Brown v. Hebb

175 A. 602, 167 Md. 535
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 5, 1934
Docket[No. 21, October Term, 1934.]
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 175 A. 602 (Brown v. Hebb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Hebb, 175 A. 602, 167 Md. 535 (Md. 1934).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Dr. Arthur Hebb, a surgeon specializing in procrology or rectal surgery, operated on David Brown, at the Church Home and Infirmary in Baltimore on December 21st, 1928, for an internal anal fistula. Brown remained in the hospital for several days, and after his return to his home visited Dr. Hebb’s office, where his wound was dressed and treated daily, except for Saturdays and Sundays, for two months, and for a month after that he went every other day. Following that treatment, Brown received a bill from Dr. Hebb for $1,500, which he refused to pay on the ground that it was excessive. On September 1st, 1931, he received from Robert Coughlin, Jr., the following letter:

“I represent Dr. Arthur Hebb who operated on you some two years ago for a fistula. Dr. Hebb’s bill of'$1,500.00 is as yet unpaid and I have instructions to sue immediately if it is not taken care of. Will you please let me hear from you so I may know how to proceed.”

To that letter Coughlin received the following reply from Messrs. Rosenbush & Bernstein, a firm of lawyers practicing in Baltimore City:

*538 “In Re: Dr. Arthur Hebb vs. David Brown.
Dear Mr. Coughlin: Your letter of September 1st, addressed to Mr. David Brown in the above connection has been referred to us.
On November 8th, 1928, Mr. Brown received a letter in the same connection and referred it to us, and we wrote as follows :
‘November 11, 1929.
Attention of Mr. Wm. J. Murray, Mgr., Mercantile Collection Agency, Lexington Bldg., City.
Re: Dr. Hebb vs. David Brown.
Gentlemen: We are in receipt of yours of. November 8th in the above connection. Mr. Brown authorizes us to make an offer of $300 in full settlement and compromise of the above claim.
Very truly yours,
Rosenbush & Bernstein
By-
R:MC’
Mr. Brown is ready and willing to pay that amount now, and he informs me that his information is the offer is a very liberal one for the services rendered.
Very truly yours,
MR:SF Rosenbush & Bernstein.”

On September 9th, 1931, Coughlin replied inviting further negotiations, and on September 11th, 1931, Rosenbush & Bernstein answered declining to add anything to what they had previously said.

On October 5th, 1933, Hebb brought this action against Brown on the common counts in assumpsit to recover the $1,500 which he claimed for his services, and to the declaration Brown pleaded the general issue and limitations. The plaintiff joined issue on the general issue plea, and traversed the plea of limitations. The usual practice is to reply a new promise (Evans’ Harris’ En *539 tries 155; Carey’s Forms 156, 37 C. J. 1237), but as no point was made of the form in which the defense was presented, and as there is some precedent for it (Bullen & Leake, Precedents of Pleadings 644,) it will be assumed that the issue as to whether the defendant did within three years before the suit promise to pay the plaintiff’s claim was properly presented. The case, which was tried before the court sitting as a jury, resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff, and from that judgment this appeal was taken.

In the course of the trial the appellant reserved two exceptions to rulings on evidence, and two to the rulings of the court in respect to his prayers. The plaintiff was asked on cross-examination whether he classified an operation of “fistula in ano” as a major or minor operation, and he replied: “Well, I think next to cancer of the rectum, which is one of the biggest operations in the annals of surgery, that fistula in ano is one of the biggest operations we have to do.” A motion to strike out that answer as not responsive was overruled. We find no error in that ruling, which is the subject of the first exception. The answer, while apparently not what counsel expected, was nevertheless directly responsive to his question.

The second exception deals with the action of the court in overruling a motion to strike out the letters quoted above, which had been admitted subject to exception. That ruling was also free from error. The letters were both material and relevant to the major issue upon which the case was tried, whether within three years before the suit defendant had admitted a present subsisting indebtedness to the plaintiff and, for reasons stated infra, were properly admitted.

At the close of the plaintiff’s case defendant offered a prayer that there was no evidence in the case legally sufficient to remove the bar of the statute of limitations, and that therefore the verdict of the court sitting as a jury should be for the defendant. The prayer was refused and the third exception relates to that ruling. But since the defendant then offered evidence, he waived any *540 objection he may have had to it (cases collected in Carter’s Digest, sec. 382, Title Appeal), and that exception need not be further considered.

At the close of the whole case defendant reoffered that prayer and three additional prayers numbered two, three, and four, of which the second was granted and the others refused. Those rulings are the subject of the fourth exception.

The plaintiff in the course of his testimony had said that he had, four or five days before, examined the hospital records and discovered that the diagnosis noted on the record by the hospital interne was incomplete in that it described the operation as for a “fistula in ano,” whereas to be complete it should have described it as for a “blind internal fistula in ano,” and that witness completed the diagnosis by adding the words “blind internal.” There was testimony tending to prove that an operation for an external fistula was simpler and less dangerous than one for a blind internal fistula, and inferentially less expensive, and' defendant’s third and fourth prayers were predicated upon the theory that, since the hospital records described merely a “fistula in ano,” the court was authorized to find that the operation was for a “fistula in ano,” and that, if it did so find, no evidence of the value of such a service having been offered, it was required to return a verdict for the defendant. The objections to that predicate are obvious. First, there is no necessary conflict between the terms “fistula in ano” and “blind internal fistula in ano,” other than that the one term is generic and the other specific, the one complete and the other incomplete, the general description includes the specific, just as the term “water” would include fresh water, salt water, rain water, lime water, and the^ like.

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Bluebook (online)
175 A. 602, 167 Md. 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-hebb-md-1934.