Plaintiff, the widow of Arthur J. Binder, is the beneficiary named in an accident policy on his life issued by defendant. The policy insured against death “which is the direct and proximate result of and which is caused solely and exclusively by external, violent and accidental means.” Plaintiff claimed that her husband’s death was due to an automobile accident, while defendant contended that his death was due to a coronary thrombosis, just prior to and actually the cause of the accident. Defendant also claimed that the proof of loss submitted to it by plaintiff was insufficient. Trial to a jury resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff; but thereafter the court granted defend
*898
ant’s motion to set aside the verdict, as well as a motion for a directed verdict which it had reserved for further consideration. In so doing the court held both that the proof of loss was insufficient and that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. D.C.S.D.N.Y.,
From the evidence adduced at the trial the following facts appeared: On the morning of September 11, 1941, the decedent was driving ah automobile along Route 9, near Newark, N. J. While so driving, his car, without involving any other motor vehicle, veered off to the side of the road and on its shoulder, ran along the grassy part of the shoulder, started to slow down, then picked up a little speed, hit a highway sign, and finally crashed into a Public Service pole. He was removed from the car while still alive; but in less than five minutes he was dead.
The decedent was about forty-five years old at the time of his death. During his married life he had not suffered from other than minor ailments. For a period of six years prior to his death he was afflicted with gout in his great toe, which had grown progressively worse. In outward appearance he was a normal individual, somewhat overweight, but apparently actively engaged in the pursuit of his occupation as1 a traveling salesman, operating an automobile perhaps 50,000 miles a year. As far as it is known he had no bad habits. He bowled, played golf and ping-pong, swam, and fished. He indulged in many of the physical activities which are normal to persons of his age. On three occasions prior to the occurrence in question, while driving an automobile, he had been attacked by what is claimed was the gout and he either lost control of the car and went off the road or had relinquished its further operation to his wife or son.
In May, 1941, he was involved in an accident and was treated by Dr. Kearney, who in an examination at that time and again one and two months later found no evidence of heart disease or of circulatory disease. 1 At the time of his death he was examined by Dr. Linke,' who came along the highway and saw him before he died. Dr. Linke reports that he was pale, cold, and clammy, that his breathing was heavy and gradually petered out, and that he never regained consciousness. Dr. Linke was of the opinion that death was due to a coronary disease.
About' three hours after his death an autopsy was performed by Dr. Martland, Chief Medical Examiner of Essex County. The autopsy revealed a fracture of the sixth rib in midaxillary line with a small amount of hemorrhage. The gross examination reported: “Right coronary opens in normal position and there is a fresh thrombus about 5 mms. in size just below its origin.”
The microscopic examination revealed: “Sections through right coronary show marked, old atheroma of vessel wall. The lumen is almost entirely filled with a fresh thrombus which is firmly attached to broken intima, showing subintimal hemorrhage. The clot is well organized showing a network of fibrin in the meshes of which are entangled leucocytes and around which are red blood cells.”
Dr. Martland’s conclusion as stated in his report was: “This case is one of sudden death due to a recent thrombosis of the right coronary artery. * * * I am, therefore, of the opinion that the cause of death is due entirely to natural causes, and that the heart attack caused the accident. The injuries are not sufficient to explain death.”
Plaintiff presented the testimony of two medical experts. Each, in answer to a hypothetical question as to the cause of death, categorically denied it was due to a coronary occlusion, and strongly insisted it resulted from shock caused by the fracture of the rib. Each asserted death was caused solely and exclusively by external causes, namely the described accident. Neither witness had ever seen the deceased. The hypothetical question embodied the facts as above set forth, but did not contain *899 the reported opinions of Dr. Linke and Dr. Martland as to the cause of death.
Thereafter Dr. Martland testified that the naked eye examination revealed the lumen to be entirely filled with a fresh thrombus. The apparent discrepancy of this statement with his earlier report that the lumen was “almost” entirely filled and the contention that in view of the hundreds of autopsies he makes his report is the more authentic testimony, he answered by saying that when the artery was opened to examine the clot at the time of the autopsy some of the clot broke off and fell out, a circumstance which'recalled this case particularly to his mind.
On setting aside the verdict as against' the weight of the evidence, the court granted the motion for a new trial. Its final' judgment on the merits was therefore because of the insufficiency of the proof of loss. In so doing the court relied on the authority of Wachtel v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of United States,
A note to the form directed that the death certificate be attached. This she did. The certificate, however, was signed by Dr. Martland, who had stated as the immediate cause of death: “Sudden death while driving automobile; coronary thrombosis ; coronary arteriosclerosis.”
The court, believing the Wachtel case compelled its conclusion, held that the proof of loss was insufficient because it showed death to have resulted from coronary thrombosis, rather than solely and exclusively by accidental means. Plaintiff assigns both rulings as error.
1. The requirement of a proof of loss is to be liberally construed in favor of the insured. Glazer v. Home Ins. Co.,
Defendant’s reliance is, of course, on the attached death certificate as showing death due to coronary thrombosis and, especially since there was no entry in that section of the certificate which called for a statement where death was due to ex
*900
ternal causes, that it had not resulted from accident. Defendant’s contention is: (1) Timely submission of proof of death by accident is a condition precedent to its liability; (2) the proof submitted shows death was caused by disease, not accident; (3) hence there has not been a proper proof of loss and plaintiff cannot maintain this action. This syllogism is no stronger than its minor premise. But surely plaintiff’s sworn statement emphatically attributed death to accident. The certificate was furnished in accordance with the requirement of defendant’s form, not as the plaintiff’s own intended proof. To have refused to comply with the demand for it would have invited litigation. Plaintiff had not selected the doctor or assumed responsibility for the statements contained in his statement. She did not swear to the validity or correctness of the death certificate, nor was she required to do so. It was procured on demand of the defendant, who must therefore take it for what it is worth, and not as a final concession against plaintiff’s claim. Cushman v. United States Life Ins. Co.,
Nor do we consider Wachtel v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of United States, supra, as authority to the contrary. There the plaintiff, beneficiary of three double-indemnity policies, sought to recover on the ground that the insured’s death was the result of an accident. None of the defendant companies denied their liability for the indemnity payable upon a natural death, but all resisted plaintiff’s claim for the additional accident indemnity, because due proof of loss had not been submitted as required by the policies. The death certificate executed by the attending physician ■and the proofs of death furnished by the plaintiff gave coronary thrombosis as the cause of death. Plaintiff based her claim of accident as one occurring a month before the insured’s death when he stepped from bed and injured his leg. But the proof submitted to only one of the companies suggested death as due to a leg injury, and even there plaintiff unequivocally stated that death had been caused by coronary thrombosis. The court, while recognizing that such admissions were not conclusive and that proof could be presented to show they were erroneous, held that plaintiff could not recover, since she had not submitted proof of accidental death, and that the proof affirmatively showed', an absence of liability. Nevertheless, there was a strong dissenting opinion by two judges, who relied on the indefinite references to the leg injury as sufficient proof of death by accidental means. The two striking and obvious differences here are that the proof could be interpreted only in the light of the single possible claim of accident — death from natural causes being no ground of liability — and that the proof furnished by plaintiff’s own statement was clear and definite. There was no chance of its being misunderstood.
Two other cases cited by defendant, City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of United States,
Moreover, the defendant received, accepted, and retained the proof of less,
*901
thereby admitting its sufficiency in form. Howell v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co. of Boston, Mass.,
2. In setting aside the verdict as against the “weight” of the evidence, we think the district judge resorted to a formula which is no longer (if it ever was) appropriate. The discussions in the opinions in Galloway v. United States,
Reversed for the entry of a judgment for plaintiff on the verdict.
On Petition for Rehearing.
Defendant has petitioned for a limited rehearing as to the form of mandate to be handed down on the decision of this court. It suggests that the district judge who had granted defendant’s reserved motion for a directed verdict had alternatively granted a motion for a new trial and that our decision reversing the first holding could not properly go so far as to direct entry of judgment for plaintiff on the verdict, thus denying a new trial. Plaintiff has answered the petition urging that our former ruling should stand; but we conclude that the precedents require the result urged by defendant.
While defendant’s motions, made orally during and at the close of the trial, do not in terms mention a new trial, yet the trial judge interpreted them thus inclusively and his order of February 9, 1944, so states explicitly. We cannot well question his interpretation; and the fact that a superfluous “judgment” was entered later, on February 17, 1944, in more limited terms does not change this result. Leonard v. Prince Line, 2 Cir.,
“Ordered that the defendant’s motion to set aside the verdict and for a new trial be and the same is hereby granted upon the ground that the verdict is against the weight of evidence. (As to this practice see Montgomery Ward
&
Co. v. Duncan,
While this second order is not designated as an alternative one, that appears to be its intended effect, as the reference to the Montgomery Ward case would imply. So viewed, it comes within the very terms of that decision,
Footnote 15 cites these cases: United States v. Young,
Recent developments fortify the general conclusion here stated. For the Advisory Committee, attempting to codify the results reached by some of the intermediate courts, recommended an amendment to Rule 50(b), F.R.C.P., 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c, to make clear the power of the appellate court to act in this and other instances. Report, June, 1946, Rule 50(b), pages 61-63, with Committee Note, pages 64-66. But this was one of the three proposed amendments which the Court did not adopt. Order Dec. 27, 1946,
Hence we cannot interfere with the judge’s discretionary power in ordering a new trial. The petition for rehearing is therefore granted, our previous opinion and *903 the judgment thereon are modified to state that the order of the district court setting aside the verdict and directing a judgment for the defendant is reversed, while its order for a new trial is affirmed, and the case is remanded to the district court.
Notes
A statement to like effect from another doctor appears not to have been finally admitted in evidence.
The long delays in this and other eases, however distressing in view of such prods as 28 U.S.O.A. § 448, seem beyond the power of an appellate court to avoid. Action was instituted April 1, 1942, the verdict of the jury was rendered on Dee. 28, 1942, tbe opinion ordering the verdict set aside was filed Jan. 21, 1944, the record was filed in this court Sept 18, 1947 (the time having been extended by stipulation), the *902 appeal was argued Nov. 7, and our decision was made on Nov. 28, 1947. Of course delays are particularly burdensome in a period of rapid fluctuation in the value of the dollar.
The appellate court has jurisdiction of the appeal; the order in the Fairmount case was for affirmance of the district court’s denial of a new trial, not for dismissal of the appeal.
It is stated in Palmer v. Miller, D.C.W.D.Mo., 60 F.Supp. 710, 714, that a state restriction upon the number of times a verdict may be thus set aside does not apply in the common-law practice applicable in the federal courts, 28 U.'S.C.A. § 391, now incorporated, in F.R. 59.
