McDermott v. St. Wilhelminia Benevolent Aid Society

54 A. 58, 24 R.I. 527, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 127
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 13, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 54 A. 58 (McDermott v. St. Wilhelminia Benevolent Aid Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDermott v. St. Wilhelminia Benevolent Aid Society, 54 A. 58, 24 R.I. 527, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 127 (R.I. 1902).

Opinion

Tellinghast, J.

This is assumpsit to recover the sum of $90, which the plaintiff claims to be due and owing to him from the defendants for professional services, under a contract entered into between him and the defendants on the *529 28th day of December, 1900. The action is brought against the individual members of said society, associated together under the name aforesaid.

At the trial of the case in the District Court of the Sixth Judicial District, a. decision was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the amount claimed; whereupon the case was taken to the Common Pleas Division for a jury trial upon the defendants’ claim therefor, and upon trial in that court the plaintiff recovered a verdict for the full amount of said claim, with interest.

The case is now before us upon the defendants’ petition for a new trial on the grounds (1) that the verdict was against the evidence, and (2) that certain rulings of the Common Pleas Division made during the trial were erroneous.

(1) The plaintiff is a physician, and the defendant society is a voluntary association organized for the purposes of charity.

The plaintiff was first employed by the defendant society in July, 1899, and rendered services during the period for which he was then employed, except that he was ill and absent for a while during the autumn and early winter of 1900, prior to the period now sued for, and his place was taken by a substitute, Dr. Gray. The rate originally agreed upon in 1899 was the same as that now sued for, namely, ten cents a month for each member of the society in financial standing ; and no different contract was entered into between the parties at the time when the plaintiff was last elected.

Article IX of the constitution of the defendant society, in force during the period in question, provides as follows :

“Section 1. There shall be a physician attached to this Society, whom the members can consult at any time.
“ Sec. 2. The physician shall be chosen by the Society at the regular elections of the Society, and shall serve for six months.
“ Sec. 3. The physician shall receive such sum per month, per annum, per member, as may be agreed between him and the Society, from time to time, to be paid at the expiration of each quarter.
“Sec. 4. The Financial Secretary shall furnish the phy *530 sician with, a list of all members in good standing and entitled to benefits, at the beginning of each year ; also notify him of all who are in arrears and all that have been reinstated.
“ Sec. 5. Every member applying for medical advice must present her card of membership if the Doctor requests her so to do.”

Article III, section 4, of the constitution provides that ‘ ‘ The election of officers shall take place at the regular meetings in January and July,” and article 1 of the by-laws of th‘e society provides that its meetings shall be held on the second and fourth Fridays of each month, at eight o’clock. It had been the. custom, however, for some time before the election in question, to elect officers in June and December.

At the last regular meeting in December, 1900 (held on December 28th), the plaintiff was declared elected the physician of the society, and the president directed the corresponding secretary to notify him of his election. Although the plaintiff did not receive a majority of all the ballots, he was declared elected the physician of the society; and this was acquiesced in by all the members thereof who were present at this regular meeting.

The records of the meeting state that the plaintiff was duly elected, ‘c provided he answered the corresponding secretary’s letter.” On December 30, 1900, the secretary sent a notice to the plaintiff, by mail, of his election, directing it to Ashton, E. I.., from which place it was forwarded to the plaintiff at Providence,- where he had returned, and was received by him on January 1, 1901. On January 3, 1901, the plaintiff duly mailed his acceptance of the offer of contract, made by the society, to the corresponding secretary thereof. This was done before he received the notice of the withdrawal of the offer of contract by the society, hereinafter referred to.

The plaintiff’s substitute, Dr. Gray, in October, 1900, received the list of the society’s members, and the plaintiff himself was notified of some members in arrears and of some members in good standing during the period in question. He testifies that he performed whatever services were required of him during the period for which he was elected, and that *531 these services included quite an amount of regular professional work. At a special meeting of said society, held on January 2, 1901, the object of which meeting was to elect a doctor for the society, Dr. Boucher was elected to that position, and the corresponding secretary was directed to notify the plaintiff that his services were no longer required. At a subsequent meeting of the society, held on January 11, 1901, it was ‘ ‘ Moved and seconded that all business transacted at our special meeting stand legal. Moved and seconded that Dr. Boucher shall he doctor for the balance of the present term.”

In pursuance of the action taken by the society at said special meeting, the corresponding secretary notified the plaintiff, by mail, that his services were no longer required. The letter containing this notice was posted at Providence on January 3, 1901, at 4 P. M., and was received by the plaintiff on the evening of the following day.

The first point relied on by defendants’ counsel is that the plaintiff is not entitled to compensation for services to individual members of the society; that he must stand or fall upon his right to claim that the contract was entered into with him on the 28th of December, 1900.

Assuming that by this statement counsel means that in order to entitle the plaintiff to recover he must prove that he was legally elected to the office or position of physician to said society, and that he accepted said office or position before receiving notice of the withdrawal of the offer made to him in manner aforesaid, we concur in the position taken. Moreover, we do not understand that the plaintiff is suing for compensation for services rendered to individual members, hut that he is suing simply on the contract which he claims to have made with the society. His bill shows this. It is as follows :

*532 “Providence, R. I., July 1, 1901.
‘ ‘ St. Wilhelmina Benevolent Aid Society, of Providence,,
B. L, and Branch No. 6%5 of the C. L. B. U. of America,
‘ ‘ To Bernard F. McDermott, M. D., Dr.
“To professional services from January 1, 1901, to July 30, 1901, both inclusive, for 150 members of the Society, at ten (10) cents a month each, covering a period of six months, in accordance with contract with the Society ...... $90 00 ”

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Bluebook (online)
54 A. 58, 24 R.I. 527, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdermott-v-st-wilhelminia-benevolent-aid-society-ri-1902.