Massachusetts General Hospital v. City of Revere

191 N.E.2d 120, 346 Mass. 217, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 585
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 6, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 191 N.E.2d 120 (Massachusetts General Hospital v. City of Revere) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Massachusetts General Hospital v. City of Revere, 191 N.E.2d 120, 346 Mass. 217, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 585 (Mass. 1963).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

In this action of contract brought in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston, the hospital seeks reimbursement of $586.59 for hospitalization furnished to one Mary Barney as follows: November 11 to 19, 1960, at $30.79 per day, $153.95, and January 21 to February 8,1961, at $33.28 per day, $432.64. The only issue at the trial “was whether . . . Mary Barney was a person within . . . [O. L. c. 117, § 24A] for whose treatment the . . . [hospital] was entitled to be reimbursed by the . . . city . . . -” 1 The following facts were agreed. Mary Barney “had no property.” She was “a married woman with no depend *219 ents.” Her “husband had a steady job with a weekly take home pay of $56.” The Barneys had an equity of about $2,000 in a trailer in which they lived. They owned a 1949 Buick automobile. “ [0]ther than the foregoing, [the husband] had no assets whatsoever.” These “facts were made known to the hospital at the time of . . . [Mrs. Barney’s] admission.”

The judge found that the Barneys possessed the assets listed above and added, “I do not find that she was a needy person within the meaning of” § 24A. “ [I]n view of . . . [his] finding[s] of fact,” he denied a request for ruling, “18. If . . . the . . . [hospital] furnished necessary hospitalization to Mary Barney ... at the request of the patient, either express or implied, and . . . the patient was unable to pay for the hospital services when they were due as a matter of law all that remains for the . . . [city] to do is to provide the patient with hospitalization or pay the . . . [hospital] therefor.” 2 There was a finding for the city, made on March 27,1962, before our decision on June 1, 1962, in two cases, Massachusetts Gen. Hosp. v. Chelsea, 344 Mass. 449, and 344 Mass. 452.

The Appellate Division dismissed a report, saying, “To have requested the court to rule . . . that the . . . [hospital could] recover if it furnished necessary medical attention and the patient was unable to pay for the services when due, ignored the fact that on the evidence the court could find as a fact that no emergency existed and that, although she had no funds at hand, she was not a pauper be *220 cause of other circumstances. ’ ’ Earlier the opinion stated, 1 ‘ There are a vast variety of situations which require medical attention which do not require immediate relief.” The opinion concluded, “ [Mrs.] Barney was not brought to the hospital under emergency conditions. There is nothing in the report to indicate that she was in need of immediate relief. ’ ’ Thus, while the trial judge denied the requests on the ground that Mrs. Barney had ability to pay, the Appellate Division seems to have taken the view that there was no evidence that prompt hospitalization was medically required. From the decision of the Appellate Division, the hospital appealed.

■ The applicable statute is G. L. c. 117, § 24A (inserted by St. 1959, c. 584), which separated into two sections subject matter previously covered in § 24. 3 Section 24A reads in part, “If hospital care is furnished to a person in need of public assistance by any person not liable by law for his support, the town wherein he resides at the time his hospitalization begins . . . shall be liable for the expense of such care necessarily incurred under this chapter after notice and request made in writing to one or more members of the board of public welfare thereof, and until provision is made by them ...” (emphasis supplied), subject to provisions which need not be discussed here. The words “in need of public assistance” were inserted in § 24 by St. 1928, c. 155, § 26, which substituted those words for the word “pauper.”

In Symmes Arlington Hosp. Inc. v. Arlington, 292 Mass. *221 162, 163-164, it was said, “A pauper is ‘one residing or found in any town where he falls into distress, and stands in need of immediate relief.’ Shearer v. Shelburne, 10 Cush. 3, 5, quoted in City Hospital of Quincy v. Milton, 232 Mass. 273, 275. . . . ‘A person may have property and yet fall into distress, and be in need of immediate relief, from inability to avail himself of it. . . ” Much of the language just quoted is obviously derived from what is now G. L. c. 117, § 14 (as amended through St. 1939, e. 39, § 1), relating to the liability of one town to another for the support of needy persons having a settlement in the former town. Section 14 is expressed in somewhat less general language than the present form of § 24A.

The Symmes case was decided upon facts which arose before February 1, 1929, when St. 1928, c. 155, § 26, became effective under § 59 of that statute. It dealt with the hospital treatment of three boys, admitted at different times, who “had been injured by accident.” Each of them “remained at the hospital for two months or more, under treatment.” This court held that a verdict could not properly have been directed for the Symmes hospital “for the entire expense of care and treatment for months.” A new trial limited to the issue of damages was ordered, so that it might be established to what extent “continued relief . . . was not necessary” because parents or others might be able to pay for the treatment. The opinion, however, said, “The boys could be paupers, to whom the . . . [hospital] had a right to furnish relief at the expense of the . . . town . . . if their injuries demanded immediate relief not otherwise available, even though their parents might prove to be financially responsible. . . . [The hospital] was entitled to act on appearances of need. . . . The law does not contemplate that a person seriously injured or desperately ill, shall wait without surgical or medical attention until his wealth shall be appraised, his relatives discovered and their financial ability ascertained, or the place of his settlement determined.” See Smith v. Colerain, 9 Met. 492, 495-497; Charlestown v. Groveland, 15 Gray, 15, 17.

*222 In the first Massachusetts Gen. Hosp. case, 344 Mass. 449, the hospital had furnished hospitalization to a resident of Chelsea from July 29, 1960, until the date of her death about two weeks later. On July 26, she had withdrawn more .than $1,600 from a savings bank. The trial judge had ruled, apparently because of this withdrawal, that the patient “was not a needy person within the meaning of the act. ’ ’ In ordering that a finding for Chelsea be vacated, this court said that the hospital “did not sustain the burden of proof for the fifteen days of hospitalization. The evidence warranted recovery for the duration of that emergency which was recognized by the . . . [hospital] on the [patient’s] admission .... Conceivably this continued for the duration of . . . [the patient’s] stay. . . . [T]he judge was not required to conclude that this was so. There was nothing to show the nature of the illness. The . . . ruling erroneously determined that, because of the withdrawal of funds . . . there could be no recovery for any relief . . .

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Bluebook (online)
191 N.E.2d 120, 346 Mass. 217, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massachusetts-general-hospital-v-city-of-revere-mass-1963.