Ætna Life Insurance v. Caffee

286 F. 657 | 5th Cir. | 1923

BRYAN, Circuit Judge.

This is a writ of error, sued out by the defendant, iEtna Rife Insurance Company, to a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Matilda Caffee.

The suit is upon a policy of insurance by which plaintiff's husband was insured by the defendant against “loss resulting directly and independently of all other causes from bodily injuries effected solely through external, violent and accidental means.” The policy provides for the payment of $5,000 to the plaintiff in the event the death of the insured should result from such injuries.

The declaration is in two counts. The first count contains the following allegations:

“The said automobile in which said insured was riding and which was being driven by him suddenly and accidentally left the road and ran violently and rapidly down an embankment and upon, against, and astride a small dock at the edge of a lake some 40 feet, more or less, from the point where said automobile left said road, and upon, against, and astride said dock and against a post on the right-hand side thereof said automobile came to a stop so suddenly that said Ben V. Caffee was by the sudden stopping of said automobile as *659aforesaid accidentally thrown from said automobile upon and against the ground with such great force and violence that said Ben Y. Caffee thereby solely in and on account of being so violently and forcibly thrown from said automobile sustained a concussion of the brain, from and on account of which, directly and independently of all other causes, said Ben Y. Caffee died,” etc.

The second count differs from the first in that, instead of alleging that death was due to concussion of the brain, it alleges that the nature of the injury was unknown to plaintiff. The defendant interposed a demurrer, and also a motion for compulsory amendment, based upon the grounds that the declaration was indefinite and uncertain. The demurrer and the motion were both overruled.

The evidence without conflict developed the following state of facts: Plaintiff’s husband, Ben V. Caffee, the insured, was a physician, and on the day of his death left home in his automobile, which he was driving', for the purpose of making professional calls He was seen by several witnesses while he was driving his automobile along an asphalt highway in the direction of the residence of a patient whose name was on his visiting list. While driving down a steep hill, and at a point where the road curves sharply away from a lake, the left wheels of the automobile were seen to leave the road, and Caffee was seen making an effort to turn the automobile back on to the road; but after it had gone a few feet it departed from the road and went down the hill toward the lake. Almost immediately thereafter the automobile was found resting against a small dock at the edge of the lake, in an upright position, but tilted to the left, with the left door open and the front axle bent against one of the dock posts. Dr. Caffee was found in an unconscious condition a few feet to the left of the automobile with his head doubled up under his shoulder, and with his raincoat in the position of having been thrown over the upper part of his body. Plis head was within about a foot of the edge of the lake, and was resting upon hard, wet sand, in which there was a slight depression He was removed to a house nearby and attended by several physicians, and died about seven hours later without regaining consciousness.

The tracks of the automobile indicated that just before it struck the dock it turned abruptly to the left and away from a pipe line two or three feet above the ground.

There was conflict in the evidence as to cause of death. There were no visible signs of injury, and an autopsy held several weeks after Dr. Caffee died failed to disclose any brain injury. It was the opinion of Dr. Sullivan, one of the physicians, based upon symptoms immediately preceding death, and upon the autopsy, that the cause of death was concussion of the brain. This witness was of the opinion that Dr. Caffee was suffering from a brain injury, which he thought was apoplexy until the autopsy failed to disclose that there had been a hemorrhage. Other physicians, while conceding the possibility that death could have been caused by concussion, expressed the opinion that it was in fact caused by uraemic poisoning.

The trial court overruled an objection, and noted an exception, to the questions calling for the opinion of Dr. Sullivan, based both upon symptoms before death and upon the autopsy, as to the cause of death.

*660The court also refused to direct a verdict for the defendant, and to charge the jury to find for it if they were in doubt as to the cause of Caffee’s death. The defendant excepted to these rulings. The court charged the jury that plaintiff could not recover if death was caused wholly or in part by disease or natural causes, and that the burden was upon the plaintiff to prove her case by a preponderance of the evidence.

The defendant contends that the trial court erred: (1) In overruling the demurrer to the declaration and denying its motion for compulsory amendment; (2) in overruling objections to the questions which elicited from Dr. Sulliyan testimony'to the effect that in his opinion the cause of Caffee’s death was concussion of the brain; (3) in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant; and (4) in refusing to charge the jury to find for the defendant if they were in doubt as to the cause of Caffee’s death.

1. It is conceded that the declaration would have been good if it had omitted altogether the allegation that the automobile left the highway. The contention is that the allegation, having been unnecessarily made, should have included a statement of the facts which caused the automobile to behave as it did. The criticism is exceedingly technical. The defendant does not claim to have been misled, surprised, or embarrassed in its defense in any way. If any error was committed in sustaining the declaration, which we are very far from holding, it was harmless.

2. Jt is insisted that Dr. Sullivan should not have been permitted to state his opinion as to the cause of death until he had first stated all the facts within his knowledge. Before the questions objected to were propounded, this witness had described the symptoms shown by the patient, and stated he had come, to the conclusion, that there had been an injury to the brain, and had further testified that he attehded the autopsy, and that it failed to disclose a brain injury. He then testified, in answer to the questions objected to, that in his opinion death was caused by concussion of the brain, and proceeded to give his reasons for that opinion, by stating that the patient was suffering either from apoplexy or from concussion; that apoplexy produces hemorrhage and is «discoverable upon a post mortem examination, while such an examination may not disclose a concussion of the brain. The questions were not based upon any undisclosed facts within the knowledge of the witness, and therefore there was not, as we think, any error in overruling the objections to them. But, if there was error, it was afterwards cured by bringing out all the facts within the knowledge of this witness.

3. It is insisted there was no competent proof of. an accident. The argument is that only by basing inference upon inference, and piling presumption upon presumption, is the conclusion to be reached that an accident occurred, and that such method of proof is repudiated in United States v. Ross, 92 U. S. 281, 23 L. Ed. 707. We do-not think the cited case sustains the .argument made in this case. Here the fact to be established is that Dr. Caffee was thrown from his automobile. Although it is true there was no direct evidence of that fact; yet the circumstances relied on to establish it are shown by direct evidence. *661Such circumstances are: The finding of the body and its position on the ground; the depression in the sand; the automobile leaving the highway; its tilted and injured condition; and its position against the dock. Testimony given by several witnesses to the effect that Dr. Caffee was driving his automobile, taken in connection with his apparent effort to drive back upon the highway, the avoidance of the pipe line, and the course taken to the dock at the edge of the lake, is sufficient to justify the jury in reaching the conclusion that unconsciousness did not occur prior to the time the automobile ran against the dock. If the jury believed this evidence, it was within their province to reject the inference, supported by defendant’s evidence, either that Dr. Caffee became unconscious while driving along the highway, or that urssmic poisoning caused or contributed to his death. Under defendant’s contention, it would be practically, if not quite, impossible to prove an accident by circumstantial evidence. Inferences to be drawn from the circumstances shown by direct evidence in the case were for the jury, and the trial court correctly refused to direct a verdict for the defendant.

4. It hardly seems necessary to say that no error was committed in refusing to charge the jury to find for the defendant if they were in doubt as to the cause of the death of the insured. The jury might have been in serious doubt, and yet they might well have believed from a preponderance of the evidence, as they evidently did, that death was due to the cause alleged in the declaration.

The judgment is affirmed.

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