Schoenberg v. Rose

145 N.Y.S. 831
CourtNew York City Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 145 N.Y.S. 831 (Schoenberg v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schoenberg v. Rose, 145 N.Y.S. 831 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

Mr. Max E. Bernheimer, president, and Mr. Freeland, secretary, of a corporation, on September 24, 1913, were in attendance at the Supreme Court, Brooklyn, in an action then on trial in which the corporation was the defendant.

The plaintiff in this action, a physician in practice in this state for 12 years, earning a good income and making a specialty of treating the eyes, ears, nose, and throat, was also in attendance, as a witness on behalf of the plaintiff in that action, and, while he was testifying, Mr. Bernheimer fell from a chair in the courtroom to the floor, unconscious.

Counsel who were defending the corporation in that suit and Mr. Freeland said, “Get a doctorand the plaintiff asked permission, of the justice presiding, to leave the witness chair, which was granted. The plaintiff went towards where Mr. Bernheimer was, and said, “I am a physician,” to which Mr. Freeland, probably laboring under great excitement and anxiety for his friend, and perhaps with some momentary feeling of hostility or resentment towards the doctor, an adverse witness, replied, “The hell you are; you are an oculist; what we want at a time like this is physicians, not oculists;” and then Mr. Freeland left the courtroom with others to summon an ambulance, and also to obtain a pulmotor.

Dr. Shook, another physician, who was also in attendance at the time, and also as a witness for the plaintiff, was nearest to Mr. Bernheimer, and thereupon he and the plaintiff in this action proceeded to give what they considered proper treatment. They loosened the clothes of Mr. Bernheimer and first made an examination of his heart, lungs, and pulse, and then both physicians proceeded to make or cause artificial respiration, which was done, the plaintiff testified, by getting hold and grasping the arms above the elbows and pulling them upwards, and then bringing them downward and pressing against the chest, doing that regularly about every two seconds, and taking hold of the legs and bringing them upwards and pressing them against the abdomen and releasing them again, and next to grasp the tongue and pull it away out and let it back, doing these things in rhythmic movement.

There were signs of life in Mr. Bernheimer when plaintiff started his treatment, which treatment he claims continued from 30 to 45 minutes, and at the end of the artificial respiration he and Dr. Shook decided Mr. Bernheimer was dead. He died without haying regained consciousness. A day or two days after this, the plaintiff sent a bill [833]*833for $500, which the executors refused to pay, and this action is brought against them to recover that amount claimed by plaintiff to be the value of the services.

[ 1 ] The deceased left a very large estate, evidence as to the value of which was received over the objection of the defendants’ counsel. I am of the opinion that, while the financial condition of a patient does not alone affect the abstract question of the value of a physician’s services, it is a proper element entering into the question as to what charge or what reduction in the charge shall be made by him by reason of such financial condition. • Lange v. Kearney, 4 N. Y. Supp. 14,1 affirmed 127 N. Y. 676, 28 N. E. 255. So a patient of no means, or of limited means, may prove that his circumstances and station in life are such as to render a physician’s charge exorbitant and out of all reason and proportion to the patient’s ability to pay, while the same charge to a person of large means would not be considered unreasonable.

The financial condition of a patient is an element that it may be assumed is considered by both physician and patient when the services are contracted for, rendered, and accepted, and may also be considered by the court in determining the reasonableness of the charge; and that element should apply to a case where there is and was no contract, but a mere fiction of the law creating one, else, in a case where services are rendered to an unconscious man who never recovers, the charge against his estate might be so great and unreasonable as to be out of all proportion to the value of the estate. This charge a man who recovers could resist and successfully defend by showing his limited means, and, in the case of an unconscious man who does not recover, such value is an aid to the court in fixing the reasonableness of the claim, whether made against a large or a small estate.

Therefore the evidence as to the value of the deceased’s estate was properly allowed and properly taken into consideration, and that, together with the experience of the physician as such, and the nature and difficulty or easiness of the case, and what is considered by him and by other physicians an ordinary or reasonable charge for the services, are the proper elements upon which a judge or jury may act in fixing the value of the services.

[2] But the services performed here were not difficult. They did not require any special degree of skill or knowledge, nor were they of such a character that it required a physician of years of experience or study to perform them properly. They consisted of what a medical student could perform as well as a physician of years o£ experience.

It is not uncommon to find laymen experienced in giving prompt or what is called “first” aid to the injured, who can do this work as well as a physician. The plaintiff testified that the treatment described by him, which he gave, was the usual and well-known method.

There is some dispute as to the exact minute that Mr. Bernheimer died, and consequently the plaintiff’s claim that he treated the deceased between 30 and 45 minutes is also disputed. It is not necessary to [834]*834measure the plaintiff’s services by the fraction of a minute, but I should say, from the evidence, he was engaged, in the manner testified to by him, 15 to 20 minutes.

Dr. Shook, who also presented a bill for $500 for his services, and another physician testified for the plaintiff that $500 was the value of plaintiff’s services, -while experts called for defendants placed the value at from $10 to $15; one stating that a fair charge would be from nothing up to a maximum of $15.

[3] Who is liable for the services, if any one? The rule that where a person requests the performance of a service, and the request is complied with, and the service performed, there is an implied promise to pay for the service does not apply to a case where a person requests a physician to perform services for a patient, unless the relation of that person to the patient is such as to raise a legal obligation on his part to call in a physician and pay for the services, or the circumstances are such as to show an intention on his part to pay for them. Cyc. rol. 30, p. 1597.

Although Mr. Bernheimer was the president and Mr. Freeland the secretary of the corporation defending the suit in the Supreme Court, neither that relation or the friendship existing between them, or their business interests, or the fact claimed here, that there was no relative of the deceased present at the time, placed Mr. Freeland, or any of the counsel engaged in defending the corporation, under any obligation to supply medical attendance for the deceased, or rendered him or them liable for payment for the services rendered, because they or either of them called for a physician, as there was no understanding between the plaintiff or any of the persons calling for a physician that either of them would pay for the services. Crane v. Baudouine, 55 N. Y. 256; Macguire v. Hughes, 126 App. Div.

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Bluebook (online)
145 N.Y.S. 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schoenberg-v-rose-nycityct-1914.