Webb v. Shreveport Packing Co.

180 So. 843, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 192
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 1, 1938
DocketNo. 5634.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 180 So. 843 (Webb v. Shreveport Packing Co.) 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
Webb v. Shreveport Packing Co., 180 So. 843, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 192 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff, for her own account, and as the assignee of Mrs. Paul Lashley, both registered nurses, seeks judgment against defendant for 39 days’ services at $6 per day, rendered to W. A. Lester, an employee of defendant, while confined in a sanitarium from the effects of being seriously gored by a bull while performing the duties of his employment.

The premise upon which the action is based is that these nurses were engaged or employed by defendant, by and through its president, S. W. Dickson, to render to its injured employee the services for which they sue.

Defendant denies liability. It denies that its said president employed or authorized the employment of the nurses, as by them alleged. Alternatively, defendant pleads that should it be found and held that its president did employ said nurses, even then no liability for their services devolved upon it for the reason that such action was unauthorized and beyond its president’s powers.

Defendant appealed from ' a judgment for plaintiff for the amounfsued for.

Lester was seriously injured. He was hurried to a sanitarium (in the city of Shreveport) and Dr. T. J. Fleming was immediately summoned. The case was intrusted to him for medical and surgical attention. It was considered a serious *844 one. An operation was performed as quickly as possible.

Dr. Fleming testified that Mr. Dickson came to the sanitarium before the operation was, performed (Mr. Dickson admits this), and then and there instructed him “to not spare anything, consultation or whatever was needed; that he wanted him to get well if possible.” He also testified that on the following morning, when it appeared as though Lester would not survive, Mr. Dickson repeated what he said the evening prior, additionally suggesting that a consultant from New Orleans be summoned. Dr. Fleming testified positively that Mr. Dickson told him that defendant would pay the bills, and pursuant to this commitment and the urgent request that nothing be spared in the patient’s behalf, plaintiff and Mrs.^ Lash-ley were employed as day and night nurses to serve the injured man until he was out of danger. It is customary for the physician in charge to attend to the selection of nurses when their services are needed. Dr. Fleming’s opinion of the patient’s condition was such that he desired him to have the best of attention, and in keeping with this desire th.ese two nurses were engaged in the case. Their selection reflects Dr. Fleming’s estimate of their skill and ability as nurses.

The question of who would pay the nurses does not appear to have been specifically mentioned until at the expiration of the first week. It is customary for nurses to render bills for their services at the end of each week. Tt was then, for the first time, that, according to both nurses’ testimony, Mr. Dickson assured them personally that he would be responsible for their pay and to turn the bills in to him at the end of their services; and acting upon this assurance, and at Dr. Fleming’s request, neither presented bills at week-ends. They decided to wait until their services were no longer needed, feeling no misgivings about receiving their pay.

Mr. Dickson denies that he authorized Dr. Fleming to employ any one in the case and denies that-he agreed, on'behalf of his company, to pay for nurses’ services. He gave the following testimony:

“Q. How long afterwards was it before you discussed anything about payments?
“A. Seventeen days after the accident, he got a letter from the Insurance Company.
“Q. You recall what was said then?
“A. Yes, sir, as I recall told Dr. Fleming we could not do anything, except to try and get the boy well, and wltat it liked in paying, would have to pay it ourselves.
“Q. If the insurance was not enough, have to pay it?
“A. Yes, sir.” (Italics ours.)

The insurance referred to is the limit of $250 provided for in the Workman’s Compensation Law, Act No. 20 of 1914, as amended, for payment • of medical, surgical, and hospital expenses incurred on behalf of an injured employee.

It is quite certain that neither Dr. Fleming nor these nurses expected Mr. Dickson personally to pay any part of the expense incurred in Lester’s behalf. They understood, and correctly so, we think, that'the commitments made by him-were in the capacity of. president of his company. He evinced but a natural and a human solicitude for the injured employee’s recovery. And it seems to us that because of this solicitude and his anxiety in the case, it would have been but most natural for him to have said and done exactly what Dr. Fleming testified that he did say and do. His assurance to these nurses a week after the operation is strong corroboration of Dr. Fleming’s testimony. And, in addition, we have his own testimony, quoted supra, wherein he admits that he assured Dr. Fleming that if the insurance was insufficient to pay all the expenses in the case they “would have to pay it ourselves.” Unquestionably “ourselves” refers to defendant company. It may be that when his first commitments were made he entertained no thought that the insurance would be insufficient to pay all these expenses, but this fact would not affect his company’s individual liability for such commitments (assuming he had the power to make them), to third persons who rendered services upon the faith of such.

We are convinced from all the testimony in the case, and the rational inferences arising therefrom, that Mr. Dickson, acting as president of defendent company, authorized Dr. Fleming to go the 'limit in his efforts to save Lester’s life, and that the nurses were employed under this authority. By so acting, defendant’s liability to the nurses became a primary obligation, independent of any *845 liability therefor by any other person, if such there be. Such liability does not flow from an assumption of the debt or obligation of a third person. It flows from a primary obligation.

The objection to parol ^ testimony to prove such an obligation, or the facts forming its basis, is without merit. Wallenburg v. Kerry, 16 La.App. 221, 133 So. 823.

And when the obligation is once established, subsequent verbal declarations of the obligor, confirmatory of his original commitment, may also be shown by testimonial proof.

As concerns the above-discussed point, and the alternative defense that Dickson was without authority to bind defendant for expenses necessary to relieve Lester’s distress and restore him, if possible, to good health, we think the case of O’Ferrall v. Nashville Bridge Co., 165 La. 963, 116 So. 399, decisive. We quote two sections of the syllabi of the case which clearly reflect the court’s holding anent the questions considered? viz.:

“3. Employer’s contract with physician for treatment of injured employees is not affected by. Civ. Code, art. 2278, declaring that parol evidence should not be received to prove promise to pay debt of third person, since employer had personal interest in saving men’s lives because of possibility of being answerable in damages.
“4.

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Bluebook (online)
180 So. 843, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-shreveport-packing-co-lactapp-1938.