Belknap v. Township of Benton

135 N.W. 101, 169 Mich. 58, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 693
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1912
DocketDocket No. 70
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 135 N.W. 101 (Belknap v. Township of Benton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belknap v. Township of Benton, 135 N.W. 101, 169 Mich. 58, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 693 (Mich. 1912).

Opinion

Stone, J.

This is an action of assumpsit brought against the township of Benton, in Berrien county, to recover for services of the plaintiff, who is a physician and surgeon duly licensed to practice, in performing a surgical operation upon, and care and treatment of, a young man named Edwin Pascal, who was under the age of 21 years, and a resident of said township of Benton, who had been severely injured by a gunshot; the bone of the right arm being shattered, and muscles, ligaments, nerves, and arteries lacerated and torn away. The services began on the 27th day of March, 1904, and continued until sometime in the month of July following.

. It may be said that this record presents the question whether the township of Benton is liable, and shall pay for the surgical treatment rendered to the boy by the plaintiff. It is undisputed that the father had not requested public aid. It was the claim, however, of the pláintiff, upon the trial, that the supervisor of the township authorized the treatment at public expense. The plaintiff testified at considerable length upon this subject, claiming that it was a case of great emergency, and the plaintiff testifying, and it being undisputed, that he found the patient in a desperate condition; that the right arm [60]*60near the shoulder was, practically, completely severed. The bone, muscles, and nerves, and a large part of the blood vessels, were torn. In fact, nothing was left of the arm except a slight attachment which could have been clipped off with a pair of scissors. He testified that he proceeded to treat the boy, causing him to be removed to Mercy Hospital and taken into the operating room, where the plaintiff, with the assistance of two other physicians, spent nearly the entire afternoon in getting the arm in proper shape. The plaintiff continued to treat and care for the young man, and saved the arm. There is no claim or evidence that the charges for the services alleged in the declaration are in any way unreasonable.

On the evening of the day of the accident, or the next morning, plaintiff testified that he wrote to Mr. Jakway, the supervisor of the township, telling him of the injury, and that in the emergency he had been called upon to attend said Edwin Pascal, and that he was informed the father of the boy was poor and unable to pay any bills, and that he (plaintiff) desired to see him in relation to the matter at once. This letter was not replied to until the 5th of April following, when the supervisor wrote the plaintiff the following communication:

** Bear Sir:
“ Yesterday, as you know, was town meeting, and as I had no reasonable grounds to expect re-election I thought it best to let the incoming supervisor take the case. However, the people have decided to hold me another year, so you may expect to see me Saturday p. m.
ct Very truly,
“ J. J. Jakway.”

On the Saturday following there is no question that Mr. Jakway met the plaintiff at the latter’s office. The plaintiff testified positively, and insists, that Mr. Jakway, as supervisor of Benton township, after making some investigation, authorized and directed him to treat the case, and care for the young man as a poor patient, make his bill as low as he could, and that the township would stand [61]*61good for it. The plaintiff claims that, relying upon the fact that he was thus authorized by the supervisor, he continued to treat the case until the 11th of July following, when Mr. Jakway denied that he ever gave him any authority to treat the case. There is some evidence in the record corroborating the testimony of the plaintiff; but Mr. Jakway testified, positively denying that he ever authorized the plaintiff to treat the case at the expense of the township. The issues of fact in the case were submitted to a jury, and they returned a verdict for the defendant.

The legal question presented arises chiefly upon the charge of the court. We have, after a careful reading of the record in this case, reached the conclusion that the entire case was tried upon the wrong theory. We think that the material questions in the case are whether the supervisor ever authorized and directed the plaintiff to treat the case at the expense of the township, and whether the plaintiff acted in good faith in such treatment. It appears undisputed that the young man was a minor, living with his parents in the township, and that he himself was without any property, and that his father was a man of very limited means.

Under our statute (section 2836, 1 Comp. Laws), the supervisor is the agent of the township for the transaction of all legal business. It was the duty of the supervisor, when this question arose, and investigation had been made, to pass upon the question whether or not the care of this boy should be made a township charge. He solely was charged with the duty of determining whether or not the boy, or his father, was such a poor person as to bring the case within the law providing for the support of the poor by the township. It appears by this record that the distinction between township and county poor was restored in the county of Berrien in January, 1880; and that since that time each township cares for and supports its own poor.

Had the court submitted the simple questions of fact to [62]*62the jury whether or not the supervisor had in good faith investigated the matter, and employed the plaintiff, and whether the plaintiff had in pursuance of such employment in good faith rendered the services, the plaintiff would be in no position to complain. The difficulty is that in submitting the case to the jury, and under the evidence admitted in the case, the question of whether the Pascals were in fact poor persons within the meaning of the statute was submitted to the jury, and they were authorized to pass upon that fact. The following excerpt from the charge of the court will illustrate what we mean. After charging the jury correctly as to whether the plaintiff had been employed by the supervisor, the court proceeds as follows:

“ Now, if Dr. Belknap was authorized by Mr. Jakway to treat young Pascal, this other question arises. In the first place, the question arises whether young Pascal was in destitute circumstances, requiring immediate relief. I do not think there is any particular controversy over that fact. It is a fact, however, which you have to arrive at. That is a fact which is necessary to be found in arriving at your deliberations. Of course, young Pascal was a minor son there, and he had no property, and he was very seriously injured by a gunshot wound, and was in immediate need of relief. I don’t think there is any question about that proposition, that here was a party in destitute circumstances, requiring immediate relief. But the important question is this, whether the father of young Pascal was financially able to furnish medical services, that is, medical and surgical services under the circumstances. This is a question which I have concluded to leave to you, for you to determine, regarding it not as a question of law for the court to pass upon, but as a question for you 12 jurors to determine, whether, under all the circumstances of the case, here was a party (I mean the father), who was able to furnish the medical aid necessary for the relief of his son. If he was, if the father was able to furnish financial relief for the son, then, gentlemen, the town-; ship of Benton is not liable. That is, the supervisor has no authority to provide relief for persons of that kind.

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Related

Attorney General v. Bruce
182 N.W. 155 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1921)
In re Broughton
192 Mich. 418 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 N.W. 101, 169 Mich. 58, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belknap-v-township-of-benton-mich-1912.