Moore v. Lee

211 S.W. 214, 109 Tex. 391, 4 A.L.R. 185, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 71
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1919
DocketNo. 2652.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 211 S.W. 214 (Moore v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Lee, 211 S.W. 214, 109 Tex. 391, 4 A.L.R. 185, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 71 (Tex. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GREENWOOD

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought by defendant in error,' S. E. Lee, to recover" damages of plaintiff in error, Dr. II. Leslie Moore, for an alleged breach by plaintiff in error of his contract to attend and treat the wife of defendant in error during and after birth of a child, and for alleged malpractice on the wife, during her confinement, by Dr. A. D. Hardin, for whose acts and negligence, it was charged, plaintiff in error was Hable. The plaintiff in error answered that he arranged for Dr. Hardin, who. was a careful and skillful physician, to attend defendant in error’s wife,, during the child-birth, by express agreement with defendant in error,, and that he was to be notified in the event any complications arose, but was never so notified, and that he had not violated his agreement with defendant in error.

The material facts proven were that plaintiff in error and defendant in error had entered into an agreement, whereby the wife of defendant in error was to have the services of plaintiff in error, as a physician, for an agreed fee, during the approaching confinement of the wife, who was visited and examined by defendant in error between 1 and 2 o’clock on the morning of February 6, 1911, and, at that time, plaintiff in error promised to return when needed. On account of the setting of a lawsuit against plaintiff in error and others, at Fort Worth, for February 6, 1911, and pressing professional engagements, plaintiff in error concluded that he would not be able to return to Mrs. Lee. It was the custom.among the reputable physicians of Dallas, where the parties resided, for a physician who determined that he could not meet all his *394 engagements to send some other physician, and, about 8 o’clock on February 6, 1911, plaintiff in error -telephoned Dr. Hardin that he might need him during that morning. Before 9 o’clock defendant in error notified Dr. Moore that it was time for him to come to Mrs. Lee, when Dr. Moore replied that, because of important business, he would be unable to come, but he would send another physician, to which defendant in error responded with a request to send him in a hurry. Until about •a quarter past 9 o’clock there was another physician in the neighborhood of defendant in error, with whom defendant in error talked, without asking him to attend Mrs. Lee. After being requested by defendant in -error to send another physician in a hurry, plaintiff in error telephoned to Dr. Hardin, whose general reputation in Dallas as a physician was .good, saying that he had a case, to which he wanted to send him, that it was a partnership case, of which he expected to take care, and plaintiff-in error requested Dr*. Hardin to go out and look after the wife of defendant in error, and to notify him if he needed help or anything went wrong, whereupon he would either come himself or send assistance. Dr. Hardin reached the home of defendant in error about 10 o’clock and ■attended to the delivery of the child, and there was evidence to raise the issue of injury to Mrs. Lee through acts or negligence of Dr. Hardin. Defendant in error expressed no dissatisfaction to Dr. Hardin at the time the child was delivered, and paid him on his second or third visit the full fee, which he testified he had agreed to pay plaintiff in error, and paid nothing to plaintiff in error.

A' jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in error, which was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals, and section B of the Commission of Appeals recommended that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals be affirmed.

The trial court charged the jury that the law required the exercise of ordinary care by plaintiff in error in his personal attention to Mrs. Lee, and also required the exercise of ordinary care by plaintiff in error in the selection of another physician for her. The trial court refused requests to charge that any negligence or lack of skill on the part of Dr. Hardin, resulting in injury to Mrs. Lee, was chargeable to plaintiff in -error, regardless of the care exercised by plaintiff in error in Dr. Hardin’s selection.

The controlling question here is whether the action of the trial court was correct in giving and refusing these charges.

It is quite undeniable that defendant in error assented to plaintiff in error’s own non-attendance on his wife. He admits that, when telephoned plaintiff in error’s reasons for seeking to be released from treating his wife, his response was to urge haste in sending another physician. It is immaterial to the matter of plaintiff in error’s liability for Dr. Hardin’s negligence or lack of skill, under the issues joined herein, whether plaintiff in error represented Dr. Hardin to be his partner at the time he proposed sending him. Ho pleading was filed by defendant in error, alleging that Dr. Hardin was held out as plaintiff in error’s *395 partner, nor seeking to hold plaintiff in error liable as a partner with Dr. Hardin, nor seeking to recover any damages for any misrepresentation of Dr. Hardin’s status as a partner. So, the question is simply what was plaintiff in error’s duty, under the law, when defendant in error asked him to speedily dispatch another physician to treat Mrs. Lee? To our minds this'question admits of no answer save that the duty of plaintiff in error was to exercise ordinary care in the selection of the physician to be sent, as the jury was instructed by the trial court.

The opinion in Texas Central Railroad Co. v. Zumwalt, 103 Texas, 607, 30 L. R. A. (N. S.), 1206, 132 S. W., 113, declared that where a railroad company furnished an employe with a physician, the railroad company would not be held liable for the physician’s negligence, unless, in treating the employe he was the agent of the railroad company. No more can plaintiff in error be held liable for Dr. Hardin’s negligence or lack of skill, in the absence of facts to establish that Dr. Hardin was acting as the agent of plaintiff in error when he was treating defendant in error’s wife.

From the very nature of the employment, the physician, who takes the place of another, must while he alone is treating the patient, exercise his own judgment and his own skill- and he is truly an independent contractor.

In the leading case of Cunningham v. Railroad Co., .51 Texas, 510, 511, it is said: “The true test . . . by which to determine whether one who renders service to another does so as a contractor or not, is to ascertain whether he renders the service in the course of an independent occupation, representing the will of his employer only as to the result of the work, and not as to the means by which it is accomplished. (Shear. & Red. on Neg., secs. 76-79; 1 Red. on Eailways, 505; Pack v. Mayor of City of New York, 4 Seld., 222.) It is now the well established doctrine in Europe and the generally prevailing .rule in this country, that the ordinary relation of principal and agent and master and servant does not subsist in the case of an independent employe or contractor who is not under the immediate direction of the employer.”

The doctrine is reaffirmed in Cunningham v. Moore, 55 Texas, 377, 40 Am. Rep., 813, in this language: “It is a well settled principle, founded on reason and- supported by abundant authority, that the relation and liability of master depends upon the right of control over the servant.”

This court said in Wallace v. Southern Cotton Oil Co., 91 Texas, 31, 40 S.

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W. 214, 109 Tex. 391, 4 A.L.R. 185, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-lee-tex-1919.