Moore v. Derees

117 A. 480, 97 N.J.L. 378, 1922 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 23, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 117 A. 480 (Moore v. Derees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Derees, 117 A. 480, 97 N.J.L. 378, 1922 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 46 (N.J. 1922).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Swayze J.

The plaintiff is a physician. One Rumuz, a workman in the employ of the defendant, was injured in the [379]*379course of Ms employment and sent for the plaintiff to attend him. The plaintiff did so and found Yumuz suffering from, a very had injury to the eye which needed an immediate operation. He took charge of it, and with the patient’s consent took him to the Yewark Eye and Ear Infirmary, and performed the necessary operation. This was in the afternoon; the plaintiff did not see the defendant until afterward and first talked with him over the telephone the same evening. The defendant then told him to give Yumuz every possible care and attention, private hospital care, a private nurse, and to spare nothing. The plaintiff said, “this is expensive,” to which the defendant answered, “that don’t matter, but give, him the best of care, every care and consideration, spare nothing, give him private nurses, put him in a private room, and absolutely give him the best of care and attention and get consultations if yon want to.” The plaintiff did not, however, secure a, private room and a private nurse because the infirmary did not have the available room and the only available bed was in the ward with other patients. There is no proof of consultation. Yumuz was in bed for several days when he commenced to improve and the plaintiff gave orders that he could he out of bed. The eye and ear infirmary was short of help and Yumuz was asked to carry in a tray of food to some other patients who were not able to get up. To this he objected and the defendant also objected, saying that he was a private patient, that he did not want him to wait on other patients. Yumuz and Derees were both dissatisfied. The patient was taken to the Mountainside hospital, at Montclair, about two weeks after the accident. This suit is brought to recover the plaintiff’s bill for services. His charge was $100 for the operation, $84- for twenty-eight calls and $14 for two office calls, making a total of $198. Judgment was rendered for the full amount with interest.

The trial judge found that the defendant led the doctor to rely on him for payment of the bill for doctoring, in which he must have meant to include the operation. He [380]*380also found that the weight of the evidence on the disputed points, as to the attitude of the defendant, established the •liability for the bill. What the disputed points were does not appear. The appellant does not dispute the amount of the bill but relies upon the fact that it was a proper case for proceeding under the Workmen’s Compensation act, so as to preserve the defendant’s rights to recover indemnity from his insurance carrier.

The operation for which the charge is more than half the bill was performed before the defendant knew anything about the accident and at the request of the injured workman. There is nothing to take this-case out of the ordinary rule that a debt will be implied from the rendering of services on request, and there is nothing to. negative the indebtedness of Numuz to the doctor. Nor is there any question that Numuz became indebted to the doctor for the subsequent attendance, since the doctor says himself that he took charge of the case. There is no evidence that he acted on the defendant’s request to provide private hospital care and a pri-. vate nurse. He seems to have acted as any reputable doctor would have acted in the performance of his duty to. a poor patient who might be assumed to' be willing to do light work to help pay his hospital expenses. If the situation in life of Numuz and of the defendant had been exchanged no one would have thought of collecting the bill of the defendant, although there is nothing to show pecuniary inability on Numuz part. We naturally assume without basis therefor that an employe who was injured chopping wood is a man of no means or very moderate means and that a surgeon’s bill for a serious operation to- the eye might be a hard bill to pay.

The legislature has provided for the liability of the employer by a method1 of its own, with which we shall deal later. The promise of Derees to pay the doctor, so far as the $100 item is concerned, is the promise to pay the debt of another. The ease is something like Fitzgerald-Spear Co. v. Kelly, 81 N. J. L. 6, with this vital difference that Numuz’ debt [381]*381ior the operation already performed and the. subsequent debt for services! already contracted for was. without even the knowledge of Derees. Derees’ object was not to secure ordinary attendance for the patient hut to- secure extraordinary attendance. So far as ordinary attendance was concerned, the doctor’s obligation to render it was under his agreement with the defendant without consideration since lie was already under obligation to render those services under his employment by Numuz. So far as concerns the extra services, the doctor is not shown to have accepted the employment by Derees. Whether it was possible or not for the doctor to perform the contract for extra services may be a question. The doctor says it was impossible. That impossibility may excuse the doctor’s failure to provide the extra services and explains his failure to contract to- do so-; it saves the doctor from any action against himself for breach of contract; even if he accepted Derees’ terms it surely cannot entitle Mm to recover for services not rendered. Nor do we mean to suggest that the plaintiff himself thought he-was entitled to compensation for these extra services not rendered.

The importance of these facts for our present purpose is that the debt for the subsequent attendance as well as for the original operation is a debt of NumUz and the promise of Derees to pay is a promise to- pay the debt o-f another and within the statute of frauds. Hetfield v. Dow, 27 N. J. L. 410.

There is another aspect of the case growing out of the Employers’ Liability act and the supplemental legislation. The original act is readily found in 8%ipp. Comp. Stat., p. 1638. The important supplemental legislation is the act of 1917, chapter 178 (Patmph. Lp. 522), making it obligatory upon employers to take out employers’ liability insurance] for the benefit o-f all their employes as well as themselves; the; act of 1918, chapter 149 (Pampb. L., p. 429), creating the workmen’s compensation burean, and the act of 1919, chapter 93 (Pampb. L., p. 201), amending the [382]*382provisions of the original act, are also important. The act of 1911 provides for a statutory contract in cases where, as in this case, the parties do not refuse to come under it; a contract implied from the relationship of employer and employe and regulated and controlled by the statutory provisions. The statutory provisions' are not the work of the parties or subject to alteration and control by them but are fixed according to a supposed public policy and under the management of state officials. The opinion, in Mulhall v. Nashau Manfacturing Co., 115 Atl. Rep. 449, 452, is a recent convenient statement of the theory and the authorities supporting it. As the compensation of the employe for the accident cannot be decreased, even with his own consent, it orrght not to be increased, even with the assent of the employer. That this was the intent of the legislature appears from the very title of the original act of 1911. “An act prescribing

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Bluebook (online)
117 A. 480, 97 N.J.L. 378, 1922 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-derees-nj-1922.