292 Mass. 473 | Mass. | 1935
In this action of contract the plaintiff seeks to recover the value of his services averred to have been rendered to the defendant in the investigation, preparation and trial of a criminal cause. There are two counts in the declaration, each alleging that his services were rendered at the request of the district attorney. The first is on an account annexed. The second recites that the district attorney, in the name of the defendant, entered into a contract with the plaintiff to perform certain autopsies, necropsies and medical examinations, to attend consultations and to testify as an expert at the trial of a criminal case; that the plaintiff was to receive as compensation the expert fees prevailing in the community for services of that nature; that the plaintiff has performed his part of the contract, but the district attorney has unreasonably and arbitrarily refused to certify that the plaintiff’s bill for services was necessarily incurred in the proper performance of the duties of the district attorney. The defendant filed a demurrer wherein nine causes are assigned. In substance those causes are that the plaintiff fails to set forth a cause of action in accordance with G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 231, that the matters alleged in the declaration are insufficient in law to enable the plaintiff to maintain his action, and that he fails to state a case under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 12, § 24. The plaintiff’s appeal from the order sustaining the demurrer brings the case here.
The plaintiff did not frame his declaration on the terms of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 213, § 8, to the effect that “The courts shall, respectively, receive, examine and allow accounts for services and expenses incident to their sittings in the several counties and order payment thereof out of the respective county treasuries.” That section does not enable district attorneys on their sole responsibility to bind the county by their contracts for services and expenses;
There are no sufficient allegations of arbitrariness and unreasonableness on the part of the district attorney in refusing to give the required certificate. Nichols v. Rogers, 139 Mass. 146. Boston v. Treasurer & Receiver General, 237 Mass. 403, 415. Cosmopolitan Trust Co. v. S. L. Agoos Tanning Co. 245 Mass. 69, 73. Therefore it is unnecessary to consider the case from that point of view.
The case at bar is distinguishable from Wheelock v. Auditor of Suffolk County, 130 Mass. 486, where the allowance of bills was a regulation of the internal administration of municipal affairs and not as here a condition precedent to the existence of a valid claim.
The provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 35, § 11, and c. 280, § 4, do not support the contention of the plaintiff; they are general in terms and apply to expenses otherwise valid according to law.
Order sustaining demurrer affirmed.