(After stating the facts.) When one summons a ;physician to care for another, rendered by sudden illness unable to act for himself, and to whom he stands in no relationship which -creates an obligation to furnish necessary medical care, and no express undertaking is entered into, then, from the mere summoning -of the physician and requesting him to care for the person who is ill, the law does not presume an implied promise by the one so acting to pay for the services of the physician summoned. Meisenbach v. Southern Cooperage Co., 45 Mo. App. 232 ; Jesserich v. Walruff, 51 Mo. App. 270 ; Smith v. Watson, 14 Vt. 332 ; Starrett v. Miley, 79 Ill. App. 658. In the last case cited, a woman who was, so far as appears from the report of the facts, a stranger to Starrett, ran into his house, wounded and bleeding, and fell there unconscious. He at once called in Miley, a physician, and directed him to the injured woman and told him to care for her. Starrett also had her carried to a room in his house. No express promise was made by him to pay^ the physician for the services rendered the woman. It was held that Starrett was not liable for the physician’s services. In Boyd v. Sappington, 4 Watts (Pa.), 247, it was held that a request by a father to a physician to attend his son, then
The general rule is well settled that a master is not, in the absence of some stipulation, under any legal obligation to furnish medical attendance for a servant who falls sick while engaged in;
Judgment affirmed.