Mount v. Riechers

13 P.2d 335, 140 Or. 267, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 44
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 P.2d 335 (Mount v. Riechers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mount v. Riechers, 13 P.2d 335, 140 Or. 267, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 44 (Or. 1932).

Opinion

*270 BROWN, J.

The plaintiffs tried this case upon the theory of a stated account. The defendant proceeded upon the theory of reasonable value.

Among the instructions requested by plaintiffs is the following:

“From the pleadings and evidence in this case, your verdict must be for the plaintiffs in the sum of $1,500.”

*271 This instruction was refused, and plaintiffs assign such refusal as error, on the ground that “the stated account was admitted.”

The plaintiffs’ evidence is to the effect that, when David Martiny was discharged from their hospital as cured he asked for his bill and was informed by Dr. Hugh S. Mount that the charge was $2,000; that he paid $500 on the account and stated that he had a lot of timber holdings and some real property that he did not like to sacrifice at that time, and he asked for a year’s time in which to pay the balance, which was granted.

When plaintiffs had concluded their case Dr. Ringo, called as a witness for the defendant, after expressing his opinion as to the reasonable charge for an operation for the removal of the prostate gland, testified that, in December following the operation, Martiny came into his office a couple of times for the purpose of having the dressing changed, and “I asked him what they charged him. * * * He said $2,000, and I asked him if he paid it. He said he paid $500. I said: ‘Are you going to pay the rest of it?’ He said: ‘I don’t think I will.’ ”

The plaintiffs assert in their brief:

“Here was a stated account, and the five hundred dollar payment was a ratification of it.”

In the early ease of Crawford v. Hutchinson, 38 Or. 578 (65 P. 84), this court held that, when an account rendered has been assented to, the question of liability becomes one of law for the court, and not one of fact for the jury. Prom Point 3 of the Syllabus of that case, we take the following:

“Where the testimony showing a right of action in plaintiff and against defendant is undisputed and *272 no counter-claim or set-off is pleaded, the trial judge may properly instruct the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff. ”

It is generally held than an account stated is final and unimpeachable excepting for fraud, accident, or mistake. Griffith v. Hicks, 150 Ark. 197 (233 S. W. 1086, 18 A. L. R. 882).

But the difficulty that confronts the court in this eause lies in the fact that the defendant denies that the account has been stated or agreed to.

The record shows that this claim was filed with the executor of the estate, who rejected the same, and that action was thereupon' instituted.

It is the law of this state “that no claim which shall have been rejected by the executor or administrator * * * shall be allowed by any court, referee, or jury, except upon some competent satisfactory evidence other than the testimony of the claimant.” Oregon Code 1930, § 11-504.

See Franklin v. Northrup, 107 Or. 537 (215 P. 494).

The defendant offered testimony that, at the time of the alleged agreement constituting- the stated account, Martiny had on deposit with the Bank of Tillamook the sum of $3,500. He also adduced testimony in effect that the charge for the services rendered by the plaintiffs was excessive, and we have referred to testimony to the effect that, within a short time after the alleged agreement to pay $2,000 for the services rendered him, Martiny said, in substance, that he did not think he would pay any more on the account. So far as the record discloses, however, he at no time denied his promise to Dr. Hugh S. Mount.

The plaintiffs contend that the court erred in admitting any-evidence of the reasonable value of the *273 services rendered by Doctors Mount. The purpose of the testimony to which, this objection is directed is stated by the court in the following instruction:

“Evidence of the character of and of the value of the medical services rendered by plaintiffs to Martiny has been admitted in evidence, both in behalf of the plaintiffs and in behalf of the defendant, but this testimony was admitted only for the purpose of affecting the probability as to whether or not a settlement of the character alleged in the complaint was or was not entered into, and such testimony should be considered by you for that purpose, and also for the additional purpose of establishing that there existed at the time some foundation in the form of service rendered upon which to base a settlement as to the amount to. be paid by Martiny. ’ ’

In support of this instruction, see 2 Jones’ Commentaries on Evidence (2d Ed.), pp. 1115, 1116, §§ 603, 604.

The plaintiffs assert that, if testimony of reasonable value of services was admissible at all, it was error to permit the Tillamook doctors called by defendant to testify as to what the specific charge in the case should have been. We cannot agree with plaintiffs. Each of the doctors called qualified himself- as a competent witness before he was permitted to testify.

The fourth assignment relates to defendant’s objection to the following question asked Dr. Rockey by plaintiffs on direct examination, which objection was sustained by the court:

“Now, Doctor, assuming the facts in this case may be that a man by the name of David Martiny of Tillamook, Oregon, came to Doctors Mount for medical treatment and operation for prostate gland, and that he was received by them for this service on or about September 19, 1926, and he underwent a preliminary examination or preliminary service for upbuilding *274 and making him fit .for the operation from September 19, 1926, to October 6, 1926, being a period of about seventeen days, and that at the expiration of the seventeen days he was thought physically fit to undergo the operation and he was operated upon for this ailment, prostate gland; his blood chemistry was taken on September 22d, October 2d, October 4th and November 4th of 1926, and on October 14, 1926, the tissue examination, pathological, was made, the operation was made on October 6, 1926, and he had medical treatment from that date up until November 23, 1926, when he was discharged as cured. You may assume, if you think that the rule prevails generally in Oregon City and Portland, that the charge is based somewhat upon the financial ability of the patient to pay, that David Martiny was supposed to be worth at that time approximately two hundred thousand dollars, but, in reality, he was actually worth from fifty thousand to two hundred thousand, what would you think would be a reasonable price for this service, and you may consider further that he was a bachelor, if that has anything to do with it?”

The answer excluded reads:

“To answer the last portion of the question first, that would have something definitely to do with it.

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Bluebook (online)
13 P.2d 335, 140 Or. 267, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mount-v-riechers-or-1932.