Hickman County v. Scarborough

149 S.W. 1116, 150 Ky. 1, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 824
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 1116 (Hickman County v. Scarborough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hickman County v. Scarborough, 149 S.W. 1116, 150 Ky. 1, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 824 (Ky. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinions

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Lassing —

Reversing.

Dr. J. R. Scarborough was tbe health officer of Hickman County in October 1909; and had held such position [2]*2for some time prior thereto. At its October, 1909, term, the fiscal court of Hickman County adopted in due form the following- resolution, as appears from the record kept by said court:

“On motion made, seconded and carried, ordered that the health officer of Hickman County be paid $1.50 for each call he may make and 50 cents per mile one way for the distance he shall travel over one mile in making-such call, and $2.00 for quarantining- and $2.00 for fumigating- smallpox, scarlet fever, diphtheria and other infectious disease and it is understood that Dr. J. E. Lee shall act in such capacity in the vicinity of Columbus. This to be effective until the April term, 1910, of this court. ’ ’

Conceiving- that his rights were fixed by' said order or resolution, Doctor Scarborough continued to discharge the duties of health officer of Hickman County. Sometime following- the April, 1910, term of said court, he presented to it his claim for services rendered the county, during- the six months covered by the order. On the advice of the county attorney, the fiscal court declined to pay. He thereafter instituted suit, in which he sought to recover of the.county $324.00, the value of the services alleged to have been rendered by him as health officer from October, 1909, to April, 1910. Several defenses were interposed for the fiscal court and the county by the county attorney, the chief of which was: That the health officer was not ordered or directed by the county board of health, or the State Board of Health, to render the service for which he sought to hold the county liable and that, in rendering- this service, he acted as a volunteer, on his own initiative, and the county was, in no wise, responsible therefor. In an amended petition, plaintiff pleaded that he rendered this service under the direction of the county board of health and the regulations of the State Board of Health. This amended petition was traversed. Another defense, interposed in behalf of the county, was that the persons, to whom this service was alleged to have been rendered, were financially able to pay the bills, and that therefore the county was not chargeable therewith. Upon the issues thus joined the case was submitted to a jury for trial, and it having returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the amount sued for, the county appeals.

[3]*3On the question of the financial condition of the patients treated by appellee, for the services to whom he sought to hold the county liable, the burden was upon. the county; the proof failed to support the allegations in the answer, that these parties, or any of them, were financially able to meet the expense themselves; and hence, if the service was in fact rendered by appellee in his official capacity as health officer of the county and while he was proceeding as directed by the statute, the county should be required to pay the contract price, if the order adopted by the fiscal court, and upon which appellee relies, is a valid and binding contract; or, if this order is invalid, then the county should be required to pay . appellee for such service, its reasonable value. Section 2055, Kentucky Statutes, makes it the duty of the fiscal court to fix the compensation of the health officer, by allowing to him a salary. The evident purpose and object of the legislature, in passing this act, was to prevent controversies between the health officer and the fiscal court, growing out of questions of this character. But, as it is the plain duty of the county to meet the legitimate and proper expenses of the health officer, when he proceeds in the way and manner as by statute directed, the failure of the fiscal court, in advance of the service rendered, to fix a salary as compensation for the health officer, could not have the effect of defeating him in his effort to, collect for such service, the reasonable value thereof. Butler County v. Gardner, 29 Rep., 922. So, it becomes unnecessary to enter into a consideration of the validity of the order adopted by the fiscal court, at its' October, 1909, session. If the order was not binding upon the county, then no salary or compensation was fixed for his services. during the ensuing six months, and if-he rendered any services, he would be entitled to a reasonable charge against the county for the value thereof. There is no complaint that the schedule of fees, adopted by the fiscal court in said order, is not reasonable; and, as the evidence shows that the services charged for were rendered and the charge fixed acording to the schedule adopted in the order of Hie fiscal court, if appellee is entitled to anything, he is entitled to the amount sued for.

The serious question presented by the record is: Bid the health officer act upon the direction of the county [4]*4board of health, or was he acting upon his own initiative? Upon this point, he testifies as follows:

“Q. Doctor I will ask you one other question: Tell the jury when you made these charges — when you gave this attention as health officer, how you come to do it?”

“A. In the beginning the fiscal court employed mo as health officer to do this work as per contract, I accepted it and as cases demanded through the county, we had no epidemic at all, that is, what we call an epidemic, we had sporadic cases, just here and there through the county, as eases were reported to me by the different doctors over the county, I attended those cases, carried out what we thought were the rules and regulations of the State Board of Health and of our board of health. ’ ’

“Q. Didn’t you go to Spring Hill, Columbus, and various parts of the county on notifications of these various doctors, wouldn’t you get in your buggy and go and the board of health didn’t know anything about it at all?”

“A. I told you that I didn’t go a single time by a direct order from the county board of health.”

“Q. I mean any kind of an order, didn’t you go without any kind of an order?”

“A. Never did but one time, that was by order of Judge Brummel, you remember thaT'time I met you over here.”

££Q. Did the county board have a meeting?”

<£A. No, we had several meetings, they knew what I was doing all the time, there was no special, direct order in any of these cases, there was no special, direct order from the county board of health, where we met and kept minutes, but we would meet, and not knowing, and not believing yet that minutes were absolutely necessary to be kept, it was absolutely impossible to have a meeting every time and the thing was to do it right now that the orders of the board of health might be carried out; you may take it for granted that in not one of these cases did we meet and Tiave these things ordered carried out, not in regular session where minutes were kept but we did meet. ’ ’

The chairman of the county board of health, Dr. W. W. Richmond, upon the same point testifies:

‘ ‘ Q. What direction or instruction did the local board of health of Hickman County give the health office^ [5]*5during this period here from October, 1909, to April, 1910, with regard to his duties?”

“A.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 1116, 150 Ky. 1, 1912 Ky. LEXIS 824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickman-county-v-scarborough-kyctapp-1912.