Barden v. . R. R.

67 S.E. 971, 152 N.C. 318, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 267
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 13, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 67 S.E. 971 (Barden v. . R. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barden v. . R. R., 67 S.E. 971, 152 N.C. 318, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 267 (N.C. 1910).

Opinion

BROWN and WALKER, JJ., concur in result. Action heard on demurrer to the complaint.

The plaintiff complains that while he was an employee of the defendant he was taken sick and was received into the hospital of the Relief Department of the defendant at Rocky Mount, to be there operated upon *Page 307 and attended to. That the operation was performed, and through the neglect and inattention and carelessness of the surgeon, nurses and attendants, he was permanently injured, and demanded damage (319) for his suffering and injury. The plaintiff alleges further, that he was entitled to admission into the hospital because he was a member of the Relief Department, under a certificate issued to him, as follows:

ATLANTIC COAST LINE RAILROAD COMPANY.

RELIEF DEPARTMENT.

CERTIFICATE OF MEMBERSHIP IN THE RELIEF FUND,

No. 5282.

Office of the Superintendent.

WILMINGTON, N.C. 19 September, 1902.

This Certifies, That N. F. Barden, employed by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, is a member of the Relief Fund of the Relief Department of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, and is entitled to the benefits provided by the regulations of the Relief Department for a member of the _________ Class, with _______ additional Death Benefit of the First Class.

__________________________, Superintendent of the Relief Department.

It was alleged that plaintiff was operated on in May, 1906; that he had paid since his membership, seventy-five cents per month; that this amount was retained out of his wages by the defendant. The rules and regulations of the Relief Department are attached to the complaint. The following is a summary of the principal rules and regulations, which are as follows:

It is a department of the defendant company's service. (Rule 1.) It is in charge of a superintendent and a chief surgeon, whose directions in carrying out these regulations are to be complied with, subject to the control of the defendant company's president. (Rule 1.) The said president appoints the superintendent, assistant superintendent and the chief surgeon. (Rule 11.) It has an advisory committee (Rule 5), of which the defendant company's general manager is ex officio a member, and the chairman, with twelve other members, of whom six are selected by the defendant company's board of directors and six by the contributing employees, insuring the control of this advisory committee to the defendant company by a "safe majority." The functions of this committee, controlled by the defendant company, is to "have general supervision of the operation of the departments, and see that they are *Page 308 conducted in accordance with the regulations." (Rule 8.) This (320) advisory committee may propose amendments to the regulations, but no amendment becomes operative until adopted by a majority of the whole committee and it is approved by the board of directors of the defendant company. (Rule 16.)

The superintendent, who is appointed by the defendant company's president, shall have charge of the business pertaining to the department, employing subordinates, certifying pay-rolls or bills, signing orders for payment of benefits, etc., and exercising such other authority as may be conferred upon him by the president of the defendant company. (Rule 9.) Its members are limited to employees of the defendant company. (Rule 17.) Its funds are derived from their contributions. (Rule 3.) If there should be a deficit in these contributions, then, only, the company advances the money for its operations, charging 4 per cent interest, and reimbursing itself out of the funds contributed by the employees. (Rule 14.) It pays 4 per cent on the monthly balances which may be in its hands derived from this fund, it is true, but the company is the trustee, and it administers the trust funds. (Rules 4 and 13.)

If a member of this relief department is furloughed, suspended or otherwise temporarily relieved from defendant's service for a specified time, he may retain his membership, during such absence by paying his contributions in advance; but if at the time specified by his division officer he does not return to his duty in the service of the company, his membership in the relief fund shall thereupon terminate. (Rule 29.) When a member resigns from defendant company's service, or leaves it without notice, is relieved or discharged therefrom, his membership in the relief fund terminates with his employment, and he shall not be entitled to any benefits for time thereafter, except he continue his membership only in respect of the minimum death benefit, if applied for within five days. (Rule 30.) If a member absents himself from the duty of the defendant company for six days, without permission previously obtained, or without satisfactory reasons to his employing officer, he is deemed to have left the defendant's service without notice, and his membership in the relief fund terminates. (Rule 31.) If a member reported by a medical examiner as able to work, fails to report for work at the time set, he must obtain a written furlough from his employing officer; otherwise, his relief fund membership ceases. (Rule 32.)

The employee must make written application for membership in the relief fund. (Rule 34.) In this application, set out in Rule 34, he is to state he has read or had read the regulations of the department, (321) accepts them, together with subsequent changes or amendments, and accepts any agreement "now or hereafter made by the said company with any corporation or corporations now or hereafter associated *Page 309 with it in the administration of their relief departments." He agrees that the company may retain the stipulated contributions from his wages to be applied to the relief fund, and his agreement to do so shall constitute an assignment in advance for such portions of his wages to the said company in trust. He also agrees that if transferred to the service of any other company associated with the said company in the joint operation of their relief departments, it shall operate to transfer his membership in the relief department of such other company. (Rule 34.)

It is further provided that "contributions for any month will be due on the first of that month, and ordinarily be deducted from the member's wages on the pay-roll of the preceding month"; but, when a member has no wages on the pay-roll, any contribution due from him must be paid in cash in advance, otherwise he will be in arrears. (Rule 40.) The benefits from this relief fund "shall not be due on account of disability beginning, or death occurring while a member is in arrears, and when in arrears for two months his membership shall thereupon cease." (Rule 41.)

It is provided by Rule 49 how much shall be paid in the nature of benefits: to a member of the first class, 50 cents per week; second class, $1; third class, $1.50; fourth class, $2; fifth class, $2.50, and at half these rates during the continuance of disability; but these sums are not paid for a longer period than fifty-two weeks. It is also provided by this rule (49) that provisions shall be made by the department, in addition to the benefits allowed, "for necessary surgical attendance, or, when such provision is not made, payment in behalf of the member of such bills for surgical attendance as are authorized and approved by the chief surgeon." There is likewise a provision that, in case of sickness, he shall have the same benefits.

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.E. 971, 152 N.C. 318, 1910 N.C. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barden-v-r-r-nc-1910.