261 Mass. 358 | Mass. | 1927
This is an action of contract, wherein the plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendants for medical services rendered their minor child.
In December, 1922, a dog bit the defendants’ nine year old boy. When killed and examined, the dog was found to have a disease known as rabies. The chairman of the board
The order was clearly right. There was no express contract, and no contract was implied in fact or in law, to pay the plaintiff for the services rendered in the circumstances disclosed. Assuming the physician rendered services outside the terms of his employment as town physician to the board of health, and further assuming that such services were reasonably required by the board of health in making the provisions required by law for persons infected with a disease dangerous to the public health, the town was obligated to pay to the plaintiff the reasonable value of the services rendered at the request or at the direction of the board of health, and had a remedy over against the defendants if they were able to pay. G. L. c. Ill, § 116. Haverhill v. Marlborough, 187 Mass. 150.
Exceptions overruled.