Succession of Caranne

147 So. 562, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1649
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 17, 1933
DocketNo. 1101.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 147 So. 562 (Succession of Caranne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Succession of Caranne, 147 So. 562, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1649 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

MOUTON, Judge.

Miss Caranne died in Houma, Da., October 21, 1931.

In April, 1932, several lots of ground situated in Houma, with improvements, part of her estate, were sold to pay the debts of her succession.

Harry Ilellier, administrator of her estate, on April 21, 1932, less than one year after her demise, filed a provisional account of his administration.

Dr. Jonas W. Rosenthal was carried on the account for $748; also Ellender & El-lender, attorneys at law, in the sum of $151.-13 as attorney’s fees for collection of a note for the original amount of $1,700 reduced by payments to $1,500, secured by special mortgage in favor of the Bank of Terrebonne & Trust Company, carrying interest at 8 per cent, per annum; also for $71.22 as attorney’s fees on a note of $700 due the said bank by the estate, secured by special mortgage, bearing 8 per cent, annual interest.

A. J. Daigle, attorney for the absent heirs in the succession, not being carried on the tableau for his fee, as such, filed his opposition to the homologation of the account.

The provisional account was homologated by the court in which the fee of Daigle, attorney for the absent heirs, was recognized, and is not disputed on this appeal.

It was, however, amended by reducing the claim of Dr. Rosenthal from $748 to $125, and by rejecting the claim of Ellender & Ellender, for attorney’s fees, which had been carried on the account by the administrator, as here-inabove stated.

On this appeal, we are therefore concerned with the claims of Dr. Rosenthal and the attorneys, Ellender & Ellender.

Miss Oaranne was treated by Dr. Rosenthal for bilateral glaucoma, an eye disease, very serious, as testified to by Dr. Ro-senthal, and of which there is no contradiction. He treated her from the year 1926 and during 1931, up to a few months before her death, for a period of about five years. The doctor testifies that glaucoma, with which she was suffering, is a most serious disease, and leads to blindness, and it may be proper to remark, that there is no evidence in the record to indicate that this statement of the physician is not true. Glaucoma, Dr. Rosen-thal says, means the hardening of the eyeball ; that in her ease it was stone-hard; that she came into his office in April, 1930; and that he had to perform an operation by puncturing the cornea of the eye on account of the hardness of the eyeball.

The seriousness of the operation is indicated by a charge therefor of $75 on the doctor’s account, and which item was approved by the district judge as carried on the tableau.

In giving his qualifications as an oculist, Dr. Rosenthal says he had training in eye work in Columbia University, Knapp Memorial Hospital of New York, Royal Eye Hospital of Budapest, Hungary, and that he attended various clinics in Rome, Paris, and London. No doubt Miss Caranne received expert treatment, and the fact is there is no intimation that she did not.

It is shown that Miss Caranne got “all day visits” at the office of Dr. Rosenthal.

Miss Mildred Helmer, his secretary, explains that these “all day visits” are when the patient remains in the office from 9:30 until closing time or an hour before and occupies a room while the doctor gives alternate treatment to others.

Dr. Rosenthal says at first Miss Caranne found it necessary to have a companion with her when she came on her visits, but that after treatment had been established she came alone to his office, and was able to read and write.

Miss Helmer, his secretary, testifies that Miss Caranne often told her that she had received wonderful results from the doctor’s treatment.

The account is for 162 visits, the first, for $10 and 161 at $8 a visit, making $1,288, and $75 for the operation, totaling $1,373, less $625 on account, leaving a balance of $748 for which the doctor was carried on the account, and reduced by the district judge to $125.

There are seven letters in the record written by Miss Caranne to Dr. Rosenthal, and from their tenor there is nothing to indicate that the treatment she was getting was not entirely satisfactory and beneficiak Besides, as these letters cover a period of over two years, the last one in April, 1931, there can hardly be any doubt that she had been benefited while under the care of Dr. Rosenthal.

It is well established by the testimony of Dr. Rosenthal and Miss Helmer that the charge for the number of visits is correct, and the only real issue is as to whether the amount claimed per visit is excessive or had been paid up to the balance of $125 allowed below.

Dr. Rosenthal says that Miss Caranne found that his charges at $8 per day were just, and that she expressed her regrets that she could not come to New Orleans more often, and the testimony of his secretary on this subject is that the decedent frequently told her she was pleased with the price the doctor was charging. The doctor says he was using Lavoglaukosan, a special expensive medicine, for her eyes, retailing at $2 per ampul, which was reduced to $5 for three *564 ampuls. His testimony is that be used approximately an ampul of that medicine a day. One dollar and one-half a day for the medicine would be a fair estimate of what the doctor was using in his treatment. As Miss Caranne received the treatment in 162 of her “all day visits,” the medicine furnished by the doctor, at $1.50' per ampul, amounted to the sum of $243. A deduction of this sum from the balance of $748 claimed in his account, leaves a balance of $505 for his services for 162 visits, a fraction over $4 per visit. The doctor testifies that his charges of $8 per day for his work were fair and usual, and that Miss Caranne commended him for the price he was charging.

Miss Helmer, his secretary, says that she had so expressed herself.

Applying thé reduction to the account for the medicine furnished, the charges would be more than fair as far as the record discloses. If they were unfair or excessive, it seems to us that it would have been easy to establish that fact, but no effort was made in that direction.

In her letter of December, 1929, Miss Caranne inclosed her check for $50 for, as she writes, “services rendered.” In another letter, June 11, 1929, she incloses her check for $50 “on account of services rendered.” In her letters of March, July, May, and December 15, 1930, she made no remittance, and in her last one, April 31, she inclosed her cheek for $50 without using the words, “on account” or “for services rendered.” In these letters Miss Caranne makes no reference to her remittances as being partial payments on a past-due account.

In such letters, cordial and friendly, the trial judge says, it must be assumed that Miss Caranne would have made some reference to her account if only to assure the doctor that he had not been forgotten.

It appeárs from the account of Dr. Rosen-thal that she had made in 1927 three payments, two of $50 and one of $75, three payments of $50 each in 1928, and similar payments in 1929 and 1930. Hence there was no reason why Miss Caranne, in writing the letters, should have been called upon to refer to the account of Dr.

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147 So. 562, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-caranne-lactapp-1933.