BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?

No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Montgomery v. North British Railway Co. [1878] ScotLR 15_557 (16 May 1878)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1878/15SLR0557.html
Cite as: [1878] SLR 15_557, [1878] ScotLR 15_557

[New search] [Help]


SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 557

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Sheriff of Berwickshire.

Thursday, May 16. 1878.

15 SLR 557

Montgomery

v.

North British Railway Company.

Subject_1Railway
Subject_2Liability of Company for Fees to a Medical Man called in by their Station Agent.

Facts:

A servant of a railway company was hurt in the exercise of his duty. The station agent sent for a doctor, who attended the wounded man during a long period of time, travelling by train a distance of eight miles for that purpose to a town where other medical attendance was available.

Among the “rules and regulations to be observed” by the company's officers was the following—“In the case of a doctor being sent for by a servant of the company to attend any person who may have sustained injury by accident upon the railway, the company will become responsible for the doctor's fee in respect of his first visit to such person, but for his first visit only. And station agents and others will be held responsible for making the doctor acquainted with this regulation.”

The Court held that, even upon the assumption that the doctor was not made aware of the rule, he was not entitled to rely upon any implied authority of the station agent to employ him, and that the company was therefore not liable for his fees for visits subsequent to the first.

Headnote:

On 21st March 1876 Manson, a guard in the employment of the North British Railway Coy., while engaged in their service sustained an accident to his left foot, which at one time threatened to render amputation necessary. The pursuer Dr Montgomery was sent for by the defenders' agent at Ayton Station to treat Manson professionally for the injury to his foot, which was very serious, and might and did require long and anxious treatment and care. Dr Montgomery went with Manson to Berwick-on-Tweed, a distance of eight miles, where he lived, and he continued his attendance until the 15th July, and paid in all seventy-five professional visits, for which he charged 10s. 6d. a visit, which, in addition to a charge of £3, 3s. for the first visit, and charges for medicines, amounted in all to £44, 14s. The doctor, who lived at Ayton, where the accident had taken place, in making these visits travelled to and from Berwick-on-Tweed in the knowledge of the station-agent free of charge. He brought this action in the Sheriff Court of Berwickshire against the North British Railway for payment of the sum mentioned above.

The defenders denied employment, and in support of their defence adduced article 8 of the “Rules, and Regulations to be observed by the officers and servants of the North British Railway Company”—“In the case of a doctor being sent for by a servant of the Company to attend any person who may have sustained injury by accident upon the railway, the Company will become responsible for the doctor's fee in respect of his first visit to such person, but for his first visit only. And station agents and others will be held responsible for making the doctor acquainted with this regulation.”

The import of the proof which was led in the case sufficiently appears from the judgments quoted below.

The Sheriff-Substitute ( Dickson) pronounced the following interlocutor—“The Sheriff-Substitute having heard parties' procurators, and having considered the proof, productions, and whole process, Finds that William Manson, a goods guard in the service of the defenders, met with a severe injury to his foot while engaged in shunting waggons at Ayton Station on the 21st March 1876: Finds that in the emergency the pursuer, as the nearest available surgeon, was sent for by the defenders' station agent, Yule, and that the pursuer immediately attended to Manson's injuries and accompanied him to Berwick by train, and to his lodgings there the same afternoon: Finds that there was employment of the pursuer by the defenders through their agent Yule on that occasion: Finds that the pursuer is entitled to a fee of £3, 3s. for his services: Finds that the defenders tendered payment to him of the said sum before this action was raised: Further, finds that the pursuer was not employed by the defenders, or by any one on their behalf, to continue his attendance on the injured man: Finds that the pursuer continued his visits of his own accord, and was suffered to pass between Ayton and Berwick stations by train free of charge for upwards of two months, but without the knowledge or consent of the superintendent of the company or any officer in general authority: Finds that the pursuer was informed and was well aware that Manson was entitled as a member of the

Page: 558

Society of Oddfellows to have the attendance of a surgeon free of expense: Finds that under these circumstances the pursuer is not entitled to further remuneration than the fee above specified: Therefore decerns against the defenders for payment to the pursuer of the sum of £3, 3s., and quoad ultra assoilzies the defenders from the conclusions of the action: Finds the pursuer liable in expenses; allows an account thereof to be given in, and remits the same when lodged to the Auditor of Court to tax and report.”

Note.—The findings in the foregoing judgment seem sufficiently to set forth the grounds of the judgment. There was unquestionably employment on the part of the defenders in the first instance, and as a case of emergency. It was very proper and necessary employment, and would probably be sustained at common law, even if it were not expressly sanctioned by the defenders' regulations, No. 8. But further employment and further liability must be founded upon express sanction and employment. The pursuer in his deposition admits that there was no such further employment. Next morning he went ‘of his own accord, ’ and he continued to go ‘because he was never told to discontinue his visits.’ But this is no foundation for a contract of continued employment. It is idle to argue that because through inadvertence or out of sympathy for the injured man the pursuer was suffered, in making his voluntary visits, to pass to and from Berwick without a ticket, thereby a contract of continued attendance was entered into with him by the company. The stationmaster has authority to employ in an emergency, just by reason of the necessity of the case; but for further employment, when that necessity ceases, it is clear that the general authorities of the company must be looked to, and a stationmaster has no authority to enter into such a contract; so that, even if Yule (the stationmaster) either directly or indirectly had employed the pursuer (after the first occasion), which the Sheriff-Substitute holds he did not do, liability would not thereby be fixed upon the defenders.

This is enough for the decision of the case; but the Sheriff-Substitute thinks that the evidence excludes even bona fides from the pursuer's case. He knew perfectly well that Manson was entitled to have a doctor without expense either to himself or to the company, and in spite of that knowledge, and without employment, he continued his visits. It is a very clear case of non-liability.”

The Sheriff ( Pattison) on appeal recalled the Sheriff-Substitute's interlocutor and gave decree against the defenders.

The defenders appealed to the Court of Session.

Appellant's authorities— Cox v. Midland Railway Company, 5 Railway Cases, 583, and 18 L.J. Exch. 65; Walker v. Great Western Railway Company, 2 L.R. Exch. 228, and 36 L.J. Exch. 123.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President—This is a case of some importance, but it appears to me to be also very clear. I think the Sheriff-Substitute's judgment is perfectly sound, and the only qualification that I should make upon his statement is, that I am not quite prepared to adopt the view which he suggests in his note, that the stationmaster's authority to employ a medical man in the first instance would hold at common law without a special authority. Upon that I give no opinion. It is not necessary for the decision of this case, because in this case the Railway Company have given express authority to their stationmaster, and not to their stationmaster only, but to their servants generally upon the line, to call in a doctor in case of accident; but they have limited it to this, that they are to be answerable for only one visit. Now, it is made a question of dispute whether in point of fact the medical man who was called at Ayton Station when Manson met with the accident was informed of this rule of the Company? The man himself who was injured, and another person who lodged in the same house with him, both swear that they made the doctor aware of it, and the doctor himself is not very distinct in his denial of what occurred on that occasion. But assuming that he was not made aware of this rule, then he had nothing to go upon except what he considered to be the implied authority of the stationmaster at Ayton to employ him not merely upon the occasion of the accident, and for a single visit, but for seventy-five visits paid thereafter; because it was not contended that the doctor received employment from anybody else except the stationmaster at Ayton. Now, observe what it is that is thus imputed to the stationmaster. It is that he not only sent for this doctor at Ayton, where the accident occurred, and ordered him to attend the injured man there, and to conduct him home to Berwick, at a distance of some eight miles from the place of the accident, but also impliedly thereby authorised him to continue to travel daily by railway from Ayton to Berwick, and to pay seventy-five visits at that distance, charging therefor a very much larger sum than any medical man in Berwick would have been entitled to charge for rendering the same services. It appears to me to be utterly out of the question to suppose that any station-master can have an implied authority to employ a medical man to that extent and for that purpose; and upon that ground I think it quite clear that the Sheriff-Substitute's interlocutor is right, and that the Sheriff-Principal is wrong.

Lord Deas—It is unnecessary here to decide the abstract question, whether a stationmaster may or may not, under certain circumstances, authorise a doctor to attend longer than the first visit, because all the circumstances here make this an a fortiori case against the claim of the doctor. I confess the evidence of the station-master does not impress me with the idea that his recollection is very accurate. There can be no doubt at all that he knew that the doctor was continuing his attendance, and that he allowed him to travel on that footing without a ticket; in short, the whole of his evidence, I think, is more a defence of himself from reflections than an accurate account of what passed. But I do not think that affects the question. I think Dr Montgomery was made aware very early that this man could get a medical attendant without costing him anything, and that, according to the rules of the Railway Company, they would not be responsible for anything but the first visit. This is not the abstract question of the power of the stationmaster, although I am not disposed to indicate any opinion in favour of the authority of a stationmaster in such a case. I have no doubt that the feeling of humanity, and the professional desire to do the best that he could for his patient, influenced Dr Montgomery very much, and it was very natural for him to suppose that, being called in at first, and having advised whether an operation could not be avoided, he was the person best fitted to continue his attendance; and when he claimed the poor man as his patient he had the feeling that it was his duty to attend him. This, probably, was his motive for claiming him as his patient. But I think he carried that a great deal too far, farther than the law will justify him, and farther than he could reasonably do. His motives may have been all very good, but I am clearly of opinion that in all the circumstances his claim against the Company is unfounded. I agree with your Lordship that this is a case of importance. I have read the whole of it carefully, and the more I consider it the more I am of opinion that the Sheriff-Substitute is right and the Sheriff wrong.

Lord Mure—I concur with your Lordship that the stationmaster has no such implied authority in regard to the employment of medical men as has been maintained here, and on that ground I think the Sheriff's judgment is not sound. It was strongly pushed in argument that the exception about one visit should have been made known to Dr Montgomery; but I think the preponderance of the evidence goes to show that after the conversations spoken to he ought to have satisfied himself that he was entitled to go on making his visits.

Lord Shand—I am of the same opinion. The stationmaster, under his ordinary employment as such, was certainly not an agent of the company entitled to employ a doctor to give continuous attendance either to a servant of the company or a passenger. That being so, the only question is, whether he had special authority to do so by virtue of the rules on which, in this view, the pursuer must found in order to establish liability? The rules give no greater authority to a stationmaster than to any other servant of the Company, and it appears that the authority here given is limited to employment, we find, for the first visit. It is said that the concluding part of the rule, “that station agents and others will be held responsible for making the doctor acquainted with this regulation, ’ implies that in the absence of such an intimation to the doctor there is liability for further atendance. But a provision or direction to give an intimation of precaution to prevent any possible misunderstanding cannot be interpreted as extending the power of the agent who fails to give intimation, and I cannot see how the failure to give intimation can infer liability against the Company, who were not bound to give it.

The Court recalled the Sheriff's interlocutor, and pronounced an interlocutor repeating the findings of the Sheriff-Substitute and giving decree of new for £3, 3s., and quoad ultra assoilzieing the defenders.

Counsel:

Counsel for Pursuer (Respondent)— Scott— Shaw. Agents— Renton & Gray, S.S.C.

Counsel for Defenders (Appellants)— Balfour. Agent— Adam Johnstone, Solicitor.

1878


BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1878/15SLR0557.html