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ARTICLE |

TORT LIABILITY OF CHARITABLE HOSPITALS TO PATIENTS

Aaron Hardy Ulm
JAMA. 1959;169(4):410. doi:10.1001/jama.1959.03000210104021.
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ABSTRACT

To the Editor:—  Although the review on "Tort Liability of Charitable Hospitals to Patients" in The Journal (168:788-789 [Oct. 11] 1958) provides a valuable survey of the law in the several states, it may be prudent to bring attention to an inaccuracy which appears in the state-by-state schedule appended to the digest. New Jersey is there represented as a jurisdiction which supports "full liability." For authority, the collator cites Collopy v. Neward Eye & Ear Infirmary, 141 A. (2d.) 276 (1958).The Collopy case was decided April 28, 1958, and it is true that the Supreme Court of New Jersey there rejected the former New Jersey rule, which for 33 years had denied recovery to patients damaged through the negligence of the agents of a charitable hospital. Three months later, however, July 22, 1958, the governor of New Jersey signed into law an act of the legislature which restored,

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