Cowan v. Martin Huckaby

20 So. 2d 769, 246 Ala. 378, 1945 Ala. LEXIS 279
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 1, 1945
Docket8 Div. 291.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 20 So. 2d 769 (Cowan v. Martin Huckaby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowan v. Martin Huckaby, 20 So. 2d 769, 246 Ala. 378, 1945 Ala. LEXIS 279 (Ala. 1945).

Opinion

THOMAS, Justice.

The suit at law against a partnership and the members thereof, by agreement of the parties, was transferred to the equity side of the docket of the circuit court.

The effect of the recast pleading, after transfer, is that appellant rented from respondents a certain hospital known as Tennessee Valley Infirmary and was to pay them $150 per month, and respondents were to collect and remit to her the charges for hospital expenses rendered by her to the several patients of the respondents; that she had already paid all of the rents except $300 due them; that they had admitted that they had collected $331.50 for the complainant from their patients which they had not paid, and also alleged that in addition to this sum they had actually collected $562 more. She asked that her rents be offset and a judgment on an accounting rendered for the balance.

Respondents filed an answer denying they had agreed to collect her rents or be *382 come liable therefor. They admitted that they had leased her the building with the exception of Dr. Martin’s office, the X-ray room and equipment, and Dr. Martin’s office and surgical equipment, and that she agreed to pay $150 per month for the same, and she was to fix and collect her own charges and keep up the hospital and furnish everything else in the way of supplies, including meals and nurses for all patients; that each patient admitted was to pay her for her charges, and the doctor bills, and surgery fees were to be separately collected, and assessed against each patient, ánd doctors were to collect their own fees; that very often patients were brought to the hospital who had no money, and in order to collect her fees and assist the complainant in collecting her charges, she furnished them with a list of her charges, where the patients had no money, and .a note was taken, payable to the hospital and the doctor or to the doctors, or to the hospital, as the case may be; that the notes were taken to the bank and endorsed by the doctors with recourse and discounted at the bank. These notes included the doctor’s fees and hospital expenses due to the complainant. This was all known by complainant and acquiesced in by her and she received her money for her services from the proceeds obtained on the notes at the bank in each instance. Most of the notes thus taken were paid by the patients at the bank, but a large number of them, totaling several hundred dollars, were not paid by the patients, but Dr. Martin and Dr. Huclca.by had to- pay them oif, and take the patients’ notes up at "the bank on their endorsement; and that they took up $1446.-53 worth of such notes, which respective amount had formerly been paid by them to the complainant from the moneys received from the bank, and they lost the remainder of these notes. These matters were handled in this manner to accommodate complainant and help her get her hospital bills while they were thus getting their surgical fees and,bills for medical treatment.

After the testimony had been practically completed, complainant amended her bill, alleging respondents had admitted collecting $331.50 for'complainant, and they had actually collected an additional $727.50. Respondents thereupon amended their answers setting up that they had thus discounted said notes at the bank and listed the name of each patient who had made a note, the amount that had been charged back to Drs. Martin and Huckaby by the bank, and the amount received by Cordelia Wooten Cowan from the note discounted, and the net amount paid to her and charged back to the doctors. This last .sum was $1547.53, which they paid the bank for moneys received by her 'from the notes so discounted. They later' made another amendment, admitting since the filing of the first amendment they had collected certain other notes, her part amounting to $100, which should go as a credit on the $1547.53. Some of these notes were made only for fees due by patients to the complainant and handled for her in this manner at the bank. The notes were all offered in evidence.

The agreement of counsel is to the ef- ■ feet that the matters set forth in the amended pleading .should be treated as testified to by the respective parties. It was further agreed in open court that:

“It is stipulated that the notes listed in the interrogatories except such as has [have] been admitted as having been collected since are yet in the hands of defendants’ attorney. No claim is made as against them by complainant and these notes will remain in the hands of defendants’ attorney for collection. * * * [Italics and brackets supplied.]
“It is hereby stipulated and agreed in open Court that all the testimony and exhibits that have been taken and filed in this cause will be treated as having been taken under decree of reference* and the matter is now submitted to the register for his findings "and that the register may report his findings to the Judge after allowing said report to lie over for five days and that this stipulation may be validated by the Court in its decree and that on expiration of ten days from the date of the register’s report, he will forward his report and all the file to the court for final decree by the Court, as if it had been submitted to the register on decretal order.”

The register, under these stipulations and on the testimony taken before him, ascertained in his report that Respondents had collected $1019.50, which they had not paid to complainant; that she owed them $300 for rents, and they had paid the bank for moneys she had received on notes discounted at the bank $1447.53, which they had to repay to the bank, and she yet owed respondents $728.53; that the costs were $212.60. Exceptions were filed by both parties to the register’s report and the court on May 23, 1944, rendered a decree con *383 firming this report of the register as to the findings of fact, rendering judgment against appellant for $728.53, and holding that the arrangements between complainant and respondents, whereby hospital expenses were from time to time included in notes taken by the respondents for complainant’s fees, was a wholly gratuitous arrangement, and that the law will raise or imply a promise on the part of the complainant to repay the respondents such amounts as they have paid her, but which have been charged back to and paid by them to the bank, and that she was due to pay this sum as a matter of right, good conscience, and justice, on this equitable action for accounting.

The assignments of error supporting this appeal are to the effect that there was error in overruling complainant’s demurrer to the amended cross bill; exceptions to the register’s report as indicated; in holding that the law raised or implied a promise on the part of complainant to repay respondents such amounts as they had paid her, but which have been charged back to and paid by them to the bank; and in decreeing that respondents have and recover of complainant the sum of $728.53 and one-half of the costs, and in awarding the judgment in that amount for the respondents.

The amended answer and demurrer and amended cross bill and supplemental answer and amendment to the cross bill for the respondents will appear in the statement of facts.

We have carefully considered this pleading, and are of opinion and hold that, there was no error committed in overruling the demurrer to the cross bill.

In 17 Corpus Juris Secundum, Contracts, § 4, p.

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Bluebook (online)
20 So. 2d 769, 246 Ala. 378, 1945 Ala. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowan-v-martin-huckaby-ala-1945.