92 Vt. 353 | Vt. | 1918
On the 22nd day of August, 1913, the defendant, while working for the New England Telephone Company, was severely injured and taken to the plaintiff’s hospital in St. Johnsbury, where he was treated and eared for until November 3, 1913, incurring an expense in the sum of $167.19. This action of contract, on the common counts, is brought to recover that sum. It is conceded by the defendant that, if the plaintiff is entitled to recover, it is entitled to recover that sum with interest on the same from November 3, 1913, to the date of judgment. The general issue was pleaded and the case was tried by jury at the December term of the Caledonia County Court, 1917.
The plaintiff seeks to recover on a promise implied by law. The defendant defends on the ground that the liability was incurred by the New England Company or by its general manager, C. E. Merrill, under an express contract between Merrill and the plaintiff, with the understanding of the plaintiff, defendant, and the New England Telephone Company, through its general manager, at the time the defendant was taken to the hospital, that the telephone company was to pay the expense for the care and nursing of the defendant while at plaintiff’s hospital.
The first exception taken and relied upon by the plaintiff was to the testimony tending to show the contract claimed by the defendant to have been made by Merrill, on behalf of the telephone company, with Mrs. Flora Love joy, matron of plaintiff’s hospital, on behalf of the plaintiff, in which it was agreed that the telephone company should bear the expense incurred by the plaintiff in the care of the defendant, and that this contract was made in accordance with the understanding of the defendant, Merrill and Mrs. Love joy, Merrill acting on behalf of the telephone company and Mrs. Lovejoy on behalf of the plaintiff. The objection to this evidence was based upon the ground that Merrill had no authority to bind the telephone company, and that the defendant, having received the benefit, with full knowledge of the same, a promise implied in law created a liability on his part, and that the promise of the telephone company, if one was made, was collateral, and did not extinguish the original liability of the defendant.
The remaining exception to be considered is to the court’s refusal to direct a verdict for the plaintiff and to its direction of a verdict for the defendant. Since it affirmatively appeared from the record that neither party wished to go to the jury on any issue of fact, it was for the court to direct a verdict for one party or the other on such a state of the facts as it regarded proved by the evidence, and the verdict will be upheld if there was any evidence to sustain it. Lowe v. Vermont Savings Bank, 90 Vt. 532, 98 Atl. 1023. An examination of the transcript, referred to in the bill of exceptions, discloses that there was substantial evidence sustaining it. The evidence was clear that Merrill promised to pay the plaintiff for the care and nursing of the defendant while at its hospital, and that promise was original and not collateral, and that it was so understood by the defendant and by Merrill and Mrs. Love joy.
The express promise of Merrill being shown, no promise implied in law arises on the part of the defendant. Morse v. Kenney, 87 Vt. 445, 89 Atl. 865. The plaintiff’s claim that Merrill’s promise was collateral cannot be sustained, for there was no evidence in the case tending to support it. If the promise was made by Merrill, as the evidence tends to show, and as the court must have found, it was original, and he or the telephone copany, to whom the credit was given, is liable on that promise.
Judgment affirmed.