McLain v. West Side Bone & Joint Center

656 So. 2d 119, 1995 Miss. LEXIS 265, 1995 WL 325387
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1995
Docket91-CA-00503-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 656 So. 2d 119 (McLain v. West Side Bone & Joint Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLain v. West Side Bone & Joint Center, 656 So. 2d 119, 1995 Miss. LEXIS 265, 1995 WL 325387 (Mich. 1995).

Opinion

Hill McLain and his former wife Vivian McLain have a son Jessie "Mike" McLain. In the fall of 1987, Mike was injured in a high-school football game in Alabama where he and his mother resided. Hill McLain was a resident of Wayne County, Mississippi. On October 16, 1987, a clinic then known as Medical Park Bone Joint Center, P.A. performed knee surgery on Mike for a torn ligament. He was seventeen (17) years old at the time. Mike was discharged on October 18, 1987. Handwritten on the line marked "PATIENT'S SIGNATURE" on the contract for payment of medical expenses is "Jessie M. McLain L.V.M." Handwritten on the line marked "INSURED'S SIGNATURE" is "Hill C. McLain." "L.V.M." were apparently the initials of Hill's former wife Vivian. On the consent to medical treatment form, "L. Vivian McLain" was the insured/guarantor signature, and Mike McLain signed as the patient.

On June 6, 1990, West Side Bone Joint Center ("West Side") filed suit against Hill McLain in the Wayne County Circuit Court seeking payment of an overdue bill for medical services rendered to Mike McLain in the amount of $1,416.00 and reasonable attorney's fees. West Side also sought 8% interest and court costs. The principal payment had been due since January 12, 1989. West Side was a medical clinic in Mobile, Alabama doing business under Alabama law. They named Hill McLain, Vivian McLain, and Jessie McLain defendants. The amount sought by West Side, however, was not the total amount due for services rendered to the child, as Hill McLain's insurance through his employer, Hood Industries, already paid a portion of his son's medical bill.

Hill McLain denied the substantive allegations of the complaint, and counter-claimed for malicious prosecution. He argues that West Side contacted him before instituting the lawsuit and informed him that they knew he did not sign the contract to pay for the medical services. McLain alleges that he was damaged in that he had to hire an attorney for his defense, and that he suffered emotional anguish due to the institution of an action by West Side that was intentionally done to cause distress. He also argued that West Side's intentional acts entitled him to $250,000 in punitive damages.

In their response to the counterclaim, West Side admitted that McLain did not contract with them since he did not sign the contract. West Side added, "However, McLain's naked assertions that he is not responsible for the debt in no way affects the claim against him based upon a parent's responsibility to pay for the medical expense of the child." *Page 121

West Side moved for summary judgment arguing that the medical treatment performed by its doctors for Mike was necessary. West Side further argued that a father is responsible for the necessary medical care for his child, regardless of the fact that the parent has not assented to a contract for payment.

Hill McLain moved for partial summary judgment, arguing that the fact that he did not enter into any agreement to pay for the medical expenses was uncontradicted. His affidavit contains the assertion that he was not informed of his son's treatment before it was performed and that he did not authorize the treatment. The parties stipulated, for the purpose of the summary judgment motions, that the signature on the admission form was not Hill McLain's signature. He stated that he did not agree to pay for his son's medical treatment, except for his submission to the divorce decree which required him to maintain insurance with his employer for his son Mike.

McLain argued that a reading of the complaint filed by West Side limited it to a single claim based upon a contract to which he was not a party, and that their doctrine of necessities did not apply.

McLain further contends that to require him to pay the child's expenses would amount to usurpation of the chancery court's jurisdiction to determine the rights and responsibilities between former husband and wife since he had already fully complied with the chancery decree by providing the medical insurance for his son. He claimed that the suit would have to be brought against him in chancery court in order for him to have to provide more than required by the divorce decree.

At the hearing on cross motions for summary judgment, the trial judge concluded that West Side had provided Mike McLain necessary medical treatment at the request of his mother. He determined that Hill McLain, as natural and legal father, was responsible for the reasonable and necessary medical expenses of his minor son, even in the absence of a signed contract between him and the medical clinic. The court thereupon found that under the doctrine of necessities, Hill McLain, as father, owed West Side the cost of his son Mike's medical treatment. The trial judge concluded that the divorce and orders were binding only upon the parties and their child, and not third parties. The court further stated that if McLain's payment exceeded his duties under the divorce and modification decrees, then his proper course of relief would be a pleading against his former wife in chancery court.

The trial court also determined that West Side had followed the open account statute entitling them to one third of the judgment in attorney's fees. Additionally, 8% interest per annum from January 1989 until payment of the judgment was added to the sum of the unpaid amount and attorney's fees. Broken down, the amount found to be due was $1,416.00 in principal, $471.95 for attorney's fees, plus eight percent (8%) interest per year calculated on the sum total of $1,887.95.

In the case of Govan v. Medical Credit Services,621 So.2d 928, 930 (Miss. 1993), this Court held that absent some type of agency relationship, a husband was not responsible to a third party for the medical debts of his wife where he had not contracted with the third party to pay that debt. The Court determined that the marriage relationship could not be the basis for a third party's enforcement of a contract against a spouse who was not a party to the contract Id. It follows that Hill C. McLain, being divorced from Vivian, clearly owes West Side Bone and Joint Center nothing under contract law as both parties stipulated that he did not sign the contract, and that, in fact, his signature on the contract was a forgery. Summary judgment in favor of McLain on this issue was proper.

There remains the issue of whether or not the doctrine of necessities requires McLain to pay the medical debt of his son Mike. As a preliminary matter, we find that West Side, in accordance with Rule 8 of Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure, included a short and plain statement in its complaint sufficient to put McLain on notice that West Side might be entitled to relief under this doctrine. While the State of Mississippi does not in fact have the doctrine of necessities, *Page 122 we do recognize the doctrine closely akin thereto. Mississippi law requires parents to pay for their child's reasonable medical expenses. Lane v. Webb, 220 So.2d 281, 285 (Miss. 1969). This is a legal duty of both the father and the mother. Alexander v.Alexander, 494 So.2d 365, 368 (Miss. 1986); see Calton v.Calton, 485 So.2d 309, 310 (Miss. 1986) (finding that parental duty to support children is a vested right of child which can not be contracted away). It is a continuing duty which is not terminated upon divorce or an award of custody. Simpson v.Rast, 258 So.2d 233 (Miss. 1972); Rasch v. Rasch, 250 Miss. 885, 898, 168 So.2d 738

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
656 So. 2d 119, 1995 Miss. LEXIS 265, 1995 WL 325387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclain-v-west-side-bone-joint-center-miss-1995.