37 La. Ann. 871 | La. | 1885
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The executors of Charlotte Piffet filed a provisional account placing Dr. Tebault thereon as creditor for two undisputed items and allowing him $300 besides for attendance, upon the deceased in her last illness. lie. opposed it claiming two thousand dollars tor the last service and $352 for attendance upon Mrs. Knapp a niece of the. deceased.
The executors excepted that the opponent had set up a special contract for the. services during last illness and at the same, time claimed under a tjxumtum meruit and prayed that hq he required to elect, and this exception having been sustained, he elected to stand on the contract.
The sole witness to the contract was Dr. Tebault himself, hut his counsel insists that his testimony is supported by corroborating circumstances more than sufficient to bring the case within the rule of art. 2277 Rev. Civ. Code.
Mrs. Piffet was an aged woman with large fortune and without children. The inventory of her estate is over four hundred thousand dollars, the accumulation of her own thrift and good management.
She had made no disposition of her property and notwithstanding this neglect, it apj>ears that when confronted by death she earnestly desired to make a will. She adjured him to stay with and watch her, and to keep her alive, until she could get strength to make her will. He said he had other patients who needed his attention and he could not devote himself exclusively to her. Then she offered to give him two thousand dollars if he would abandon every other patient and attend to her alone, lie accepted the offer and gave her his undivided attention until the 37th. of the same month when she. died. She made her will on the 9th. and a codicil on the 11th.
He had to do much more than prescribe for her and watch her. She would not have a professional nurse. lie was attendant and nurse as well as doctor. The nature of the disease suficiently indicates the kind of services he. had to perform without going into the details supplied us by the record.
It is a. strong corroborating circumstance that this old and rich woman ardently wished for time and strength to dispose of her property, and the promise of an unusually large fee was a natural expíes, sion of that wish, a proof at once of the intensity of the desire and of the largess she was willing to dispense to attain its fulfillment. For what was that sum to one who coveted a few more days of life that she might dispose according to her own mind of that to the acquisition of which her life had been given ? A strong corroborating circumstance is the fact that Dr. Tebault gave up his other practice and devoted himself exclusively to Mrs. I’iftet, performing menial services even and watching her with unremitting attendance.
Several eminent physicians testified that the services of Dr. Tebanlt were fully worth the sum claimed. Their testimony was given after the details of those services of various kinds had been made by him accompanied by statements of the offensive developments of the disease. The testimony was objected to by the executors because the quantum meruit claim had been abandoned.
There can be no doubt of the correctness of the principle asserted by the executors that where a pi an tiff declares on a contract, he can
We do not leave out of sight the suspicion with which legists have always regarded the influence of physicians and others upon a sick person, and the rigour with which jurists have annulled donations made under undue influence, art. 1489 Rev. Civ. Code. Domat Droit .Publie, lib. 1, tit. xvii, sec. 1 & 12. But that made it only the more becoming that proof should be tendered to shew that the contract set up is one that a sick person, circumstanced as was this ■testatrix, would naturally make, and that other men of the same profession as the opponent would think not exorbitant and not improper ¡to be accepted.
The claim preferred by the opponent for services rendered Mrs. Knapp rests upon a very slender basis. This'lady was the niece of the •testatrix, had been an inmate of her house previous to marriage, had been reared by her, and is one of her legatees. She was married in 1878. Mrs. Piffet paid Dr. Tebanlt’s bills for attendance upon Mrs. Knapp in 1879 and 1880. He presented his bill for 1881 audit was not paid by Mrs. Piffet, and he then presented it to Dr. Knapp. No further application to Mrs. Piffet for the payment of that bill was made, and considering her ample means and her business habits it is not unreasonable to conclude that had Dr. Tebault looked to her for it any longer it would again have been presented.
There is an attempt to shew that Mrs. Piffet bound herself to pay ■continuously for medical services to Mrs. Knapp in conversations had during the first years of the latter’s married life, but the narration of conversations correctly is the most difficult feat of memory and of expression, and of all evidence the narration of a w itness of his conversation with a dead person is esteemed in justice the weakest. Besides, this is an attempt to prove by parol evidence the promise of a deceased person to pay another’s debt, and that is textually prohibited. art. 2278 Rev. Civ. Code.
The judgment below was adverse to the opponent but with reservation of his rights to bring another action on a quantum meruit. We •think it is error. Therefore