Opinion
This appeal by the insurer from a judgment in favor of the widow of the insured for double indemnity death benefits presents a question of first impression in this state as to whether the exclusionary clause of the insurance policy issued by California-Western comes within the “prime or moving cause” rule of
Brooks
v.
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
The matter was submitted to the court below as a question of law on stipulated facts as follows: the insured, who died on November 3, 1971, was a member of the State Bar of California, had been actively engaged in the practice of law and was insured under a group policy issued by the insurer. The pertinent portion of the policy provided double indemnity accidental death benefits if the insured dies as a result of accidental bodily injury, directly and independently of all other causes, within 90 days after the date of injuiy, but also stated that the benefit was not payable “... if death ... is contributed to by:
“(1) disease or bodily or mental infirmity . . . .” The court found the facts as follows:
At all pertinent times, the insured had hemophilia type 8, a congenital condition present since his birth. On October 30, 1971, the insured slipped and fell to the floor, an accidental occurrence. The bodily injuries sustained by the insured in his fall proximately caused a subdural bleeding that commenced at the time of the fall. This subdural bleeding, due to his preexisting condition of hemophilia, continued from the time of the fall until his death several days later. The subdural bleeding or subdural hemotoma was the direct and immediate cause of his death. If the preexisting condition of hemophilia type 8 did not exist, the accident and the resulting subdural bleeding alone would not have *824 caused the death of the insured. A person who did hot have hemophilia type 8 would not have died from the accident or from the subdural bleeding. In the absence of the accident, the insured would not have died from his preexisting condition of hemophilia.
The court concluded that the death of the insured occurred within the 90-day period and did not result from and was not contributed to, by disease within the intent or meaning of the exclusionary provision and entered its judgment in favor of the widow for the double indemnity death benefit of $36,000 provided by the policy.
As indicated above, the main question is whether the court below properly interpreted the exclusionary clause of the insurance policy. The insurer argues that the language “. . . is contributed by” excluded the insured’s preexisting hemophilia, which was the cause of his death. The trial court held otherwise pursuant to
Brooks
v.
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
The insurer contends that the
Brooks
rule has no application here because the “contributed to” language of its exclusion is different from that of the policy in
Brooks,
and relies on
Miller
v.
Life & Casualty Insurance Co. of Tenn.,
*825
In
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Partridge,
While no California court has construed policy provisions identical to those here, the Illinois Appellate Court did so in
Carlson
v.
New York Life Insurance Co.,
We think the application of the rule is particularly apt here, where the insured was suffering from a condition that in and of itself would not have caused his death, but had to be set in motion by the accident. Thus, contrary to the insurer’s contention, the evidence supports the conclusion of law that the insured died as a result of accidental bodily injury and was entitled to the double indemnity death benefits.
The judgment is affirmed.
Kane, J., and Rouse, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 16, 1975.
Notes
The insurer relies on the quotation in
Shafer
by this court of certain dicta in
Stokes
v.
Police & Firemen’s Ins.,
