Red Cross Medical Service Co. v. Green

126 Ill. App. 214, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 477
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 5, 1906
DocketGen. No. 12,391
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 126 Ill. App. 214 (Red Cross Medical Service Co. v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Red Cross Medical Service Co. v. Green, 126 Ill. App. 214, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 477 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Cook County obtained by the appellee as administrator against the appellant for causing the death of the appellee’s intestate. The action was brought under the so-called “Campbell Act” of Illinois, which provides that the personal representative of a deceased person may, for the exclusive benefit of the widow and next of kin of such deceased person, sustain an action for damages against a person, company or corporation who has caused the death of the deceased by any such wrongful act, neglect or default as would have entitled the party injured to maintain an action and recover damages if death had not ensued.

The appellant, the defendant below, is a corporation in Chicago, giving contracts to various persons by which it agrees to provide medical attendance to the contract holder during the 'time the contract is in force and according to the conditions of the said contract.

The appellee’s intestate, one Henry O. Bluhra, had such a contract with the appellant, dated February 3,1902. By it “The Red Cross Medical Service Company ” promises, in consideration of a payment of forty-five cents weekly, to •furnish Henry O. Bluhm “ all the benefits referred to in an attached schedule.” The attached schedule reads:

“This contract provides for medical and surgical treatment, hospital care, the services of a trained nurse, and in the event of death, one hundred dollars (which is deemed sufficient" to defray funeral expenses) will be paid on receipt of satisfactory proof of death and the surrender of this contract. In lieu of hospital care or a trained nurse, it also provides for a weekly medicinal allowance of seven dollars for each full week of total disability from sickness or accident.”

Printed on the back of the contract are directions in case of sickness, accident or death, to notify at once the Red Cross Medical Service Co., and “Regulations and Rules for Contract Holders ”, which provide how a doctor should be consulted under various circumstances, and among other rules contain these:

“4. If you do not find the doctor and immediate attention is required, telephone the main office of the company.”

“ 7. If you have any complaints, make them to the company at its central office and not to any one else.”

“8. It is the intention of the company to furnish the best of care and attention. If you do not receive it, you will confer a favor by reporting it promptly to the central office of the company.”

Also on the back of the policy there are further “Provisions” printed. Among them is this:

“ Fourth. ' If provided for in the attached schedule, the contract holder shall be entitled while this contract is in force, subject to all its provisions, to free medical attendance and to free surgical care at his or her homes, whenever he or she may be totally incapacitated from performing any kind of work, and to free consultations and free treatment at all times during office hours at the office of the physician to whose care he or she may be assigned. The company agrees upon its own behalf to appoint and employ a competent physician and surgeon to examine and attend the contract holder in accordance with the terms of this section.”

Also this: “ Ninth. The company shall not be liable for any claim under this contract, unless it has been in force continuously and uninterruptedly for ten days prior to the commencement of the ailment, injury or complaint as the result of which claim for benefit is made.”

And this: “ Thirteenth. If the contract holder cannot secure the services of the district physician, immediate notice must be sent to the main office and acknowledgment received therefor; then only emergency calls may be allowed by the association.”

On the cover of a receipt or account book furnished the beneficiary Bluhm with the contract, in which it was expected that receipts for the -weekly payments would be entered, were again printed the “ Regulations and Rules for Contract Holders,” and the statement: “ Your physician is Dr. W. H. Webster, Residing at 190 E. 55th St. Office Hours 11 a. h., at, after 7. ’Phone Oakland 206. Important. In case of an emergency or whenever in haste for a doctor, step into the nearest drug store and ask them to telephone for .the above named doctor, which they will do for you without charge.

In case of sickness, accident or death, notify at once The Red Cross Medical Service Co., Suite 72, 140 Dearborn St. ’Phone Central 1965. Chicago, Ill.”

The plaintiff’s intestate, Bluhm, apparently held a contract with the appellant prior to February 3, 1902, of the same general terms, but with smaller fees and financial sick benefits, and it is claimed that the one in force involved in this suit was substituted therefor, and that the ninth clause of the “ Provisions ” is of no importance therefore in this case.

The view that we take of the essential merits of this cause makes it entirely unnecessary for us to discuss the question thus indicated or the rulings involving it.

In the latter part of January, 1902, Bluhm was attacked by rheumatism, and Doctor Webster was called by Mrs. Bluhm, in accordance with the instructions of the contract - and receipt book. He came on January 28th and gave the patient a prescription for rheumatism. He seems to have visited him again, at least once between that time and February 11th, he thinks about February 4th, and found Bluhm still suffering from the same ailment. Tuesday, February 11th, Dr. Webster called again, and this time he says that he found Bluhm with the same trouble complicated, however, with pericárditis, a frequent accompaniment of rheumatism. He gave him then another and different prescription. The patient was quite ill, though he seems to have been dressed and about his rooms on that day, as he was also on the next and perhaps as late as Thursday night, for so Dr. Brady testifies. He died, however, of pneumonia Saturday morning, February 15th. In the meantime Dr. Webster had again called on him on the 12th, but had ordered the same treatment and medicine continued. He testifies positively that when he saw Bluhm on February 11th and on February 12th, the latter did not have pneumonia, but was quite ill from rheumatic pericarditis, with some bronchitis.

February 12th Dr. Webster had a conversation with Mrs. Bluhm, the testimony of the parties to which concerning it is slightly, but not materially, variant. Mrs. Bluhm testifies that Dr. Webster said he was going to resign from the service of the Bed Cross Company, and Dr. Webster says that he told her that he had resigned and presumed that they would send a physician there to see her husband. Mrs. Bluhm says he gave her a statement of the case, and that she wrote to the Bed Cross Company claiming money for weekly sick benefits, but got no reply. Dr. Webster says, however, that Mrs. Bluhm asked him if he would continue to treat her husband, and that he answered affirmatively and told her to let him know if he was needed, if another physician did not come. Hot receiving any call, he says he presumed that another physician had been sent by the Bed Cross Company.

Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 Ill. App. 214, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/red-cross-medical-service-co-v-green-illappct-1906.