Missouri Court of Appeals, 1900

Voerster v. Kunkel

Voerster v. Kunkel
Missouri Court of Appeals · Decided December 4, 1900 · Biggs
86 Mo. App. 194; 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 330

Voerster v. Kunkel

Opinion of the Court

BIGGS, J.

The plaintiff is a practicing physician. The defendant is a professor of music. The plaintiff sues for medical services alleged to have been rendered to the members of defendant’s family at 'his request, and also to persons belonging to the family of defendant’s brother. The defendant denied the alleged indebtedness and filed a counterclaim for musical lessons given to plaintiff’s children and also for other services pertaining to the defendant’s profession. The cause was sent to a referee, who found the sum of five hundred and forty-six dollars to be due plaintiff for the medical services alleged to have been rendered to the members of defendant’s family, and he found for the defendant on his counterclaim in the sum of one hundred and twenty dollars, which amount he deducted from the amount found to be due plaintiff, and recommended a judgment for the balance, with interest from the date of the institution of the suit. The defendant filed exceptions to the report of referee. The circuit court was of the opinion that the amount found to be due plaintiff by the referee was excessive in a small amount, which was deducted, and judgment entered for the balance. Erom that judgment defendant has appealed.

In'this court the defendant admits that the plaintiff rendered the services claimed and for which judgment was rendered, and that the charges therefor were reasonable. It is conceded that there was no express contract to pay for the services, and the contention of the defendant is that the facts found by the referee are not sufficient t'o authorize the *197conclusion that there was an implied contract or promise to pay, which his counsel contended is a conclusion of law. Their position is stated thus: “In the absence of an express promise, the obligation to pay, or the the implied promise to pay, granting a given state of facts, is a conclusion of law.” This is a correct statement of the law as applicable to certain facts. Thus where valuable services are rendered on request, and there are no circumstances tending to prove that the services were intended to be gratuitous, such as might be implied from the relationship of the parties, then the legal presumption arises that they were to be paid for. Or, if the claim for services is in favor of a child against the parent or other person standing in loco parentis to the claimant and there is no evidence of an express promise to pay, or facts from which it could be implied, then the legal implication would be that the services were intended as a gratuity. But on the other hand if it be doubtful under the evidence whether the services were rendered as a gratuity, or whether there was an intention on the one side to charge and on the other to pay, it is for the jury to say whether, under all the circumstances, there was an implied contract for compensation. Whaley v. Peak, 49 Mo. 80; Smith v. Meyers, 19 Mo. 433; Guenther v. Birkicht, 22 Mo. 439; Hart v. Hart, 41 Mo. 441; Kerr v. Cusenbarry, 60 Mo. App. 558. Now, in the present case, the referee found as facts that the plaintiff rendered the services with the intent to charge therefor, and that the defendant requested them with the intent to pay. If there is substantial evidence to support these findings, the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed, for in a law case the report of the referee is equivalent to the special verdict of a jury, and is equally binding on the trial and appellate courts. That there was such evidence there can be no question. We quote the following from the testimony of *198plaintiff: Q. “What professional services -did you at any time perform for him at his request ?” A. “I rendered services, medical and surgical, and also furnished medicines to him, his wife, his fapiily, his mother,” etc. Q. “You were summoned to his house at his request in these cases?” A. “I was summoned by him to his house in all cases, and to his office, or at other times, where specially mentioned in the bill, services were rendered at my office.” Q. “These services you have charged here for his wife, by whose order were they rendered?” A. “By order of the defendant in this case, her husband, Charles Kunkel.” Q. “With respect to the services you have charged for the services to their daughter, Miss Tillie, at whose request were those services rendered?” A. “By request of Mr. Charles Kunlcel.” Q. “Also there is charged eighteen dollars for services to his mother, Mrs. Kunkel; by whose request and order were those services rendered?” A. “By special order of Mr. Kunkel.”

The following appears from the cross-examination of the defendant: Q. “He attended your wife?” A. “Yes.” Q. “He also attended other members of your family ?” A. “If he did, I did not know anything of it.” Q. “Do you say you do not know anything of his attending other mem-, bers of your family?” A. “I do not know that he attended any of my sons, but as long as the Doctor put it down there, I know he would not put down anything that was not correct, and I will pay it.” Q. “You expected him to charge for attending your wife ?” A. “Yes, certainly.”

There are circumstances in evidence that tend to controvert the findings of the ref eree,' that is that the plaintiff was not the family physician of the defendant, and that the social relations of the plaintiff and defendant were such as to warrant the inference that the services of neither party, as *199represented by tbe claim and counterclaim in suit, were in-’ tended to be made a matter of charge, but such considerations must be put aside as <the positive testimony of the parties themselves is to the contrary.

Under the findings >of the referee and the admissions of the defendant, the judgment of the circuit court could not have been otherwise. It will therefore be affirmed.

All concur.

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