104 Ga. 709 | Ga. | 1898
Following these decisions, we think the evidence in the present case was sufficient to authorize the jury to infer that the plaintiff’s husband was injured in the manner described in the policy. It appears from the record, that he was a hale, hearty man; his occupation was that of a blacksmith; it was his duty upon this occasion to use a heavy sledge-hammer; he had used it many times before in the course of his business; on this particular occasion, in striking a slanting blow he suddenly felt a severe pain in the lower part of his abdomen; the injury proved to be a rupture producing hernia, which injury resulted, in a few days, in death. Taking all the facts together, the fact of his previous good health, the fact that he had many times before used the hammer, the sudden pain after the blow of the hammer, and other facts which appeared, the jury could properly infer that the act which preceded the injury was something unforeseen, unexpected, and unusual, and that the injury resulted directty and immediately from such act, and was therefore produced by external, violent, and accidental means.
Judgment affirmed.