60 W. Va. 320 | W. Va. | 1906
In this action of assumpsit instituted by Geo: Ben Johnson, a surgeon of Richmond, Virginia, against Mrs. Ida Bank, in the circuit court of McDowell county, there was a verdict of a jury and a judgment for the plaintiff for Five Hundred Dollars, being the amount of a fee claimed by him for the performance of a surgical operation upon Mrs. Louis Jaffe, a sister of Mrs. Bank. She obtained a writ of error to the judgment. The amount of the recovery is justified by the evidence if the evidence fixed a liability upon Mrs. Bank, the defendant. She complains of the giving to the jury of instructions, numbers 1 and 2, at the instance of the plaintiff, of the refusal to give instruction number 1 offered by her, and of the overruling of her motion to set aside the verdict and grant to her a new trial.
The plaintiff claims that there was an oral promise by defendant to pay his fee. The services were not rendered to the defendant but to a third person, the defendant’s sister. The two crucial questions involved in the issue in this action are: 1st, Did the defendant make the promise claimed by the plaintiff? 2nd, If so, was that promise original or collateral? If there was a promise by defendant and it was to answer
A partial statement of the evidence is necessary. Drs. Daniel and Hall testified for plaintiff substantially that they were practicing physicians and were called to attend upon Mrs. Jaffe by her husband, Louis Jaffe; that after a diagnosis and consultation they decided that an operation was necessary; that they did not care to undertake it without assistance; that they consulted the defendant, Mrs. Bank; that they told Mrs. Bank that it would be necessary to oper-erate upon Mrs. Jaffe in order to save her; that they told her that they did not want to undertake the operation with out assistance; that Mrs. Bank mentioned the name of a doctor in New York or Baltimore; that they told her that they could get the plaintiff, Dr. Johnson, cheaper and quicker; that Mrs. Bank said “money is no object, get a good doctor. I will see it paid”; that thereupon they sent a telegram to Dr. Johnson; that Dr. Johnson came and performed the operation and that they did not consider Louis Jaffe financially responsible and would not have sent for Dr. Johnson had it not been for Mrs. Bank’s statement.
Dr. Johnson, the plaintiff, testified on his own behalf substantially that the telegram received from Doctors Daniel and Hall was according to his recollection in the following language, “Come to Welch on first train prepared to operate. Fee good.” Signed “Daniel and Hall;” that upon this call he came and performed the operation upon Mrs. Jaffe; that no other arrangement was made as to the payment of his fee previous to the operation; that he relied upon Drs. Daniel and Hall as having made proper arrangements for his fee; that after the operation Daniel and Hall stated to plaintiff that in the event Mrs. Jaffe’s husband did not compensate him her sister, would; that plaintiff rendered his bill for the operation to Louis Jaffe, the husband; that the bill was made from plaintiff’s book; that after receiving no response from the husband he communicated with Drs. Daniel and Hall and was told by them that according to their agreement he should send the bill to the’ sister if he heard nothing from the husband.
We have not detailed all the evidence but enough to show that the evidence and circumstances are materially conflicting as to both questions mentioned. Answers to these questions must be deduced from such conflicting evidence and circumstances and inferences therefrom. In calling Dr. Johnson, Daniel and Hall, acting for Mrs. Bank, could bind her within the scope of the authority given to them by her and no farther. If the conversation between Mrs. Bank and Daniel and Hall, considering the situation of the parties and the circumstances surrounding the transaction, authorized them to make an original promise for her then they could so bind. her, but without such authority, express or implied, they could not do so. In determining whether a promise is original or collateral regard must be had to the intention of the parties at the time the promise was made. Throop on Yerbal Agreements, sections 183-188. In 29 Amer. & Eng. Enc. of Law 907, it is stated that “While as a matter of law a promise absolute in form to pay or to be ‘responsible’ or to be ‘paymaster’ is an original promise and while on the other hand if the. promissor says ‘I will see you paid’ or ‘I will pay if he does not’ or uses equivalent words the promise standing alone is collateral, yet, under all the circumstances of the case an absolute promise to pay or a promise to be ‘responsible’ may be found to be collateral or promises deemed prima facie collateral may be adjudged original.” See Brown on Statute of Frauds, (4th Ed.) sec
In view of what we have said we will consider the instructions given and refused. The instructions for plaintiff are as follows: No. 1. “The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence in this case that the defendant in this ■ case through Drs. Daniel and Hall, as' her agents, sent for Dr. Geo. Ben Johnson, the plaintiff, and that by reason thereof the said plaintiff came to Welch and performed the operation upon Mrs. Louis Jaffe, then the agreement to pay was not a collateral agreement but a primary and original agreement and that it is not necessary that it be in writing but that Mrs. Bank, the defendant, is primarily liable for a reasonable amount for said
Instruction No, 1 offered for defendant and refused is as follows: “The court instructs the jury that though they believe from the evidence in this case that there was a promise on the part of the defendant to pay the plaintiff’s claim, yet if they further believe from the evidence that the plaintiff gave any credit whatever to either Mrs. Louis Jaffe or her husband so that either or both of them were in any degree liable for the payment of the plaintiff’s claim then such promise on the part of Mrs. Bank is a collateral undertaking and they must find for the defendant.” In Waggoner v. Gray, 2 Hen. & Munf. 603, Judge Roane considered it settled “that where the person on whose behalf the promise is made is not discharged but the person promising agrees to see the debt paid so that the promissee has a double remedy the
For the reasons stated the judgment complained of is reversed, the verdict set aside, a new trial awarded and this action remanded to be further proceeded with according to. law.
Reversed, Remcmded.