GOLD V ESSEX
GOLD V ESSEX
GOLD V ESSEX
1942 June 23, 24, 25; July 15.LORD GREENE M.R., MACKINNON and
GODDARD L.JJ.
rays - Failure to use proper screen - Injury to patient - Liability of hospital - Damages -
A local authority carrying on a public hospital owes to a patient the duty to nurse and
treat him properly, and is liable for the negligence of its servants even though the
negligence arises while a servant is engaged on work which involves the exercise of
professional skill on his part. Where, therefore, a patient being treated in such a
whole-time employee of the hospital, the local authority was liable for his negligence.
The same duty and liability is owed by and attaches to the governors of a voluntary
hospital, whether the services be rendered gratuitously or for reward, and the
(Governors) [1909] 2 K. B. 820, 829, that the only liability of a public hospital giving
"the gratuitous benefit of its care" to a patient is that "the patient whilst there shall be
competence the Governors have taken reasonable care to assure themselves" and to
provide "fit and proper apparatus and appliances" is a dictum which ought not to be
followed. The actual decision in that case (as laid down by Farwell L.J. in his
judgment) was that when a nurse in an operating theatre did something by the
direction of the operating surgeon which resulted in injury to the patient, the
In assessing damages in favour of an infant plaintiff a judge should not award a low
figure on the ground that the amount, through accumulation of interest, would have
increased very considerably by the time the infant became of age and received it. The
court may think it right at any moment to apply the money for the benefit of the infant
during his minority and it is impossible to estimate the value of money at some date in
the future. The infant is, therefore, entitled to have the damages assessed on the basis
of an immediate award.
In June and July, 1940, the plaintiff, Ruth Ann Gold, aged five years, was taken by
defendant county council under the Public Health Act, 1936, for treatment for warts
on her face. She was seen by the visiting dermatologist, Dr. Burrows, who ordered
treatment by 1000 units of Grenz rays and sent the plaintiff to the radiology
department with a written statement as to the treatment she was to receive there. The
department was in charge of a radiologist, Dr. Allen, but the treatment was given to
the plaintiff by a qualified and competent radiographer, named Mead, who was
employed by the defendants under a contract of service. While the plaintiff was
undergoing the treatment her face was covered with a lead-lined rubber cloth which
protected all but the affected part of her face. This happened on about five occasions,
the mother paying a fee of 1s. 6d. on each visit. As the warts did not yield to this
treatment, Dr. Burrows ordered the number of units of Grenz rays to be doubled and
on July 11, 1940, the mother again took the plaintiff for treatment. On this occasion,
Mead was admittedly negligent in that he covered the plaintiff's face only with a piece
of lint. In doing this he was not acting under the instructions of Dr. Allen or any other
disfigured. The plaintiff brought this action by her next friend for damages, alleging
that Mead had been negligent in his treatment of her and that the defendants, whose
servant or agent he was, were responsible for his negligence. Tucker J. held, on the
defendants were not liable for the negligence of Mead, who was a competent and
qualified man, but he questioned whether, if the matter had been free from any
authority binding on English courts, he might not have followed the opinion
expressed by Lord
conclusion. He fixed the damages he would have awarded to the plaintiff if liability
had been established at 125l. and gave as his reason for fixing this low figure that as
she was so young the amount would have increased very considerably before she
Denning K.C. and Safford for the plaintiff. As Tucker J. found the radiographer,
Mead, to have been negligent, the only question is whether the defendants are
responsible for that negligence. Mead was the defendants' servant, and it follows that
they are responsible for his negligence in the absence of some rule of law protecting a
hospital authority. It is the duty of a hospital authority to take reasonable care in the
treatment of patients and the defendants are responsible for the failure of one of their
servants to perform the duty arising out of the relationship of hospital and patient
without negligence. This duty does not arise out of contract and Hillyer v. Governors
of St. Bartholomew's Hospital (2) errs in this respect. Further, it is said that hospital
authorities cannot control skilled persons in their employment, but this is a fallacy.
The powers of local authorities in regard to hospitals carried on by them are laid down
in the Public Health Act, 1936, ss. 181, 182, 183 and 184. There is no foundation for
the contention that a local authority carrying on a hospital without profit is less
responsible for the negligence of a servant than a nursing home: see Mersey Docks
Trustees v. Gibbs (3). That the test in regard to the responsibility of the hospital is
whether the person who has been negligent is the servant of the hospital was
recognized in Hall v. Lees (4) and that test was applied in Evans v. Liverpool
Corporation (5). In an article in 54 Law Quarterly Review, pp. 553 et seq., Professor
Goodhart deals comprehensively with the liabilities of hospitals for the negligence of
their nurses or other servants. He points out that Farwell L.J. in Hillyer v. Governors
of St. Bartholomew's Hospital (2) was careful to confine the absence of liability of
hospitals for the negligence of their nurses to cases where the nurses were acting on
the orders of surgeons or other specialists who were not on the staff of the hospital.
Kennedy L.J. used wider language, and he, rather than Farwell L.J.
hospital was held not to be liable for an injury caused to a patient by the negligence of
a nurse in the ordinary course of her duty, was clearly wrong. In Wardell v.
Kent County Council (2) a nurse was held to be in the same position as a workman.
In Dryden v. Surrey County Council and Stewart (3) the surgeon and not the hospital
was held liable for a nurse's negligence. In Scotland the observations of Kennedy L.J.
Provost Municipal Hospital (7) - and New Zealand - see Logan v. Waitiki Hospital
Board (8) - the observations of Farwell L.J. in the Hillyer case(4) are followed. The
damages the judge misdirected himself when he took into account the probability that
the amount given would have appreciated by the time the infant plaintiff would
receive it, and he does not seem to have taken into account the pain and suffering she
underwent. [They also cited Lindsey County Council v. Marshall (9); Clelland v.
Edward Lloyd, Ld. (10); Century Insurance Co. v. Northern Ireland Road Transport
Board (11); Newsholme Bros. v. Road Transport and General Insurance Co. (12);
Montague Berryman for the defendants. A local authority, when giving aid in a
hospital, provides doctors, nurses and servants, but it does not hold itself out to be
carrying on a business by doing so. In Evans v. Liverpool Corporation (14) the case
was put as it was later in Hillyer's case(4), and the corporation were held not liable.
Greer L.J. in Marshall v. Lindsey County Council (15) said that the Court of Appeal
was bound by Hillyer's case(4), and Lord Hailsham and Lord Sankey
therein. English and Scottish courts have both drawn a distinction between a hospital
run
by a local authority and a hospital run as a business. Here the radiographer, who was
held by the judge to be a competent man, was negligent in his own skilled work, and
the defendants are not liable. The principles of Hillyer's case(1) apply. As regards
damages, in so far as Tucker J. reduced the damages because he thought they would
Appeal can refuse to follow an earlier decision of the same court on a point not
LORD GREENE M.R. A small payment was made to the defendants for the treatment
given to the plaintiff, but I attach no importance to this, since it would be quite
unreasonable to hold that the duty owed to a paying patient in such a hospital as this
was greater than that owed to a non-paying patient. The result in the present case
must, in my opinion, be the same as it would have been if the treatment had been
gratuitous.
On the facts I should have thought it clear on principle that the defendants were liable
Tucker J., in his careful judgment, reviewed the authorities at length and came to the
St. Bartholomew's Hospital (1) to come to a different conclusion. The only question
which we have to consider is whether that decision compels us to decide this appeal in
Hillyer's case(1) has had a remarkable history. There can be few cases in the books
which have given rise to such a diversity of judicial statement as to the precise nature
of the point decided. I do not propose to examine the various, and often conflicting,
statements as to what it did decide which are to be found, not only in English reports,
but also in Scottish and Dominion reports of cases dealing with the liability of
hospitals. Those who are interested in the subject will find the cases collected in an
article by Professor Goodhart in 54 Law Quarterly Review, p. 553. It is enough to say
that
there is not, in my opinion, any authority which prevents this court from
examining Hillyer's case(1) and forming its own opinion as to what it really did
decide. There were two reasoned judgments in the case, those of Farwell L.J. and
Kennedy L.J.; Lord Cozens-Hardy M.R. agreed that the appeal should be dismissed
for the reasons contained in both judgments. This, as the history of this class of case
has proved, is unfortunate since the reasons given in the two judgments differ in
important respects. The judgment of Farwell L.J. is based on quite narrow grounds,
that of Kennedy L.J. on propositions of a scope far wider than was necessary for the
decision of the case. These wider propositions so far as they relate to nurses were said
Infirmary (2), and in this opinion I respectfully concur. In a case where two members
of the court base their judgments, the one on a narrow ground confined to the
necessities of the decision and the other on wide propositions which go far beyond
those necessities, and the third member of the court expresses his concurrence in the
reasoning of both, I think it right to treat the narrower ground as the real ratio
decidendi. I, accordingly, look to the judgment of Farwell L.J. to discover what the
operating theatre conducted by the consulting surgeon attached to the hospital. There
were a number of persons present, including the surgeon, three nurses and two
carriers. It was not shown which of the persons present was directly responsible for
the act of negligence. Farwell L.J., in the first branch of his judgment, held that,
whoever was the individual directly responsible, the hospital authorities could not as a
matter of law be liable for the negligence of any of those present. In the second
branch of his judgment(1) he held that, even if the hospital authorities were in the
circumstances liable in law for negligence on the part of the nurses and carriers, it was
not shown that they or any of them were or was responsible for the act of negligence
complained of. The facts were consistent with the surgeon having been the
responsible party, and for his negligence, at any rate, the hospital authorities were not
liable. These two branches of the judgment must, I think, be treated as equally
to observe that in a later case Farwell L.J. himself treated the second branch as
containing the real reason for his decision: Smith v. Martin (1). It is the first branch
which is pertinent to the present question. The observations of the lord justice are
prefaced by the assumption that the nurses and carriers were servants of the hospital
authorities "for general purposes," but he held that they were not so "for the purposes
of operations and examinations by the medical officers," the reason being that in the
operating theatre they cease to be under the orders of the authorities and are under the
sole orders of the surgeon. They, accordingly, cease for the time being to be the
servants of the hospital. The language of Farwell L.J. makes it clear that he was
limiting his decision to the facts of the case before him, and that he was only
intending to deal with the position of the hospital authorities in relation to what takes
place in the operating theatre, the surgeon's domain. I can find nothing in his
judgment to support the view that the authorities of a hospital are not liable for the
negligent act of a nurse in the performance of her general duties as a nurse, be they
nature such as giving a patient his meals. It may well be that the principle which he
laid down extends to cases where, outside the operating theatre itself, the nurse is
acting under the direct instructions of the surgeon or doctor attending the patient, but,
be this as it may, I should myself have thought that the true ground on which the
hospital escapes liability for the act of a nurse who, whether in the operating theatre
or elsewhere, is acting under the instructions of the surgeon or doctor is, not that pro
hac vice she ceases to be the servant of the hospital, but that she is not guilty of
negligence if she carries out the orders of the surgeon or doctor, however negligent
those orders may be. I can see no reason on principle why, if she negligently carries
out an order, the hospital should not be liable. The idea that the same nurse is at one
moment a servant of the hospital and at another not is one which, with all respect, I
find difficult to understand, but I need not further discuss this matter since the
reasoning of Farwell L.J. does not appear to me to extend to such a case as that of
Mead, having regard to the nature of his employment and the circumstances in which
the infant plaintiff was injured. In doing what he did Mead was acting on his own
responsibility
(1) [1911] 2 K. B. 775, 784.
and according to his own judgment. He was in no sense under the orders of any
medical man save as to the nature of the treatment and the dose. There is no room in
his case for the theory of a transmutation in the nature of the employment such as, in
the view of Farwell L.J., takes place in the case of a nurse once the door of the
It is, however, necessary to consider also the observations of Kennedy L.J., more
particularly as they have sometimes been regarded as containing the true ground of
the decision. I will not quote his language at length. It is, curiously enough, limited to
the case of a public hospital giving "the gratuitous benefit of its care"(1). The only
liability undertaken in such a case is, according to his view, that "the patient whilst
whose professional competence the governors have taken reasonable care to assure
themselves; and, further, that those experts shall have at their disposal for the care and
treatment of the patient, fit and proper apparatus and appliances." So far as this
proposition extends beyond the case of surgeons and physicians there is, so far as I
have been able to discover, no earlier authority which supports it. Evans v. Liverpool
Corporation (2) referred to by Kennedy L.J., certainly does not do so. In that case the
jury had found that there was no negligence on the part of the matron and the nurses.
The only question with which Walton J. had to deal was whether the hospital was
liable for the proved negligence of the visiting physician and his judgment is confined
to that question. On this matter of earlier authority I may refer also to a passage in the
Bartholomew's Hospital (1) and an earlier case of Hall v. Lees (4), and says that "the
law as laid down in those cases" was correctly summed up as follows: "In the case of
a nursing home conducted by local authorities, the local authority is not responsible
for negligence of doctors, matron or nurses while acting in the exercise of their
professional functions and knowledge." I have already pointed out that Evans v.
Nor does Hall v. Lees (1) give any support to it. In Hall v. Lees (1) a nursing
association provided a nurse for a private patient, and on the true interpretation of the
contract it was held that the association did not undertake to nurse the patient but only
to procure for her duly qualified nurses. The contract was a special one and the case
has nothing to do with hospitals or nursing homes. The only authority for the
respect of members of their staff (other than doctors and surgeons) when not acting
under the direct instructions of doctors or surgeons owes its origin entirely to the
gathered from the concurrence of Lord Cozens-Hardy M.R. There is, so far as I am
aware, no English authority which prevents this court from giving effect to its own
Apart from any express term governing the relationship of the parties, the extent of
the obligation which one person assumes towards another is to be inferred from the
circumstances of the case. This is true whether the relationship be contractual (as in
the case of a nursing home conducted for profit) or non-contractual (as in the case of a
hospital which gives free treatment). In the former case there is, of course, a remedy
in contract, while in the latter the only remedy is in tort, but in each case the first task
is to discover the extent of the obligation assumed by the person whom it is sought to
make liable. Once this is discovered, it follows of necessity that the person accused of
a breach of the obligation cannot escape liability because he has employed another
person, whether a servant or agent, to discharge it on his behalf, and this is equally
true whether or not the obligation involves the use of skill. It is also true that, if the
cannot escape liability for its breach, any more than can an individual, and it is no
answer to say that the obligation is one which on the face of it they could never
perform themselves. Nor can it make any difference that the obligation
is assumed gratuitously by a person, body or corporation which does not act for
profit: Mersey Docks Trustees v. Gibbs (1). Once the extent of the obligation is
determined the ordinary principles of liability for the acts of servants or agents must
be applied.
The question which presents itself in the present case may, therefore, be formulated as
follows: When a patient seeking free advice and treatment such as that given to the
infant plaintiff knocks at the door of the defendant's hospital, what is he entitled to
employed to give that treatment. So far as consulting physicians and surgeons are
concerned, clearly the nature of their work and the relationship in which they stand to
the defendants precludes the drawing of an inference that the defendants undertake
responsibility for their negligent acts. The same may be true of the house physicians
and surgeons, but their case is not relevant to the present inquiry and I say nothing
about it. The position of the nurses again, although, no doubt, analogous, is not
strictly relevant, but if the nature of their employment, both as to its terms and as to
the work performed, is what it usually is in such institutions I cannot myself see any
sufficient ground for saying that the defendants do not undertake towards the patient
the obligation of nursing him as distinct from the obligation of providing a skilful
nurse. Nursing, it appears to me, is just what the patient is entitled to expect from the
institution and the relationship of the nurses to the institution supports the inference
that they are engaged to nurse the patients. In the case of a nursing home conducted
for profit, a patient would be surprised to be told that the home does not undertake to
nurse him. In the case of a voluntary hospital with the usual nursing staff his just
expectation would surely be the same. The idea that in the case; of a voluntary
hospital the only obligation which the hospital undertakes to perform by its nursing
staff is not the essential work of nursing but only so-called administrative work
appears to me, with all respect to those who have thought otherwise, not merely
unworkable in practice but contrary to the plain sense of the position. If correct, it
(1) L. R. 1 H. L. 93.
patient's tea by its nurses and is liable if a nurse negligently spills the hot water on the
patient, but that the true function of a nurse, namely, that of nursing, is not one which
the nurse is employed to perform on behalf of the hospital. A nurse, I should have
thought, is employed by a hospital to nurse the patients, not merely to carry up their
tea, and a patient would expect that the hospital employed a nurse to nurse him. The
other duties which the nurse has to perform are incidental to her primary task of
nursing, and could as well be performed by anyone else. Even Farwell L.J.
in Hillyer's case(1) does not say that the hospital does not undertake to nurse, but only
that it does not undertake to nurse during the operation(2). I have only dealt with the
case of nurses because in the authorities which I have discussed nurses are taken as
the type of skilled person on the hospital staff other than medical men. In the case of
the defendants' hospital, the patient seeking treatment by Grenz rays finds a
give the treatment. In the circumstances I can draw no other inference than that the
obligation assumed is to treat the patient by the hand of Mead with the apparatus
provided. This result appears to me to follow necessarily when all the relevant
from the defendant's method of conducting their affairs and the nature of Mead's
I have not so far referred to the statutory powers under which the defendants maintain
their hospital. The nature of those powers is one of the relevant circumstances to be
Nevertheless, the inference which I draw from the other circumstances of the case is, I
think, confirmed when the statutory powers are examined. They are to be found in
Part VI. of the Public Health Act, 1936. Section 181 empowers a county council or
district who are sick." This power includes power to provide clinics, dispensaries and
properly equipped and staffed. Under s. 184 the county council or local authority are
expenses of maintenance from the patient, and by sub-s. 2 (b) the expenses ale to be
calculated by reference to the average cost per patient of "the maintenance of the
institution and the staff thereof and the maintenance and treatment of the patients
therein." It is clear, therefore, that the powers of the defendants include the power of
treating patients, and that they are entitled, and, indeed, bound in a proper case, to
recover the just expense of doing so. If they exercise that power, the obligation which
they undertake is an obligation to treat, and they are liable if the persons employed by
them to perform the obligation on their behalf act without due care. I am unable to see
how a body invested with such a power and to all appearance exercising it, can be
said to be assuming no greater obligation than to provide a skilled person and proper
appliances.
learned judge fixed the damages which he would have awarded to the infant plaintiff
if liability had been established at 125l. This assessment, although not binding on us,
is one from which, but for one circumstance, I would have been unwilling to differ,
unpleasant" and it will last all the child's life, but he fixed the damages at a low figure
because she was only five years old and the amount would have increased very
considerably by the time she got it. In my opinion Tucker J. was wrong in giving such
weight to the possibility of an increase. It is not the least certain that the money will
not be required at any moment, sooner or later, for the benefit of the infant plaintiff,
and she is entitled to have the damage assessed on the basis of an immediate award
and not on the basis of an award to be received at some future date after an assumed
accumulation of interest has taken place. In the circumstances, I think that a proper
applied were as follows: (1.) One who employs a servant is liable to another person if
negligently as to injure that other. This is the rule of respondeat superior. (2.) That
principle applies even though the work which the servant is employed to do is of a
himself ignorant, for example, a shipowner and the certified captain who navigates his
ship. (3.) The liability of the master for the negligent act of the servant will exist
although at the time the servant is, by direction of the master or by operation of law,
under the control of some third party, for example, when the captain of a ship is under
the command of a naval commodore in charge of a convoy. (4.) The master will not
be liable for the act of his servant if he is only doing, without personal negligence,
command of the commodore goes at eight knots in a dense fog. His employer is not
liable for a resulting collision, since the servant is not negligent, and if anyone is
negligent it is the commodore for whose acts the shipowner is not liable.
Applying these principles to this case, I should hold that Mead was clearly the servant
of the defendants, and that when applying the Grenz rays to the plaintiff he was acting
for them in the scope of his employment. Under the second proposition he would
render the defendants liable for his negligence in that task although his work involved
the exercise of skill on his part. Under the third proposition they would still be liable
if he did the work negligently, although he was at the time doing it by the orders of
Dr. Burrows. But under the fourth proposition, if he was only doing what Dr. Burrows
told him to do, and as he told him to do it, the defendants would not be liable. For
Mead would not be negligent, while Dr. Burrows would. The plaintiff could then only
recover if Dr. Burrows was the servant of the defendants. But the difficulty of
deciding this case in that way, and by the application of those principles, arises from
the existence of Hillyer v. Governors of St. Bartholomew's Hospital (1) and especially
the dicta in it and in other cases in which it has been followed or referred to. The
claim of the plaintiff in that case was for injury alleged to have been caused to him by
the negligence of servants of the defendants. The injury was sustained when he was
persons from
whose acts or omissions he had suffered injury were those who were in the theatre,
and they were three surgeons and certain nurses. The plaintiff, to succeed, had to
establish that negligence had been committed by one or more person or persons who
were servants of the defendants. The senior surgeon in charge certainly was not a
servant of the defendants, and probably the other two surgeons were not servants of
the defendants. The nurses, I should think, were undoubtedly servants of the
defendants, although they were at the time acting under the directions and control of
the surgeon. If in carrying out his directions a nurse, or the nurses, only did what the
surgeon told them to do, I should think the defendants would not be liable, by reason
of my fourth proposition, but if a nurse or nurses, in carrying out his directions, did so
negligently, then I should think that the defendants would be liable, in accordance
plaintiff had not proved that he sustained his injury by reason of the negligent act or
the act or omission of the nurse or nurses since the surgeons were not servants of the
defendants. Farwell L.J. in Smith v. Martin (2) explained the decision in Hillyer's
case(1) as resting on the plaintiff's failure to discharge this onus of proof. For he
said(3) that "in Hillyer's case(1) the nurses .... were treated as being servants for
whose acts the hospital would be liable, but the plaintiff failed to prove any case
against them." If this were a correct summary of the reasons given in the judgments, I
should find in Hillyer's case(1) no obstacle in the way of my deciding the present case
in favour of the plaintiff, for in this case I could equally treat Mead as a servant for
whose acts the hospital was liable, and the plaintiff has succeeded in proving a case of
negligence against him. But Farwell L.J.'s summary in Smith v. Martin (4) is clearly
not a correct summary of his own reasoned judgment in Hillyer's case(1); still less is
it of that of Kennedy L.J. The reasoning of Farwell L.J., and that of Kennedy L.J. are,
to a large extent, at variance one with the other. The reasoning of Farwell L.J. is that
when the nurses enter the operating theatre and within it come
under the control and direction of the surgeon they cease to be the servants of the
hospital because they "are at the disposal of and under the sole orders of the operating
surgeon until the whole operation has been completely finished; the surgeon is for the
time being supreme, and the defendants cannot interfere with or gainsay his orders." I
confess that with all deference this proposition, so stated, seems to me no more
accurate than to say, in the case I suggested, that the captain of a ship ceases to be the
servant of the shipowner when that captain comes under the orders of the commodore
of a convoy. The true proposition, as I think, would be that although the nurses
remained the servants of the hospital in the operating theatre, the hospital would not
be liable for their acts if they were only doing, without personal negligence, what the
surgeon directed them to do. The reasons given by Kennedy L.J. for deciding in
favour of the defendants are quite different from those of Farwell L.J., and very much
wider in scope. In his view the hospital only undertakes towards its patients the
obligation to provide premises where they will be treated by experts, and those
governors have taken reasonable care to assure themselves .... But I see no ground for
holding .... that the hospital authority makes itself liable in damages if members of its
professional staff .... act negligently towards the patient in some matter of
professional care or skill." This is to assimilate the position of a nurse to that of the
senior consultant surgeon. He is clearly not a servant of the managers of the hospital,
and equally a nurse is not their servant. It is true that the lord justice goes on to say
that the hospital authority may be "legally responsible to the patients for the due
cases of emergency," which seems to recognize the nurses as being "servants" for
such duties, while it is difficult to see why these are not "matters of professional care
in Lindsey County Council v. Marshall (2). It was not necessary for the House to
Wright in terms said(1): "It is not necessary to express here any opinion one way or
by Hillyer's case(2) to dismiss the present appeal. It has been pointed out by Greer
L.J. that this court is not bound to follow one of its previous decisions although it
almost always does so. Hillyer's case(2) is, as I have pointed out, a rather singular
decided nothing except that the plaintiff had failed to prove the cause of action he
might have had. And the cause of action he specified was clearly the cause of action
the present plaintiff possesses and has proved. As I have said, if that were the correct
allowing the present appeal. Secondly, the reasoning of the judgment of Farwell L.J.,
that the nurses ceased to be servants of the hospital when inside the operating theatre
under the control of the surgeon is no obstacle to the success of the present plaintiff.
Mead was not doing anything in any apartment under the control or orders of Dr.
Burrows. There is no ground, on the reasoning of Farwell L.J., to say that he had
ceased to be the servant of the defendants. Thirdly, the reasoning of Kennedy L.J. not
only differs from that of Farwell L.J., but is really inconsistent with it. According to
him nurses are professional experts, just as much as is the hospital's senior surgeon,
and are, no more than he is, "servants" of the hospital, although they may be
"servants" for what are called "purely ministerial or administrative duties." I confess I
really do not know whether Kennedy L.J. would consider that Mead's work in the
present case, in treating the plaintiff with Grenz rays, was the work of a professional
it as having only decided in reality that which Farwell L.J. said it did in Smith
reasons of the two lords justices as obiter dicta. In the result, for the reasons indicated
in the first part of my judgment, I am for allowing the appeal, and entering judgment
for the plaintiff. As to the damages, I agree that they should be increased to 300l.
GODDARD L.J. Assuming that the defendants had taken reasonable care in
appointing Mead to do this work with Grenz rays, the question is whether we are
obliged by the decision in Hillyer's case(1) to hold that they had discharged the duty
view to distinguish that case from the one we have now to decide. That was a case of
a voluntary hospital, and although, since Mersey Docks Trustees v. Gibbs (2), it
makes no difference to liability whether the party sought to be made responsible was
reaping a benefit or acting gratuitously, this is a case of a hospital being set up,
maintained and conducted under the provisions of a statute, and the duties and
accommodation for persons in their district who are sick. By s. 184 they are to recover
the expense of this maintenance from patients who are able to pay, and that is to be a
sum representing the average daily cost per patient of the maintenance of the
institution and the staff and the maintenance and treatment of the patient therein. The
right of a resident in the district who is sick to enter the hospital and the right of the
defendants to recover the cost of his maintenance and treatment are both independent
of contract, and, therefore, so is the duty owed by the defendants to the patient. Nor
does the duty depend on any profession by the defendants. It depends on what it is
their duty to do once they have availed themselves of the permission to set up a
hospital which the statute gives them. Their duty would seem to be to maintain and
treat the sick in their hospital, and that appears to me to oblige the defendants, not
merely to provide a nurse and treatment, but to provide nursing, which they do and
can only do by their servants. If there is negligent nursing I can see no ground on
which they can say that they have discharged the duty cast on them.
I should, however, be sorry to decide this case on so narrow
(2) L. R. 1 H. L. 93.
for council hospitals and another for voluntary hospitals. Since the Mersey Docks
case(1), whether the service is rendered gratuitously or for reward is immaterial, but
if Hillyer's case(2) goes to the length of deciding what in subsequent cases, at least in
courts of first instance, it has been assumed is its result, it must apply to the paying
wards of hospitals, and, indeed, to all descriptions of private nursing homes some of
case(2) critically. The first observation I would make is that the court found that no
negligence had been proved against anyone, but undoubtedly both Farwell L.J. and
Kennedy L.J. discussed the case from the point of view of what the legal position
would have been had negligence been proved. So far as the surgeon was concerned,
no one would question the decision. Visiting surgeons and physicians are not the
servants of the hospital governors, whether the latter are the board of a voluntary
institution or a local authority. Even if, as I think is the case with council hospitals,
they receive a fee, their contract is to give services. It is not a contract of service. But
again, no one can seriously dispute that there is a contract of service in the case of
nurses and people who are engaged on such terms as Mead is in the present case.
Farwell L.J. assumed that the nurses were the servants of the governors. I think all he
intended as regards nurses was that, once they were in the operating theatre, they were
necessarily under the control and orders of the surgeon, so that, if they carried out his
orders, they were not guilty of negligence. So far, we may agree. It is part of the
nurses' duty, as servants of the hospital, to attend the surgeons and physicians and
carry out their orders. If the surgeon gives a direction to the nurse and she carries it
out, she is not guilty of negligence even if the direction is improper. I do not think the
lord justice was contemplating a case where the surgeon or physician gives a proper
order and the nurse is guilty of negligence in performing it, which may take place
either in the theatre or at the bedside. So, indeed, it may take place when the surgeon
or physician is no longer actually present. It is the nurse's duty to her employers and
to her patient to carry out the directions given by the surgeon or physician faithfully
and carefully. That this was what Farwell L.J. had in mind is, I think,
(1) L. R. 1 H. L. 93.
shown by his comment on Hillyer's case(1) in Smith v. Martin (2) only two years
later. He said the nurses were treated as being servants for whose acts the hospital
would be liable, but no case was proved against them. In my opinion, there is nothing
in his judgment which obliges us to hold that, when a nurse negligently carries out
instructions given to her, her employers are not liable for her acts. The only other
comment I would make on his judgment is that he uses language which might be
taken to mean that, in his opinion, in the operating theatre or, I suppose, in the ward
where she was acting under the personal supervision of the physician or surgeon, the
nurse is his servant and, for the time, not the servant of the governors. That would
lose sight of the fact that by the terms of her employment as a nurse at a hospital she
is and must be required to attend on the medical and surgical staff and carry out their
directions. It is not a case of a servant being lent by his employer and placed wholly,
though temporarily, in the service of another, as, for instance, in Donovan v. Laing,
Wharton and Down Construction Syndicate, Ld. (3), and Bain v. Central Vermont
Railway Co. (4). That he did not intend his language to be so understood is, I think,
shown by his comment in Smith v. Martin (2), to which I have referred. His judgment,
therefore, in my opinion, is no authority for the proposition that the governing body of
a hospital are not liable for the negligence of a servant acting within the scope of his
authority, although the negligent act arose during the exercise of the professional skill
The judgment of Kennedy L.J. presents greater difficulty, and Lord Cozens-Hardy
M.R. stated that he concurred with it as he did with that of Farwell L.J. He places
nurses in exactly the same position for this purpose, vis-a-vis a governing body, as
surgeons, in spite of the fact that the former are under a contract of service and the
latter are not. If his judgment is to be taken without any qualification it seems that the
doctrine of respondeat superior does not apply to nurses and hospital authorities. His
when he said: "I do not think the hospital authorities undertook in any way themselves
to administer the doses, but that the nurses in doing that were doing their own work as
skilled
nurses and not as servants of the hospital authorities." In other words, as the alleged
superior did not himself profess to exercise the particular skill he could not be
answerable for the negligence of the person whom he employed to exercise it. But the
himself? but: What is it that he promises or professes to do? I use the word "promise"
as applicable to cases where the duty is alleged to arise ex contractu and "profess" to
those in which the duty arises independently of contract. If he does that which he
promises or professes by a servant or agent, he is liable for their acts on the doctrine
of respondeat superior. Otherwise it is difficult to see how any corporate body could
ever be liable for the acts of their servants. This part of the judgment has been referred
to by Lord Dunedin in Lavelle v. Glasgow Royal Infirmary (1) as dicta, and, in truth,
it was not necessary for the decision in that case as no negligence was proved against
the nurses. Nor is it supported by Evans v. Liverpool Corporation (2), to which the
learned lord justice referred. All that case decided was that the visiting medical officer
of a hospital was not the servant of the hospital authority. Hall v. Lees (3) was a case
which related to nurses but decided quite a different point. It was an action against a
nursing association who supplied nurses for nursing private patients and their
prospectus showed that the nurse was to be regarded as the servant of the employer.
The difference in reasoning between Farwell L.J. and Kennedy L.J. makes it difficult
to say what the ratio decidendi of Hillyer's case(4) is, nor has this been elucidated by
the many comments on that decision in subsequent cases. Its correctness has been
expressly left open by the House of Lords in Lindsey County Council v. Marshall (5)
For my part, considering that neither lord justice indicated any difference of opinion
with the other and that the Master of the Rolls agreed with both, I think we are
entitled to choose between the two judgments, and I prefer that of Farwell L.J.,
although, if he meant that the nurse is the temporary servant of the doctor, I do not
a patient instead of medicine, and yet is liable if the cook mixes some deleterious
why they should be responsible for the acts of these servants and not for those of
nurses who are equally in their service. That they are not liable for the doctor's
negligence is due simply and solely to the fact that he is not their servant. I desire,
however, to say that for the purpose of this judgment I am not considering the case of
doctors on the permanent staff of the hospital. Whether the authority would be liable
and that must depend on the facts of any particular case. So, too, I can conceive that a
nurse might be regarded as negligent even though she was carrying out the orders of
authority. In the stress of an operation, however, I should suppose that the first thing
In my opinion, therefore, the defendants are liable for the negligence of Mead, who is,
for this purpose, in exactly the same position as a nurse, and I would allow the appeal.
With regard to the damages, I think the learned judge was in error in taking into
account that the sum he awarded would be largely increased by the time the child
came of age. We cannot speculate on what the value of money will then be, and in
any case the court has power to allow the damages to be applied for the benefit of the
infant during her minority. I agree to increasing the amount, and I think the proper
Appeal allowed.
H. C. G.
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ICLR: King's/Queen's Bench Division > 1942 > Volume 2 > GOLD v. ESSEX
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