County of Lander v. BOARD OF TR. OF ELKO GEN. HOSP.

403 P.2d 659, 81 Nev. 354, 1965 Nev. LEXIS 242
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1965
Docket4813
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 403 P.2d 659 (County of Lander v. BOARD OF TR. OF ELKO GEN. HOSP.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Lander v. BOARD OF TR. OF ELKO GEN. HOSP., 403 P.2d 659, 81 Nev. 354, 1965 Nev. LEXIS 242 (Neb. 1965).

Opinion

*355 OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

This appeal from a judgment in favor of respondent and against the appellant county in the sum of $5,416.64 for the balance due for hospital services rendered to a resident of Lander County, who was without means to pay the same, presents the following issues! These issues, although not so stated in appellant’s opening brief, appear to us to be (1) whether the Elko General Hospital had the right in the first instance to make the determination that the patient, one Frank P. Grunstad, was an indigent or poor person; (2) whether, assuming the hospital had this right, Grunstad was in fact an indigent or poor person as held by the trial court; and (3) whether the respondent hospital gave sufficient notice to the appellant county in compliance with the requirements of the statute.

We first turn to the facts. Frank P. Grunstad resided in Battle Mountain, Lander County, Nevada, for many years prior to his last illness and death, it being conceded by all parties that he was a legal resident of this town. He died July 24,1963, at the Elko General Hospital of pulmonary hemorrhage due to recurrent carcinoma of the esophagus.

For many years prior to his death, Mr. Grunstad lived in or near Battle Mountain, in Lander County, and was engaged in various mining and other ventures. At the time of his initial hospitalization in February, 1963, he was unemployed but drawing old-age insurance benefits. His livelihood was substantially dependent upon these insurance payments, even though testimony at the trial *356 indicated he did odd jobs from time to time as they were available and as his health permitted. He had never applied for or been granted indigent or pauper’s aid by Lander County or the state. He owned no real or personal property except his immediate personal effects. He had recently owned an automobile which was wrecked and apparently never repaired. He has at least two brothers, one living in Sparks, Nevada, who appeared and testified as a witness for the plaintiff-respondent, and one living somewhere in California.

Mr. Grunstad traveled to Elko from Battle Mountain in February, 1963, and as a private patient consulted John M. Read, M.D. He was admitted to the Elko General Hospital under the care of Dr. Read on February 13, 1963. An esophageal biopsy was performed by Hugh S. Collett, M.D., on February 14. Mr. Grunstad was discharged from the hospital on February 15, after incurring charges of $139.20, which sum was paid through his insurer, Bankers Life of Chicago, Illinois. There is no evidence that he was looked upon or considered to be an indigent during this period of hospitalization. No notice of this hospitalization or his financial condition was given to Lander County.

On March 6, 1963, he was re-admitted to the Elko General Hospital and two major operations were performed upon him. He remained in the hospital until his death on July 24, 1963. From the date of his re-admission to the hospital until his death, he was under the care of Dr. Collett, and at no time was his condition sufficiently improved to enable him to leave the hospital and be cared for either at home or at the hospital in Battle Mountain. His hospital ledger sheet indicates he lived in Battle Mountain, was an unemployed laborer, classified as insured, gave the name and address of his brother in Sparks, and listed his insurance carrier as Bankers Life under policy No. 54562431. When he died, he had incurred hospitalization costs of $6,006.75. Of this sum, $139.20 was apparently paid by his insurer; and his brother, D. W. Grunstad, testified that he paid $450.91 from the proceeds of three social security checks belonging to the decedent, which he had obtained in *357 some sort of probate proceedings in Washoe County. Part of the latter funds were applied to the payment of the decedent’s debts and his funeral expenses, the remainder of the balance available being paid to the Elko General Hospital. These transactions left a balance owing the hospital of $5,416.64, the amount of the judgment recovered by the respondent in the lower court.

The first notice given Lander County by the Elko Hospital that Mr. Grunstad was a patient there, claimed by the hospital to be a resident of Lander County, an indigent, pauper, poor person or incapacitated by disease, and the responsibility of Lander County was the notice or letter, dated March 8, 1963. This letter, signed by the business manager of the hospital, was addressed to the “Board of County Commissioners, Lander County, Austin, Nevada.” 1 It was received by the clerk of that board, placed in a drawer in her office and brought to the actual and official attention of the board at its next regular meeting in Austin, April 5, 1963. The clerk, pursuant to directions of the board, notified Elko General Hospital by letter dated April 8,1963, that Mr. Grunstad was not a Lander County patient. Thereafter, Elko General Hospital from time to time sent statements of account and vouchers to Lander County, none of which was ever acted upon.

Respondent filed its action against Lander County on the basis of the provisions of NRS 450.400 quoted in full in the margin, 2 and recovered judgment.

*358 The appellant county contends that the determination of Grunstad’s status was entirely within the jurisdiction of the Board of County Commissioners of Lander County and that said county commissioners were unlawfully ousted of such jurisdiction by the action of the superintendent of the Elko General Hospital in determining that Grunstad was a pauper or poor or an indigent person. We think, however, that it is clear from a reading of NB.S 450.400 that the original determination of Grunstad’s status must be made by the hospital.

The factual determination is beyond doubt, as Grunstad’s assets were grossly inadequate to provide the needed medical care. A realization on all his assets provided only $450.91 on the hospital’s bill of $6,006.75. Evidence as to his status and as to the extent of his assets and as to the hospital bill were all produced before the district court and amply justify the court’s findings.

The notice addressed to the Board of County Commissioners of Lander County complied in all respects with the requirements of the statute.

A county’s obligation to support indigents, paupers, and poor people results only from a statutory provision imposing such a legal obligation. 41 Am.Jur., Poor and Poor Laws § 2. This obligation is fixed in this state by *359 the provisions of NRS 428.010 and 428.050, which are set forth in the margin. 3

In Outagamie County v. Town of Brooklyn, 18 Wis.2d 303, 118 N.W.2d 201, a similar situation as here presented faced the Wisconsin court.

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Bluebook (online)
403 P.2d 659, 81 Nev. 354, 1965 Nev. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-lander-v-board-of-tr-of-elko-gen-hosp-nev-1965.