Mueller v. Winston Bros. Co.

4 P.2d 854, 165 Wash. 130, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 835
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1931
DocketNo. 23196. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 4 P.2d 854 (Mueller v. Winston Bros. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mueller v. Winston Bros. Co., 4 P.2d 854, 165 Wash. 130, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 835 (Wash. 1931).

Opinion

Beeler, J.

— The first question presented fop our determination is whether the amended complaint states a cause of action ex contractu or ex delicto. The appellants contend that the action is one to recover damages for the breach of an oral contract, and consequently the statute (Rem. Comp. Stat., § 183), which confers a right of action for wrongful death, does not apply. On the other hand, the respondent maintains, and the trial court so held, that the action is one sounding in tort. The cause was tried on that theory, and *132 the respondent was awarded damages for the wrongful death of her husband, Albert H. Mueller.

Before referring to the allegations of the amended complaint, brief reference should be made to the agreements executed by the appellants. For the sake of brevity, we shall refer to "Winston Bros. Company as “employer,” to the National Hospital Association as “association,” and to Albert H. Mueller, the deceased, as “Mueller.”

For some time prior to November 8, 1927, the employer was engaged in constructing a dam on the Skagit river, and employed some five hundred people at its camp. Mueller was employed as a steam shovel engineer. On November 8, 1927, the employer, with the consent and approval of its employees, entered into a written contract with the association whereby the employer agreed to deduct $1.25 per month from the wage of each of its employees and to turn over such moneys each month to the association, in exchange for which the association agreed to render all necessary medical and hospital care and attention for such employees as became sick or sustained injury. The contract further provided that, if the amount collected from the employees was less than three hundred dollars for any one month, the employer would contribute the difference. The employer also reserved the right to discontinue the medical attendant if and when it employed less than one hundred men at its camp. Furthermore, if the association failed “to provide the services and care intended by the contract,” the employer “might engage whatever services might be necessary to the proper care of its employees, and charge the expense incurred thereby” to the association. In other words, under the contract the employer reserved the right to pass upon the fitness of the at *133 tendant at the camp hospital. Two paragraphs of the contract are set out haec vert a:

(1) For the purposes of camp service the. party of. the first part (hospital association) will establish and maintain a properly equipped field hospital in charge of a competent medical attendant, in rooms to be provided by the party of the second part (Winston Bros. Company); such medical attendant to be at all times acceptable to the party of the second part; it being understood, however, that cases of a serious nature or those requiring continued treatment shall be removed to the general hospitals and placed under the care of the general physicians and surgeons of the party of the first part. ”

The contract then recites that the association maintains physicians and surgeons and hospitals at Sedro Woolley, Mount Vernon and Seattle, as evidenced in the following paragraph:

“ (2) All necessary medical and surgical services by any of the physicians, surgeons and specialists employed by the party of the first part in their respective localities, which shall include services in either Sedro Woolley or Mount Vernon, Washington; provided that for those cases of the nature requiring special care not obtainable in the above mentioned' cities, the parties of the first part shall provide services by physicians and surgeons and specialists in Seattle, Washington.”

The parties operated under this contract until August 1, 1929, at which time the appellants, with the consent and approval of the employees of the camp, entered into a supplemental contract-.whereby it was agreed that the employer should deduct $1.75 per month from the wage of each of its employees, in consideration whereof the association agreed to furnish to the employees the advantages of its so-called “full coverage plan. ’ ’ This plan included certain classes of diseases which were excluded from the original plan *134 or contract. This supplemental contract was in force and effect at the time Mueller became sick.

Turning now to the amended complaint, we find it is alleged that Mueller was in the employ of Winston Bros, as engineer for some time prior to October 6, 1929; that there was an oral agreement between Winston Bros, and its employees whereby the former should deduct $1.75 per month from the wage of its various employees employed at the camp, and in return therefor the employees were to be furnished with medical care and treatment and hospital attention, and that a field hospital was to be maintained at the camp with a qualified physician in charge thereof; that the appellants had entered into an agreement whereby they should have joint charge, control and supervision in furnishing and providing the medical and surgical and hospital care and attention to the employees. It is further alleged that, on October. 1, 1929, Mueller became extremely sick, and that, on the evening of that day, he applied to Jones, who had theretofore been placed in charge of the field hospital as the camp doctor, and complained to him of suffering extreme pain; that thereupon Jones took charge of him and prescribed and gave him medicines; that the appellants wholly failed to furnish Mueller with a qualified physician and surgeon until the evening0 of October 3, 1929, and, as a result of such delay and neglect, Mueller died from peritonitis which resulted from a rupture of his appendix, death occurring three days later — October 6, 1929.

The character of a pleading as to whether it states a cause of action ex contractu or ex delicto is to be judged by its allegations, and not by the matters stated as mere inducement. The basic allegations of the amended complaint are that the appellants disregarded their duty in the premises by negligently and *135 carelessly failing to furnish a qualified physician and surgeon at the camp hospital, and in failing to make timely diagnosis of Mueller’s disease, and in failing to prescribe proper treatment therefor. The rule by which the character of a pleading is to be determined is well stated in Boehrer v. Juergens & Anderson Co., 133 Wis. 426, 113 N. W. 655, as follows:

“Where a given default may constitute both a breach of contract and a tort, and the complaint contains apt allegations charging the default in both aspects, the question as to how the complaint should be construed becomes sometimes difficult.

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Bluebook (online)
4 P.2d 854, 165 Wash. 130, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mueller-v-winston-bros-co-wash-1931.