The plaintiff physician sues a county for professional services rendered in the county to one resident and eight nonresidents indigent, but judgment was properly rendered against him, for he neither had a claim to begin with nor had properly presented one.
These persons were not accepted paupers, and no county officer had requested plaintiff to treat them. Nothing can be plainer, under B.em. & Bal. Code, § 83T7 et seq. (P. C. 115 § 311), than that, however much the poor may of a sudden require a physician, a bill for such work cannot be run up against the county without an order from some one in authority. Even were we to suppose the county under a common law obligation, this thing has long been regulated by statute. Neither that statute nor reason exposes our counties to what might otherwise become enormous charges, unnecessary services, and feigned situations. These are old statutes and this their old interpretation. King County v. Collins, 1 Wash. Terr. 469.
Judgment affirmed.
Morris, C. J., Main, Holcomb, and Parker, JJ., concur.Reported in 155 Pac. 1035.