Robinson v. Campbell
This text of 47 Iowa 625 (Robinson v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff assigns the giving of this instruction as error. The instruction is, we think, correct. There is no more reason • why this charge should be enhanced on account of the ability . of the defendants to pay, than that the merchant should charge ■ them more for a yard of cloth, or the druggist for filling a ■ prescription, or a laborer for a day’s work. It is true a physician in general practice will often be called upon to treat indigent persons from whom he will not. be able to recover the value of his. services; He'may take this.into account and reg[628]*628ulate his charges with reference to that fact, just as a merchant may take into account probable bad debts in fixing his per centvm of profit upon his goods. But the value of a service depends upon the difficulty of rendering it, and the skill required in its performance, and, sometimes, upon the results accomplished, and not upon the riches or the poverty of the person for whom the service is performed.- If the ability to ■pay determines the reasonableness of a charge, then the richer ■a man is the more he should pay for any service. No such rule of charge can be recognized or countenanced by the law.
III. The plaintiff, when on the stand in chief, was asked on cross-examination if he had not stated to certain witnesses that the patient’s bowel had sloughed off from place of hernia downward, or from hernial ring downward. lie answered that he did not remember of stating the same, and had not stated the same to anybody. The defendants introduced witnesses who testified that plaintiff had made oral statements to the effect that the lower part of the bowel of the j>atient had sloughed away since the operation was performed, and that said patient could never have a natural passage. Thereupon plaintiff was called as a witness in his own behalf, and was asked his understanding of the import of the term “ lower part of the bowel,” if the same was used by him, and as to the true meaning of said term and the other oral terms in the connection as used by him, if the same were used by him. The plaintiff, who had testified that he was a regular graduate of a medical college, and for years had been engaged in general practice of medicine and surgery, was also asked what a surgeon or physician would understand by the term “ lower part of the bowel had sloughed off,” as applied to or spoken of a person who had been operated upon for strangulated femoral hernia, and gut found mortified. To these questions the defendants objected, and the court sustained the objection. The plaintiff excepted to this ruling, claiming the said term or phrase referred only to the lower part of the bowels in the hernial sack. The court, however, ruled it would permit plaintiff to inquire whether the term “lower part of the bowels ” has a technical meaning differing from its ordinarily [629]*629received meaning, and no further. This action of the court was erroneous, and prejudicial to the plaintiff. The testimony-introduced by defendants, in addition to its tendency to 'impeach the plaintiff, was calculated to show that he was ignorant of the patient’s real condition. The plaintiff should have been permitted to show to what he referred in the language imparted 'to him. See Mickey v. Burlington Ins. Co., 35 Iowa, 174 (181). For these reasons the judgment is
Reversed.
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47 Iowa 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-campbell-iowa-1878.