222 S.W. 778 | Mo. | 1920
Lead Opinion
This suit is brought to collect insurance on the life of plaintiff's deceased husband, Joseph C. Campbell. The petition filed in the Circuit Court *67 of the City of St. Louis is in two counts, each based upon an accident policy which contains the usual stipulation in accident policies, as follows:
"Against loss, as herein defined, resulting directly and independently of all other causes from bodily injuries effected solely through external, violent and accidental means, suicide (sane or insane) not included."
The answer in each count contains a general denial, and for a further defense alleges that Joseph C. Campbell was, at the time of the issuance and execution of each of the policies mentioned in the petition, a citizen of the State of California, and continued so at all times until his death; and that each of the policies mentioned in the petition became operative and in force in California and every premium was paid in California; that there was in force in the State of California the following statute:
"Sec. 4468. The common law of England, so far as it is not repugnant to or inconsistent with the Constitution of the United States, or the Constitution or laws of this State, is the rule of decision in all the courts of this State."
The answer then proceeds:
"And that at the time of the death of the said Joseph C. Campbell he was afflicted with cirrhosis of the liver, cancer of the liver and a cancerous tumor of the liver; that the immediate cause of his death was hemorrhage resulting from a rupture of said cancerous tumor; that if the insured suffered any accidental occurrence which contributed to cause said rupture (which the defendant denies), nevertheless said cirrhosis, cancer and cancerous tumor also directly contributed thereto."
The allegation follows that under the law of California the manner of the insured's death was not accidental within the meaning of the policies.
Campbell died at San Francisco July 1, 1915, at the age of sixty-three years. He was a lawyer with a large practice. On June 4th, preceding his death, *68 his son Robert Campbell, arrived from Chicago on a visit to San Francisco. Saturday, June 5th, Joseph Campbell and his son played golf in the forenoon. The insured played hard, he was a strenuous player and strenuous in everything he undertook; he strained hard in making his strokes, was awkward about it — an inexperienced player. On Sunday forenoon, June 6th, Campbell and his son again played golf, eighteen holes. After they had played to about the middle of the second nine, Campbell's ball lodged in a bunker toward the top. He took his mashie and stepped up to the side of the bunker to make a stroke and was thrown off his balance by catching his foot in something, so that he almost fell, but by a violent effort recovered his balance and continued the game. After the game he took the usual shower and went home with his son without making any complaint. The next morning, Monday, June 7, he went to his office as usual, still making no complaint. The son returned Monday afternoon and found his father at home lying on a settee. A doctor was called. Campbell complained of distention of the stomach; for three or four days he was in bed and lounged around the house. On Wednesday, June 9th, his abdomen became very much distended; his physician introduced a canula in the lower part of his abdomen and drew off eight quarts of fluid, 15 per cent blood. This operation was repeated three or four times until about forty quarts of fluid were drawn off. Campbell continued to grow weaker from day to day and finally died July first. An autopsy showed that his aorta and arterial circulatory system was diseased, but not seriously; his pancreas was shrunken and atrophied; the spleen considerably enlarged, twice its normal size; his liver was contracted to one-half or three-fourths its normal size; there was cirrhosis of the liver, and on the right lobe was a tumor about four inches in its greatest diameter; it is described as a primary carcinoma — cancer of the liver, a malignant tumor. This tumor showed necrosis; *69 on it was a nodule projecting sufficiently to cause friction against the adjacent parts of the body in case of movement; a piece of this projecting nodule was broken off, and that rupture, in the opinion of the physicians, caused insured to bleed to death. No other disturbance or condition of the internal organs was apparent to account for the hemorrhages.
The defendant introduced in evidence two California decisions: Rock v. Travelers' Insurance Co.,
I. The policies having been issued and delivered in the State of California, of which State the insured was a resident at all times, the law of California must be applied in theCalifornia construction of the contracts.Law.
Three principal propositions are formulated by the respondent, claiming either to be sufficient to defeat recovery.
First, that there is no sufficient proof that the rupture and consequent hemorrhage which caused death was the result of the strain in the golf game when the deceased attempted to get his ball off the bunker.
Second, the rupture, if caused by the exertion at that time was not through "accidental means;" and, under the law of California as shown by the decisions introduced in evidence, the exertion which produced the rupture, if it was so produced, was an intended act and not an accidental one within the meaning of the policy.
Third, under the law of California there is no liability on the part of the insured against accidents *70 where pre-existing disease contributes to or cooperates with an accidental injury to produce the injury. In this case a cancer of the liver was a pre-existing disease and a contributing cause; therefore the death was not "effected solely" through the accident.
Under the law of California there is no doubt that the burden was on the plaintiff to prove the death was caused by, (a) the incident in the bunker; (b) that the movement, effort or strain of the deceased which caused the rupture was not intentional but accidental; and (c) that this accidental injury resulted in death "directly and independently of all other causes" as that phrase is understood and construed by the California court.
If the plaintiff has failed to establish either one of the above propositions the demurrer to the evidence was properly sustained. Without determining, we may say it seems that the first two were sufficiently established; that there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury tending to show the rupture and hemorrhage were caused by the strain on the golf links, and that the exertion of the deceased to recover his balance was accidental and not an intentional movement.
II. It remains then to inquire whether the death was produced by that accident "independently of all other causes." That the rupture was the immediate cause of the insured'sAccidental death there is no doubt, and that the rupture wouldMeans. not have occurred but for the existence of the cancerous tumor is equally certain.
Under the Missouri decisions, if the rulings in Missouri should be applied, there is no doubt but the evidence was sufficient to submit that issue to the jury. [Fetter v. Fidelity Casualty Co.,
It was said in the Beile case: "The fact that the physical infirmity of the victim may be a necessary condition *71 to the result does not deprive the injury of its distinction as the sole producing cause."
Accident insurance, so far as the record in this case shows, is issued without regard or inquiry as to the physical condition of the insured, whether it is one which makes him more susceptible to a certain class of accidents than ordinary or not. An accident policy is issued to a one-legged man the same as to one who has two legs, although he may be likely to receive injury from some kinds of accidents which a two-legged man would not so easily incur. It is not shown that knowledge by the insurer of the existence of a cancerous liver would have prevented the issuance of the policies, although that condition necessarily made insured more susceptible to certain kinds of accidental injury; for Instance, the injury which he actually received. The accident which thereafter produced his death is exactly what the contract insures against, whatever the conditions of the insured may have been which made the injury possible. Such is the Missouri rule. The Missouri rule is mentioned here because cited and disapproved by the California courts.
Since the law of California must apply to the case it is necessary to ascertain just what the common law rule in California is in construing contracts of this character.
In the case of Price v. Occidental Life Ins. Co., introduced in evidence by the defendant, the court said,
And in the case of Rock v. Travelers' Ins. Co., 172 Cal. l.c. 466, the court makes the following statement as the approved rule in that state:
"We shall not take the time to review in detail the facts of the cases we have cited. It will suffice to say, by way of illustration, that among them are decisions holding that death was not the result of bodily injury sustained through accidental means where an insured who *72
was afflicted with tuberculosis died from a hemorrhage occasioned by a ruptured artery, the rupture of the artery being due to the act of the insured in standing on a chair and reaching out to close the shutter of a window (Feder v. Iowa State Assn.,
In this connection the court cites some Missouri cases including the Beile case, supra, and distinctly repudiates the Missouri doctrine.
It may be said that the Price case and the Rock case introduced in evidence turn upon the question as to whether the death of insured was through "accidental means" and not in construing the phrase "independently of all other causes." Nevertheless the statement quoted from the Rock case shows the general principle announced by that court as applied to the latter proposition.
The court in the Price case cites with approval the case of National Masonic Acc. Assn. v. Shryock, 73 F. 774, in support of the position taken, so that the Shryock case must be understood as expressing the proper rule to be followed by the courts of California; where the opinion says, l.c. 775-776:
"The burden of proof was upon the defendant in error to establish the facts that William B. Shryock *73 sustained an accident, and that that accident was the sole cause of his death independently of all other causes. If Shryock suffered such an accident, and his death was caused by that alone, the association agreed by this certificate to pay the promised idemnity. But if he was affected with a disease or bodily infirmity which caused his death, the association was not liable under this certificate, whether he also suffered an accident or not. If he sustained an accident, but at the time it occurred he was suffering from a pre-existing disease or bodily infirmity, and if the accident would not have caused his death if he had not been affected with the disease or infirmity, but he died because the accident aggravated the effects of the disease, or the disease aggravated the effects of the accident, the express contract was that the association should not be liable for the amount of this insurance. The death in such a case would not be the result of the accident alone, but it would be caused partly by the disease and partly by the accident, and the contract exempted the association from liability therefor."
The Price case and the Rock case have been cited and construed by later decisions of the California Supreme Court. In Kellner v. Travelers' Ins. Co.,
An instruction was asked by plaintiff to the effect that if the jury "believed the fall was the `sole and only direct cause' of Mr. Kellner's death, they must find for the plaintiff notwithstanding a further belief that in previous years deceased may have had a reducible hernia, provided they further find that `said Ernest F. Kellner would not have died at the time, under the circumstances, and in the manner he did die had it not been for said accident and fall.'" (L. c. 62.) This instruction, the court held, did not properly declare the law, and said:
"The last part of the offered instruction would ignore this part of the contract and make the criterion of recovery the shortening by the accident of the life of a person assured without any reference to the possible concurrence of disease in producing death. The court correctly instructed the jury that there could be no recovery under the policy for death caused partly by disease and partly by accidental injury."
The Supreme Court of California also in the case of Clarke v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co.,
"In that case the jurors were told, in effect, that although death might have resulted from two concurring causes — one being the injury and the other being pre-existing diabetes — the plaintiff would nevertheless be entitled to recover. This, very properly, was held to be error. But in the present case the theory of the plaintiff, supported by the testimony which the jurors are entitled to accept, was that no heart disease existed before the accident, and that both appendicitis and myocarditis were the result of the injury itself."
The court further said on page 198:
"Undoubtedly, death from any independent cause, whether existing prior to or supervening at a time subsequent to the accident, would defeat the claim of plaintiff, but the instruction was dealing with one phase of the problem, merely, the existence or nonexistence of disease prior to the accident."
Appellant objects to a consideration of the decision in the Kellner case and the Clarke case, because they were not introduced in evidence, and would have us reverse the judgment and remand the case for trial so that the defendant upon another trial could introduce them in evidence when the court would again have to direct a nonsuit.
While it may be said that the Price case and the Rock case are not as clear as they might be in expressing the rule subsequently stated by the California Supreme Court, still by reference to the Federal case cited and approved, the rule may be very well ascertained from those cases. This court has a right to consider the later decisions of the California Supreme Court in construing the cases which were offered in evidence. *76
In each of those later cases the issues were submitted to a jury because there was a conflict of evidence as to whether the pre-existing disease contributed to the death and whether in fact there was a pre-existing disease. In the present case there is no question of the existence of the malignant tumor growing on the liver of Campbell at the time of the accident. It is not contended that the fatal rupture without the existence of the tumor could have been caused by a strain of the kind mentioned in the evidence. In other words it is undisputed that Campbell would not have met his death by the hemorrhage and there would have been no hemorrhage if the cancer hadn't been there; just as in the Kellner case there would have been no injury but for the existence of hernia, as the jury found. The only difference between the two cases is that the evidence was conflicting as to whether the hernia existed before the accident or was produced by it in the Kellner case; whereas, in this case, it is undisputed that the cancer existed before the accident. If it had been conceded in the Kellner case that there was hernia and a protruding intestine at the time he stumbled upon the carpet, although death was immediately produced by the accident, there would have been nothing to submit to the jury. In the Clark case the issue was submitted to the jury because there was evidencepro and con as to whether the heart disease from which death ensued was caused by the accident and concussion of the brain or whether it existed before and was simply aggravated by that accident. Under the California rule it is clear that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
The judgment is affirmed. Mozley, C., concurs; Railey, C., not sitting.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by WHITE, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur. *77