:
“We contend that it is wrong in every sense, except in cases of emergency, for a physician and surgeon to enter upon a dangerous operation, or, as in this case, the administration of an ansesthetic, conceded to be always accompanied with danger that death may result, without the knowledge and consent of the parent or guardian. It is against public policy and the sacred rights we have in our children that surgeons should take them in charge without our knowledge and send to us a corpse as the first notice or intimation of their relation to the case.”
On the part of defendants it is contended:
1. Consent of the father was unnecessary.
2. The lack of consent was not the cause of the boy’s death, hence not actionable.
3. That if it were, the action does not survive under the death act.
4. That the action, if any, is in the father,' not in the administrator. ■ .
We do not think it necessary to a disposition of the case to decide all of the defenses interposed by the defendant. The record shows a young fellow almost grown into manhood, who has been for a considerable period of time, while living with his father, afflicted with a tumor. Ho has attempted, while at home, to have it removed by absorption. It does disappear, but after a time it reappears. He goes up to a large city, and with an aunt and two sisters, all adults, submits to examination, receives some advice, and goes back to his father with an agreement to return later to receive the report of the expert who is to make the microscopic examination. He returns accordingly, and, with at least some of his adult relatives, arranges to have .a surgical operation of a not very dangerous character performed. Preparations are made for its performance. There is nothing in the record to indicate that, if the consent of the father had been asked, it would not have been freely given. There is nothing in the record to indicate to the doctors, before entering upon .the *636operation, that the father did not approve of his son’s going with his aunt and adult sisters, and consulting a physician as to his ailment, and following his advice, We think it would be altogether too harsh a rule to say that, under the circumstances disclosed by this record, in a suit under the statute declared upon, the defendants should be held liable because they did not obtain the consent of the father to the administration of the anaesthetic.
Judgment is affirmed.
McAlvay, Grant, Ostrander, and Hooker, JJ., concurred.