Courchesne v. Brown

216 S.W. 674, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1196
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 1919
DocketNo. 1014.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 674 (Courchesne v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Courchesne v. Brown, 216 S.W. 674, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1196 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of appellee, plaintiff below, and against appellant, for $567.

Eor cause of action appellee alleged, substantially, the following:

Appellee on dates mentioned was in the employ of appellant; appellant is the owner of, and for many years was engaged in, a lime, rock, and lumber business, and has-been the employer of labor, and. has had employed in said business a great number of employés; appellee’s special position with appellant was that of accountant, office manager, and cashier, at a salary of $200 per month; appellee entered upon his said employment on July 1, 1917; appellant withheld from appellee’s wages $1 per month for each and every month that appellee was with appellant, for hospital fees, including medical attention and nurse hire, and withheld a like sum from each of'his employés every month, and said deduction was made upon the books of appellant as “hospital fees,” and that appellant has customarily, for a long period of time, been collecting said sum of $1 per month from his said employés as hospital fees; that the withholding and collecting by appellant of said sum of money as hospital fees from appellee’s wages entitled appellee to hospital services, medical atten-^ tion and nurse hire, including nurse’s board in the event appellee became sick; that on September 26, 1917, appellee became violently sick while so employed, the particular sickness being appendicitis, and that it became necessary to send appellee to the hospital for proper treatment; that appellant’s son, then actively engaged in managing and assisting appellant in said business, sent appel-lee to Hotel Dieu, a hospital; that it was necessary for appellee to receive treatment from said date to December 1, 1917, and to secure the services of .surgeons and physicians in the operation; and that said hospital fees and nurses’ and doctors’ bills are as stated, the several sums itemized aggregated $747; that said sums #were incurred by appellee, including necessary ambulance fee to and from the hospital of $10; that all of said bills were reasonable 'and necessary; that' by virtue of the premises appellant became liable and bound for said sums; that appellant has failed and refused to pay said sums; and that it became necessary that appellee pay, and he has paid, all of said sums, as the parties with whom said bills were made looked primarily to appellee for payment; that section 12g, pt. 1, of Employers’ Liability Act (Acts 1913, c. 179), as amended by the 35th Legislature (1917) c. 103 (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Supp. 1918, art. 5246-28), prohibits any employer from collecting from employés, any part of the premium which any employer might have to pay by reason of being a subscriber under the -terms of Said act; and appellant was a subscriber under said act, and appellant was an employer of more than five persons, and at the time ap-pellee began working for appellant, and at the time of his sickness, and when said bills were incurred, appellant was a-feubscrib *675 ■er to the Employers’ Insurance Association under said act; the insurance so secured by .appellant for his employés covered necessary hospital fees of all of his employes for injuries arising in the course of their employment, and that the hospital fees of $1 as above deducted from the wages of employes was, in the contemplation of the parties, for sickness or disability arising from any cause other than injuries received in the course of their employment, which sickness or disability would necessitate said employes or appellant incurring hospital fees, medical attention, nurse hire, and board; appellant owned no hospital, nor was he a subscriber to any particular hospital, nor was it specified by appellant which particular hospital would be necessary in the event it became necessary for an employe to incur hospital attention, yet appellee would show that by the direction, of appellant’s son, agent and manager of appellant’s business, appellee was sent to the hospital Hotel Dieu; that while there were no written specifications -between appellant and his employes as to ■what hospital services employés would be entitled to receive, said hospital fees were collected by appellant for the purpose of securing to employes said necessary medical and hospital attention, and that such was in •contemplation of the parties, and that by the payment of said $1 per month appellant expressly and impliedly contracted to pay all necessary hospital and medical expenses and services, including nurse and board of his •employes, including appellee; that between September 26 and November 1, 1917, appellant furnished to appellee certain goods, wares, and merchandise in the sum of ,$180 and appellee tenders said amount as a credit on the amount sued for, and prays judgment for $567, interest and costs.

Appellant pleaded general demurrer, general denial, expressly denied that he customarily or otherwise collected any sum from appellee or.other employés as hospital fees; hut alleged that it was the custom in his business to give any employe desiring it an order for a doctor, for medicines, or for ¡hospital services, and to charge to and collect same from such employe.

A'trial, with the aid of a jury, resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of ap-pellee for the amount sued for.

Appellant presents five assignments of error. The first claims error in the court’s refusal to instruct a verdict in his favor. The second assignment involves practically the same proposition, and is to the effect that appellee’s cause, of action is based Upon an implied contract to pay hospital services, including the items sued for, and that, the undisputed evidence showing that no ■ such contract existed, the court erred in refusing to give the peremptory instruction asked by appellant. The insistence of appellant under these assignments is that the undisputed evidence shows that there was no contract between appellant and appellee obligating or binding appellant to pay the items for which he is sued, and it was therefore the duty of the court to instruct in his favor.

The evidence is of too great a volume to reproduce it all, and we will state only the substance of what to us seems to be the evidence on the essential facts. Appellee testified:

Appellee began work for appellant about June 30, 1917, as accountant; appellant employed from 80 to 150 men; appellant’s business was that of operating a limestone quarry; as each man came to work his name was entered on the pay roll book, and the first charge against his account was a “hospital fee of one dollar at the top of the page”; every employe of every kind paid that hospital fee; appellee paid the hospital fee; ap-pellee, while at work for appellant, was taken sick on the 25th or 26th of September (1917); between the time he went to work there and the time he was taken sick he took the matter of hospital fees up with appellant; representatives of the Texas Employers’ Association came out there; appellant had signed a contract with them; appellant also carried insurance in an indemnity company, protecting him from damage suits or any cause of any liabilities on account of accidents to any of his employes..

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Kloman v. Doctors Hospital, Inc.
76 A.2d 782 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 674, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courchesne-v-brown-texapp-1919.