Four Winds Hospital v. Keasbey
This text of 92 A.D.2d 478 (Four Winds Hospital v. Keasbey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County (Wolin, J.), entered February 18,1982, following a jury trial which resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff against defendants Anthony Keasbey and May Keasbey, modified, on the law, only to the extent of dismissing the complaint, on the merits, as against defendant May Keasbey, and otherwise affirmed, without costs. The action was brought by plaintiff hospital, a private psychiatric institution, to recover for medical services rendered to Julia Keasbey, daughter of defendants Anthony and May Keasbey. The central issue concerns the relative responsibility of the defendants to pay for their daughter’s treatment based upon an alleged oral promise by Anthony Keasbey. Julia was hospitalized from February 22, 1979 through September 3, 1979, a period of approximately six months. This was in conformity with the period of hospital[479]*479ization anticipated by plaintiff and communicated to the father prior to Julia’s admission, at which time, according to plaintiff, Anthony disclosed the existence of major medical insurance alleged to be sufficient to cover the cost of such hospital treatment. Nevertheless, in March or April of 1979, defendants, for the first time, objected to the furnishing of medical treatment to Julia and refused to co-operate in the submission of a claim for major medical coverage. After plaintiff tendered a bill for partial treatment, together with an insurance form to be completed and returned, appellants, by mailgram dated May 27, 1979, refused to pay for their daughter’s hospitalization. We find on this record that the complaint should have been dismissed as against the mother, May Keasbey, since no proof was adduced of any agreement on her part to pay for her daughter’s treatment. The record does not disclose any communication between Mrs. Keasbey and the hospital prior to Julia’s admission. Nor was there any evidence to raise a factual issue for submission to the jury that the father was authorized to act as agent for his wife to bind her to pay the hospital bill. Such an agency relationship may not be implied or inferred solely by reason of the marital relationship between the parties (see Kozecke v Humble Oil & Refining Co., 46 AD2d 986). However, we do not subscribe to the views of our dissenting colleagues that the trial court erred in not submitting to the jury the issue of whether the father’s oral promise to pay the contemplated hospital expense was a promise “to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another person” so as to require a written memorandum under the Statute of Frauds contained in section 5-701 (subd a, par 2) of the General Obligations Law. The uncontested sequence of events established that Anthony obligated himself as a principal debtor, primarily liable and not to answer for the debt of another, since, at the time he agreed to assume responsibility, there was no debt in existence. Julia had not as yet submitted herself to the care of the hospital. Dr. Klagsbrun had discussed with Anthony the advisability of hospitalization before Julia was admitted and, according to plaintiff, it was during that conversation that Anthony agreed to assume any expense in excess of available insurance coverage. Subsequently, upon Julia’s admission to the hospital, she signed a standard financial obligation form. Thus, chronologically, there were two primary obligations, the primary debt by Anthony to pay any expense for Julia not covered by his major medical coverage and then by Julia when she was subsequently admitted for treatment. Anthony’s agreement at issue here, concededly, was never fulfilled since he refused to submit medical forms to his insurance carrier for payment. With reference to a primary debt or obligation as falling without the scope of the Statute of Frauds, the Court of Appeals stated in Richardson Press v Albright (224 NY 497, 502): “When the primary debt continues to exist, the promise of another to pay the debt may be original or it may not be, but it is regarded as original only when the party sought to be charged clearly becomes, within the intention of the parties, a principal debtor primarily liable.” The Court of Appeals has also recognized that the determination as to whether the promise to pay the debt is original and absolute on the one hand, or merely collateral, on the other, is dependent upon “the intention of the parties, to be ascertained from the language used and from all the surrounding circumstances.” (Clark v Howard, 150 NY 232, 238.) Here, taking cognizance of the fact that at the time of hospitalization, there was no debt in existence, the concession by Anthony that he had discussed with Dr. Klagsbrun the anticipated future hospital expense and the availability of insurance to cover a significant portion of such expense, there is sufficient in the record to sustain the finding by the jury that there was an original promise by defendant to pay the contemplated future medical/hospital services. The oral promise was enforceable and bound Anthony as an [480]*480original and primary obligor, independent from the subsequent separate written agreement by Julia to assume the expenses incurred for services to be rendered. While an issue could have been raised as to whether appellant Anthony Keasbey, sometime during the course of his daughter’s hospital stay, properly terminated his primary obligation, on this record, defendants did not object to the Trial Justice’s instruction that no such issue had been raised in the case. Accordingly, the issue of termination, not having been raised at trial, may not be tendered for the first time on this appeal. Concur — Murphy, P. J., Fein and Kassal, JJ.
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92 A.D.2d 478, 459 N.Y.S.2d 68, 1983 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 16681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/four-winds-hospital-v-keasbey-nyappdiv-1983.