Irwin v. Lorio

126 So. 669, 169 La. 1090, 1930 La. LEXIS 1642
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 3, 1930
DocketNo. 30199.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 126 So. 669 (Irwin v. Lorio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irwin v. Lorio, 126 So. 669, 169 La. 1090, 1930 La. LEXIS 1642 (La. 1930).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

The plaintiff, in each of the first three suits named in the title, is a practicing physician in the parish of East Baton Rouge, and is a member of the East Baton Rouge Parish Medical Society, which is a voluntary, unincorporated association, chartered by the Louisiana State Medical Society. The plaintiffs, in the fourth suit, are the president, the secretary-treasurer, and members of the board of directors of the Stanacola Employees’ Medical and Hospital Association, which is a voluntary, unincorporated' association of employees of the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana, numbering approximately twenty-eight hundred members, suing on their own behalf, and on behalf of the association, to protect its rights.

The purpose of the Stanacola Employees’ Medical and Hospital Association is the procuring of high grade medical services at a small cost to the members thereof and their families, and also hospital facilities. The members pay at stated periods a prescribed sum to the association, out of which the facilities mentioned are procured. In order to accomplish the purpose of its existence, the association employed Dr. W. Kernan Irwin, Dr. Edward B. Young, and Dr. Harry G. Morris, as physicians, or surgeons, or both, to administer to the needs of its members, at salaries ranging from six to eight thousand dollars a year, and also employed other physicians, who are not involved in this litigation;

*1093 The East Eaton Rouge Parish Medical Society is hound by the code of ethics of the American Medical Association, as is also the Louisiana State Medical Society. In this code is found a provision, reading as follows: “It is unprofessional for a physician to dispose of his services under conditions that make it impossible to render adequate service to his patient or which interfere with reasonable competition among the physicians of a community. To do this is detrimental to -the public and to the individual physician, and lowers the dignity of the profession.”

The local society has a by-law, reading as follows: “Kindly efforts in the interest of peace, conciliation or reformation, so far as possible or expedient, shall precede the- filing of formal charges affecting the character or standing of a member, and the accused shall have the opportunity to be heard in his own defense in all trials and proceedings of this nature. Any member expelled, suspended or resigning from this society is thereby expelled, suspended or resigned from the .state society. Appeal may be taken as provided in chapter VI of the by-laws of the state society.” In the by-laws of the state society it is provided that “Any physician who may feel aggrieved by the actions of the society of his parish in refusing him membership, or in suspending or expelling him, shall have the right of appeal to the council and to the house of delegates.”

At a meeting of the local society, held on September 12, 1928, the following resolution was adopted, to wit: “Inasmuch as it is contrary to the code of medical ethics as laid down by the A. M. A. (American Medical Association) to engage in such contract practice as ‘interferes with reasonable competition among physicians of a community’ it is the sense of this society that all such practice be immediately stopped. Failure to comply with this section of the code of ethics of the A. M. A. will be prima facie evidence that membership is no longer desired in this society.”

The local society, at a meeting held on March 18, 1929, declared, by a vote of seventeen to eight, that the contracts entered into by the plaintiffs, Drs. Irwin, Young, and Morris, with the Stanaeola Employees’ Medical and Hospital Association were unethical, a quorum, under the by-laws of the society, being present.

Thereafter, an opportunity to surrender their contracts was given these physicians, but in the exercise of their judgment, and not deeming the contracts in the least unethical, or in violation of the code of ethics of the American Medical Association, they refused to surrender them. Later, the following report was made to the local society by' a special committee thereof, appointed pursuant to a resolution of the society, of date, March 13, 1929, and reading, so far as pertinent, as follows: “In view of the fact that the contracts entered into by Doctors W. Kernan Irwin, H. G. Morris and E. B. Young are such as ‘interfere with reasonable competition among the physicians of this community’ and are, therefore, in violation of the resolution heretofore adopted by this society of date, the 12th day of September, 1928, the committee now prefers charges against the said Doctors W. Kernan Irwin, II. G. Morris and E. B. Young, which charges are as follows, to wit:

“That they and each of them have entered into contracts with the Stanaeola Employees Medical and Hospital Association which contracts are of such a nature as to prevent reasonable competition, all in violation of the aforesaid resolution of this society.

*1095 “We recommend that the aforesaid doctors be served with a copy of this report and of the. above charges, and that the trial thereon be had at the next regular meeting of the society.”

At the instance of the local society, on June 15, 1929, a copy of this report, together with a notice that his trial would be held at the police jury room oh Wednesday, July 10, 1929, at 8 p. m., was forwarded by the president of the society, and the secretary thereof, to Dr. Irwin, and was received by him. Copies of the report and similar notices, as to trial, were also sent to Drs. Young and Morris, and were received by them.

Following the receipt of these notices, the four suits under consideration were filed. The contracts entered into by Drs. Irwin, Young, and Morris, are set forth in each petition therein. It is also alleged that these contracts are not unethical or in violation of the medical code of ethics, and that the cause for which it is proposed to expel these physicians is unreasonable. It is also alleged that the expulsion of these physicians will deprive them of the right to use the hospitals in the state, and especially the two hospitals in the parish of East Baton Rouge, in performing surgical operations, and in their practice, since the management of these hospitals will not permit physicians and surgeons to use these institutions unless they are members of the local medical society, and that the use of hospitals is necessary in their practice and in discharging the contracts involved herein, which they allege to 'be valuable property rights. It is further alleged that thirty physicians, all of whom are members of the local society, have conspired to expel them from the society in default of their surrendering their contracts.

The allegation, ás to conspiracy, rests upon the declaration made in the resolution mentioned above, that the contracts of these physicians with the Stanacola Employees’ Medical and Hospital Association are unethical, and upon alleged threats by some of the physicians, made defendants in these suits, to expel the three plaintiffs, who are physicians, from the society, unless they surrender their contracts. .

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Bluebook (online)
126 So. 669, 169 La. 1090, 1930 La. LEXIS 1642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irwin-v-lorio-la-1930.