What are the facts?
An 18-year-old college football player suffered a fractured lower leg during a game and was taken to Charleston Community Memorial Hospital. A general practitioner on the hospital's staff applied a plaster cast. Over the ensuing hours and days, the patient experienced extreme pain, discoloration, and swelling of his toes—classic signs of impaired circulation and compartment pressure under the cast. Nurses noted and charted worsening symptoms and the patient's persistent complaints, but the hospital did not ensure that an appropriate specialist was consulted, that the cast was timely split or removed, or that the patient received escalating evaluation in response to clear danger signs. The patient's condition deteriorated; he was eventually transferred to a tertiary-care facility where his lower leg required amputation because of tissue necrosis attributable to compromised circulation. The patient sued the hospital (among others), alleging the hospital's own negligence in failing to supervise and review the care provided by its medical staff, to require consultation, to monitor nursing observations properly, and to enforce its bylaws and prevailing standards of hospital practice. At trial, the court admitted evidence of the hospital's own bylaws and external standards (including accreditation and professional guidelines) as bearing on the hospital's duty and standard of care. A jury returned a verdict against the hospital, and the hospital appealed.
What is the legal issue?
Can a private hospital be held directly liable under a theory of corporate negligence for failing to establish and enforce adequate policies, supervision, and quality controls—even when the negligent treatment was rendered by a physician who is not the hospital's employee—and may hospital bylaws and external accreditation/professional standards be admitted as evidence of the standard of care?
What rule applies?
A hospital owes patients an independent duty to exercise reasonable care in the operation of the institution, including the selection, credentialing, and retention of medical staff; formulation and enforcement of policies and procedures; supervision of patient care; and maintenance of quality assurance mechanisms appropriate to the hospital's functions. Breach of this institutional duty can support direct liability (corporate negligence), irrespective of the employment status of the treating physician. Hospital bylaws, internal rules, and external accreditation and professional standards are admissible as relevant evidence of the applicable standard of care and whether the hospital met it, though they are not conclusive.
What did the court hold?
Yes. The hospital was properly held liable for its own negligence in failing to supervise and ensure competent care and in failing to enforce policies and obtain necessary consultation; and the admission of hospital bylaws and external accreditation/professional standards as evidence of the standard of care was proper. The judgment against the hospital was affirmed.
What is the reasoning?
The court emphasized the modern reality of hospital care: hospitals are not passive landlords but organized, complex institutions that deliver coordinated health services. Patients reasonably rely on hospitals to provide competent care through systems of oversight, nursing services, consultation, and quality control. Given this institutional role, the hospital's duty is not limited to providing facilities; it bears an independent obligation to ensure that care is rendered with reasonable safety and competence. On the facts, multiple red flags—severe pain, swelling, and discoloration consistent with impaired circulation under a tight cast—were documented by nursing staff, yet no timely measures were undertaken to split or remove the cast, obtain appropriate specialist consultation, or escalate care. The hospital's own bylaws and rules required precisely such oversight and consultation in unusual or complicated cases, and its nurses had duties to report and to ensure prompt medical response. The court found sufficient evidence that the hospital failed to enforce those policies, inadequately supervised the delivery of care, and thereby breached its institutional duty, proximately causing the amputation. The hospital's argument that it could not be liable because the treating physician was an independent practitioner failed. The court explained that corporate negligence imposes direct liability for the hospital's own breaches; it does not depend on an employment relationship or vicarious liability. Further, the admission of hospital bylaws and external standards (including accreditation requirements and authoritative professional guidelines) was proper because such materials are relevant to establishing the standard of care for institutional conduct. While not dispositive or creating negligence per se, they are probative of what a reasonably careful hospital would do. The court concluded that the evidence supported the jury's finding of hospital negligence and that no reversible evidentiary or instructional errors occurred.
Why is this case significant?
Darling is a landmark in recognizing hospital corporate negligence, shifting the legal view from hospitals as passive facilities to active healthcare institutions with independent duties of governance, oversight, and quality assurance. It also established that hospital bylaws and external accreditation/professional standards are admissible as evidence of the standard of care, thereby integrating healthcare regulation and industry norms into negligence analysis. For law students, Darling is essential for understanding institutional tort liability, the relationship between private standards and legal duties, and how courts adapt negligence doctrine to evolving professional practice. It routinely appears in torts and health law courses to test analysis of duty, standard of care, causation, and the limits of vicarious versus direct liability.
What does "corporate negligence" mean in the hospital context?
Corporate negligence is a theory of direct institutional liability. It holds a hospital liable for breaching its own independent duties to patients—such as properly selecting and credentialing medical staff, enforcing policies, supervising care, ensuring timely consultation, and maintaining quality assurance—regardless of whether the negligent physician is an employee or an independent practitioner. It is distinct from respondeat superior, which is vicarious liability based on an employment relationship.
Did Darling make accreditation and professional standards legally binding on hospitals?
No. Darling permits hospital bylaws, accreditation standards (e.g., Joint Commission), and professional guidelines (e.g., from hospital associations) to be admitted as evidence of the applicable standard of care. They are relevant and probative but not conclusive. They do not create negligence per se. Juries may consider them, along with expert testimony and facts, to decide whether the hospital acted reasonably.
Why wasn't the hospital shielded by the independent contractor status of the physician?
Because Darling imposes direct liability for the hospital's own institutional failures. The duty at issue was the hospital's—ensuring adequate oversight, consultation, and enforcement of its policies. Whether the treating physician was an employee or independent contractor is irrelevant to the hospital's corporate negligence, which focuses on the hospital's conduct and systems, not on vicarious responsibility for the physician.
How did the nursing and escalation failures matter to liability?
Nurses repeatedly documented symptoms suggesting compromised circulation under the cast. The hospital had policies requiring reporting, monitoring, and physician consultation for such conditions. The failure to ensure that these policies were enforced and that appropriate escalation occurred supported the finding that the hospital breached its institutional duty, and that this breach proximately caused the patient's amputation.
Does Darling make hospitals insurers of patient safety?
No. The standard remains reasonable care under the circumstances. Darling imposes a duty of reasonable institutional care—appropriate policies, qualified staff, supervision, and quality controls—but it does not require perfection. Liability arises when the hospital's systems and enforcement fall below what a reasonably careful hospital would provide and that shortfall causes harm.
How is Darling typically tested in law school?
Exam problems often involve a hospital with troubling facts—missed consultations, inadequate credentialing, poor nursing escalation, or ignored policies—paired with a non-employee physician. Students are expected to analyze direct (corporate) negligence versus vicarious liability, discuss admissibility and weight of bylaws/accreditation standards, apply the reasonable hospital standard of care, and connect systemic failures to causation.