Bartlett v. Dahlsten

178 N.W. 636, 104 Neb. 738, 1920 Neb. LEXIS 248
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1920
DocketNo. 21045
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 178 N.W. 636 (Bartlett v. Dahlsten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartlett v. Dahlsten, 178 N.W. 636, 104 Neb. 738, 1920 Neb. LEXIS 248 (Neb. 1920).

Opinion

Flansburg, J.

Action against Wheeler county on an alleged contract made between the county and the plaintiff, a physician. [739]*739Plaintiff was requested, at the instance of the hoard of health, to diagnose and examine the ailments of a number of persons, residents of the county, during a smallpox epidemic.

There is evidence tending to show that the physician on the board of health was unable to diagnose the disease and called it “Cuban itch.” No quarantine had been established, and many persons afflicted with the disease walked about the streets and in public, so that the epidemic got well under way before it was discovered what the ailment was.

Plaintiff undertook the work, in this emergency, at the instance of the county board of health. Each of the specific examinations was made at the request of the board. There is evidence, -also, that the chairman of the board of county commissioners requested that the county board of health take this action. Plaintiff iñade extended trips over the county, examining cases, so that quarantine might be established. When he made these examinations, he also instructed the persons afflicted how to care for thrmselves and, in some cases, prescribed for them. These first trips are the only ones charged against the county. When his services were completed, he filed a claim. The claim was disallowed by the board of county commissioners, and he appealed to the district court, where the matter was tried without a jury and judgment was rendered in his favor for the full amount of the claim.

The fees charged by plaintiff are shown to be reasonable; no issue is raised on that question by the evidence. But the defendant contends that the individuals receiving the services should be required to pay for them, and not a county, since these people, with one exception, were not paupers and not a county charg’e.

It is first urged, however, that the county commissioners had no jurisdiction to pass upon the claim, since the written verified statement of the claim, filed under section 965, Bev. St. 1913, was not in strict compliance [740]*740■with the statute. The statute requires a showing that the items are “just and true” and that the amount claimed is “due and unpaid.” The claim as filed alleged that the “account is just and correct” and the “amount claimed, after allowing all just credits, is wholly unpaid,” but contained no affirmative allegation that the amount was due. The claim had attached to it a statement, purporting to be an account in favor of the plaintiff and against the county, and showing a balance of $214 in plaintiff’s favor. Though the claim was not, perhaps, in strict compliance with the law, nevertheless, under our decisions, the board was vested with jurisdiction, regardless of the irregularity of the form in which the claim was presented. State v. Board of County Commissioners, 60 Neb. 566; State v. Farrington, 80 Neb. 628; Gibson v. Sherman County, 97 Neb. 79.

The contention is further made that the appeal should have been dismissed by the district court by reason of failure to properly authenticate the transcript of the record of the proceedings had before the county board. It appears that the county board disallowed the claim June 17, 1918. Appeal bond was filed June 22, and on the same day the transcript of the proceedings was filed in the district court.. The transcript was not signed nor sealed by the county clerk. Motion was made to dismiss the appeal September 1.7, 1918, on the ground of failure of the clerk to authenticate the transcript, and an attempt was made by the clerk at that time to complete the certificate, but this was defectively done, and the transcript was not finally authenticated in proper form until, during the trial, on September 20, 1918, where it was signed and sealed by the clerk under order of the court.

The statute (Rev. St. 1913, sec. 965) provides that, when a claim is disallowed by the county board, the person aggrieved may appeal to the district court by serving written notice on the county clerk within 20 days, and by executing a bond to the county, conditioned for the [741]*741faithful prosecution of the appeal and the payment of the costs. These acts the claimant in this case had done, strictly in accord with the statute.

The statute further provides (section 967) that “upon such appeal being taken” the county clerk shall prepare and file the transcript in the district court. The duty of properly preparing and filing the transcript is, then, primarily enjoined upon the county clerk and not upon the claimant.

This procedure is somewhat similar to that provided for appeals from a justice of the peace to the district court. With regard to appeals from the justice court, it is held that, where the party appealing has taken the statutory steps directly required of him, and is not guilty of neglect or laches on his part, he does not lose his right of appeal because of failure or default in performance of a duty on the part of a public officer upon whom the duty in enjoined. Within the ruling in Goetz Brewing Co. v. Waln, 92 Neb. 614, it appears that the district court had jurisdiction to allow the transcript to be properly authenticated during the trial, as was done in this case. See, also, Bree Bros. v. Firestine, 84 Neb. 126; Stewart v. Raper, 85 Neb. 816. The claimant is required to take certain steps to perfect the appeal and to be diligent to see that the duties imposed upon the county clerk are carried out, but the claimant does not lose his right of appeal by the mere default of the county clerk when the claimant himself is not at fault.

As to the liability of the county for the services rendered, we must look to sections 2737 and 2738, Rev. St. 1913. By these sections of the statute, the county board of the county is directed to make and enforce regulations to prevent the introduction and spread of contagious diseases within the county, and, to that end, to establish a county board of health, which is given jurisdiction over the matter throughout the county, except in incorporated cities and villages. Where the local board fails to act with sufficient promptitude and efficiency in [742]*742any emergency, it is expressly provided that the state board of health shall step in and enforce its own regulations in that-county, and that the necessary expenses so incurred shall be borne by the county. It would seem to follow that, when the county itself acts in an emergency, it was not intended that it be limited in its powers more than the state board, and that the necessary expenses incurred should, in that event, also be chargeable to the county. Though it is not expressly provided that, when the county acts in providing regulations to prevent the spread of disease, the necessary expenses so incurred shall be a charge against the county, that liability must necessarily be inferred. If that were not true, then the county would, by law, be required to perform a duty, and at the same time be prevented from using the means necessary to its performance. The county board could not quarantine without learning, through the services of a physician, whom to quarantine, and such services of a physician could not be procured without pay.

It might be questioned whether section 1104, Rev. St. 1913, has any bearing on this case. This statute declares unlawful all contracts or orders made by the county board or members thereof, in behalf of the county, “in the absence of a statute expressly authorizing such contract to be entered into.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 N.W. 636, 104 Neb. 738, 1920 Neb. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartlett-v-dahlsten-neb-1920.