72 So. 234 | Miss. | 1916
delivered the opinion of the court.
J. D. Permenter, the appellee in this case, filed suit in the circuit court of Smith county against the. appellant, Eastman, Gardiner & Co. The declaration alleged that the plaintiff in the court below, J. D. Permenter, had been employed by Eastman, Gardiner & Co., the defendant, as a laborer engaged about the defendant’s lumber business, and that each of the employees, including the plaintiff, were required to pay and did pay from one dollar to one dollar and fifty cents each month out of their salary to the defendant company, and in consideration of this payment the defendant contracted with the plaintiff to furnish him with medical and surgical .treatment and necessary medicine in the event he or any member of his family should become sick or injured during their employment by the defendant. Plaintiff charges that on or about the 1st day of August, 1913, while he was in the employment of said defendant, and while the above contract was in force, a member of his family, a little child about sixeyears old, became sick and suffered excruciating pain both in mind and body, and the defendant on that date was immediately notified of the condition of plaintiff’s child, and that in violation of its contract, and in violation of “even the common obligations of humanity, ’ ’ failed and refused to comply with its contract to furnish him with a physician and medicine, and that by reason of the willful, gross, and wanton negligence of the defendant and the violation of its contract, the plaintiff’s sick child grew worse for want of medical treatment, and that this caused the said sick child to be without medicine and medical treatment for several days, when it was in need of same. The declaration further charges that, if the defendant had furnished a physi
The uncontradicted proof shows that the appellee was an employee of the defendant at its lumber camps in Smith county on August 1, 1913, and that the defendant deducted a dollar from the wages of each married employee, including plaintiff, at the commencement of their employment, and a like amount at'the beginning of each succeeding month, to cover the cost of medical attention for each laborer and his family, but that the medical attention did not include surgery and obstetrics. The evidence further shows that the entire amount of money thus collected was paid by the defendant company to a physician located at its lumber camps in Smith county, and that this physician was charged with the duty of treating the employees and their families; and the evidence shows conclusively that no profit of any sort was received by the defendant company from this fund, but that the entire amount was expended in' payment for the services of the physician employed.
• The testimony shows that the appellee, on the occasion in question, was an employee of the appellant and had a little child about two years of age, and that he was living in the camps about two hundred yards from the office of Dr. Harper, who was then the physician in charge of the camps, and that this little child had decayed teeth so that its face was swollen, and that Dr. Harper was called to see the child and prescribed a mouth wash for it, going to the office and sending the medicine back to be applied as directed. The proof shows that this little child was afflicted with cretinism, and that cretinism is a nervous disease enfeebling the whole body and is due to lack of secretion of the thyroid gland and usually results in the enfeeblement of the mind. The proof further shows that this child was born with this diseased condition, and
The testimony for the plaintiff shows that the physician was called to see this child and promptly responded on one occasion and prescribed a treatment, but that for eight days, though he had been repeatedly requested to mate other visits, he neglected to do so. The physician denied this and testified that he promptly responded to the calls when notified. For the purposes of this suit, however, the jury have resolved the facts in plaintiff’s favor.
At any rate, at the most the evidence of the plaintiff establishes that, if Dr. Harper had visited this little child oftener, the best that could have been expected would have been some temporary alleviation of the child’s suffering, for part of the little fellow’s ailments were incurable, and the others were such as would only yield to surgical operations.
It is clearly established that the physician furnished • by the defendant company was a competent man, skilled in his profession, and the defendant had shown no negligence in the selection of the physician furnished.
There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff in this case for six hundred and fifty dollars.
It will be noted that the physician had taken charge of the case and had undertaken to treat plaintiff’s child, and such injury as was suffered, if any, was occasioned by the negligence of the physician, and not on account of the failure on the part of the defendant to furnish a skilled and competent physician.
A peremptory instruction was asked by the defendant in this case and should have been granted.
There is no showing that complaint was ever made to defendant that its physician would not attend the sick child. The uneontradicted proof shows that the physician employed, Dr. Harper, was a skilled physician and that the defendant company was not negligent in selecting him as a physician for its employees. It is established fur
It is a well-established rule of law that, where the master makes deductions from wages of his servants and administers'the fund so collected for the benefit of those who fall sick or sustain injury while in his employment and devotes the entire amount thus collected to the payment of the physician to render medical assistance and receives himself no pecuniary profit from the funds thus created, he is not liable for the negligence or unskillfulness of the physician or surgeon employed, provided he has exercised due care in selecting the physician. Labatt on Master and Servant, vol. 5, p. 6216; Union Pacific Co. v. Artist, 60 Fed. 365, 9 C. C. A. 14, 23 L. R. A. 581; A., T. & St. F. Ry. Co. v. Zeiller, 54 Kan. 340, 38 Pac. 282; I. C. R. R. Co. v. Buchanan, 31 Ky. Law Rep. 722, 103 S. W. 272, 11 L. R. A. (N. S.) 711; Big Stone Gap Iron Co. v. Ketron, 102 Va. 23, 45 S. E. 740; Wells v. Ferry-Baker Lumber Co., 57 Wash. 658, 107 Pac. 869, 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 426. This case is therefore reversed and dismissed.
Reversed and dismissed.