Buchanan v. Beirne Lumber Company

124 S.W.2d 813, 197 Ark. 635, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 282
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 6, 1939
Docket4-5355
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 124 S.W.2d 813 (Buchanan v. Beirne Lumber Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buchanan v. Beirne Lumber Company, 124 S.W.2d 813, 197 Ark. 635, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 282 (Ark. 1939).

Opinion

McHaNey, J.

Appellant, Dr. A. S. Buchanan, is a physician and surgeon, engaged in the practice of his profession in the City of Prescott, and is the sole owner of the Cora Donnell Hospital in said city. Appellant, Miss R. C. Miller, is a registered nurse in said hospital.

On November 15, 1935, one J. N. Henley, who was, .and for sometime theretofore had been, in the employ of appellee, lumber company, as a truck driver, was very seriously and horribly injured by reason of a collision between the truck he was driving for appellee and a truck driven by appellee, Rhodes. He was taken to the above named hospital, and was there treated for a long period of time by appellants as physician and nurse, and the lumber company paid the hospital, medical and nurse bills from time to time. On December 10, 1936, Henley filed suit against appellees to recover damages in the sum of $85,000 for his injuries, alleging' as negligence on the part of the lumber company that it furnished him a car with defective brakes, and that Rhodes was negligent in turning his truck to the left as he, Henley, was attempting to pass, without giving any signal that he would do so. Shortly after this suit was filed the lumber company notified Dr. Buchanan that it would not be responsible for ■ any further bills for service rendered Henley. On June 16,1937, while said suit was still pending, Dr. Buchanan filed a claim of lien for himself and the hospital under the provisions of act 130 of 1933, in the sum of $923, and two days later, on June 18, Miss Miller filed a claim of lién under the same act in the sum of $346 for nurse hire. Thereafter, on January 3, 1938, while said suit was pending, and without notice to appellants, the lumber company settled the damage suit with Henley for $4,000 without paying appellants ’ claims and without securing any release thereof from them, and secured a dismissal of s.aid suit. Immediately on learning of the settlement and dismissal of said suit, appellants filed tlieir interventions, praying that tlie order of dismissal be set aside as to tlieir claims of liens and praying judgment against appellees for said amounts. The court set aside its order of dismissal and set the case for trial. On a trial thereof and at the conclusion of all the evidence, the court instructed a verdict for appellees, on the ground that Henley assumed the risk of driving the truck with defective brakes and could not have recovered from the lumber company because of that fact, and, therefore, appellants could not recover against it despite the $4,000 settlement made by it with Henley. In other words the court required appellants to assume the burden of trying Henley’s case and to establish his right to recover, and having determined from the evidence that Henley could not have recovered had he tried his case, appellants could have no satisfaction, regardless of the settlement for $4,000. The case is here on appeal. .

No defense was made to the action on account of any failure of appellants to comply with all the provisions of said act 130 of 1933, in the matter of properly filing claims of lien in apt time or in giving notice thereof as provided therein. The defense was and is that in order to recover, appellants must show that the lumber company was a “tortfeasor,” as defined in said act. Sub-section (4) of § 1 defines that term as “a person through whose fault or neglect a person is injured.” Section 2 provides: “On compliance with the provisions of this act, a practitioner, a nurse, and a hospital and each of them shall .have a lien,” (a) for the value of services rendered by them to a patient, “for the relief and cure of an injury suffered through the fault or neglect of someone other than the patient,” (b) “on any claim, right of action, and money to which the patient is entitled because of that injury, and to costs and attorneys ’ fees incurred in enforcing that lien.”

. Section 5 of said act reads in part as follows: “A tortfeasor and an insurer, and each of them, who has been notified, as authorized by this act, of a claim of lien against such tortfeasor or insurer by reason of an injury caused by the fault or neglect of a tortfeasor, shall not, within sixty (60) clays after the service of such notice, nor at any time after a copy of that notice has been recorded in the office of the clerk of the circuit court of the county in which the professional, nursing, or hospital service was rendered, pay to the patient, either directly or indirectly, any money or deliver to him, either directly or indirectly, anything of value, in settlement or part settlement of the patient’s claim or right of action, without having previously

“ (a) paid to the practitioner, nurse, or hospital that gave notice of such claim of lien, the amount claimed under it; or

“(b) received a written release of the claim of lien from the practitioner, nurse, or hospital that gave notice of it, except as otherwise authorized by this act.

“A tortfeasor and an insurer, and either of them, that has been notified by a practitioner, nurse, or hospital of a claim of lien under this act, and who, directly or indirectly, otherwise than as is authorized by this act, pays to the patient any money or delivers to him anything of value as a settlement or compromise of the patient’s claim arising out of the injury done to him, shall be liable to such practitioner, nurse, or hospital for the money value of the service rendered by such practitioner, nurse, or hospital, in an amount not in excess of the amount tó which the patient was entitled from the tort-feasor or insurer because of the injury.”

If the lumber company is a “tortfeasor” within the meaning of this act, then it clearly violated the provisions of this section, because it is undisputed that it paid Henley $4,000 in settlement of his claim against it, “without having previously” paid to appellants the amount of their claims; or without having received from them a written release of the claims of lien filed by them. By so doing, it became amenable to the penalty imposed by the last quoted paragraph of said section, and that is, it became liable to appellants “for the money value of the service rendered, in an amount not in excess of the' amount to which the patient was entitled from the tort-feasor because of the injury.”

We think the court misconstrued this act when it required appellants to assume the burden of proving a case of liability against appellees, after a settlement had been made, or at all. If no settlement had been made and if the case had been brought to trial, then the burden of making a case would have been on the plaintiff Henley, and if he had failed, then the lien of appellants would have failed also. But by compromising and paying $4,000 to Henley, it admitted in substance and effect that it was in the wrong, was a “tortfeasor,” and cannot now be heard to say to the contrary, even though it look a release absolving it from blame. That term, as used in the act, means the alleged wrongdoer. It is a descriptive term referring to the person or corporation charged with negligence, not that the lien claimant must prove that the alleged “tortfeasor” was one in fact, where a settlement has been effected. The act clearly gives a lien to appellants “on any claim, right of action, and money to which the patient is entitled because of that injury, and to costs and attorneys’ fees incurred hr enforcing that lien. ”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 S.W.2d 813, 197 Ark. 635, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchanan-v-beirne-lumber-company-ark-1939.