Defendant appeals from a judgment in favor of plaintiff after a trial by jury. Plaintiff, who is the widow of James T. Clarke, deceased, sued as beneficiary named in an accident policy issued to "her husband.
The policy in question provided for the payment to plaintiff of seven thousand five hundred dollars for “loss of life . . . from bodily injuries, . . . which independently of all other causes are effected solely and exclusively by accidental means, ... Nor shall the company be liable for any loss caused or contributed to by illness or disease.”
Mr. Clarke was struck by an automobile while he was crossing a street in San Jose, was knocked to the pavement and suffered a severe concussion of the brain. The date of the accident was December 10, 1914. Mr. Clarke was confined to his bed, either in the hospital or at home, for a little more *78 than a week. After that he was up for a few hours each day and later was able to go into his garden and even to take walks of several blocks. On the Sunday before he died he complained of a pain in his side and on the following Wednesday, January 13, 1915, an operation was performed upon him and the appendix was removed. It was one of those not infrequent cases in which nature had walled off and localized the pus and there was no apparently serious general infection. On January 16, 1915, Mr. Clarke died, the immediate cause of his death being- acute myocarditis, a disease of the heart. Prior to the accident he had been a man of robust health and had exhibited no symptoms either of heart disease or of appendicitis. Immediately after the accident Dr. Van Dalsem examined him, using a stethoscope, but found no indication of heart trouble, -but just before the operation a slight heart murmur became evident. This indicated a leak of the tricuspid valve. The autopsy revealed a heart of more than normal size. The valves were thickened and covered with a calcareous deposit which, according to the experts, would account for the murmur noticed just before the operation..
There was testimony to the effect that Mr. Clarke was struck across the stomach by the fender of the automobile and was thrown so that his .head struck the pavement. There was upon his head when he was first examined by Dr. Van Dalsem a contusion two and one-half or three inches in diameter. There was a concussion of the brain which caused unconsciousness for five or six hours, and for several days thereafter he was so disturbed mentally that he was unable to understand his surroundings or his condition.
These instructions substantially stated the rule governing such cases, and, therefore, the problem before us is whether or not there is substantial evidence to support the verdict in view of the court’s charge.
It appears from abundant and uncontradicted testimony that Mr. Clarke was a man of extraordinary health and bodily vigor for a man of his years. Just before the operation a slight leak of the tricuspid valve was discovered, but, according to the testimony of his physician, the heart was then functionally normal and was propelling the blood throughout the body. The autopsy revealed no abnormal condition of the lungs or liver indicative of any chronic heart condition. Dr. Van Dalsem testified, regarding the myocarditis, as follows: “In my opinion this acute myocarditis was due to the appendicial abscess aided by the lowered resistance caused by the concussion of the brain. That is the way of poisons gathered up from the appendicial abscess and carried through the heart.” Regarding the infection resulting in the appendicitis, one of the physicians, Dr. Blanchard, testified that in his opinion the accident so lowered Mr. Clarke’s vitality and put him in such a physical condition, with reference to resistance, that he became a prey to the malady to which otherwise he would have been immune—that the appendix would not have, been infected from the bacilli in the larger intestine had it not been for the accident.
Great stress is laid by defendant’s counsel upon the fact that at the post-mortem examination the heart showed lime deposits. One of the defendant’s expert witnesses, a physician, testified that “the lime deposits in the heart were due to arterial sclerosis, which is frequently due to old age. ’ ’ But there was no showing that this condition was pathological or that it was even unusual in a man of the age of the assured. Naturally, a man of sixty or more would have less power to resist evil consequences resulting from an accident than a
*80
younger person would poss_ess, but an insurer accepting as premiums the money of 'a client of advanced years may not complain of that fact.
Defendant’s counsel cite many authorities, of which
Maryland Casualty Co.
v.
Morrow,
The instructions were unusually- full and fair and it would serve no good purpose to review all of those to which appellant’s counsel call our attention. Some of them, however, require notice. The twenty-eighth instruction was as follows:
" When a doubt arises in respect to the application, exceptions to, or limitations to liability, you will adopt the construction most favorable to the plaintiff. ”
It is not contended that the rule announced is not a correct one for the guidance of a, court, nor could such contention well be sustained, because this court and, generally speaking, all American courts, have declared in favor of that principle of construction of contracts which are at all doubtful in the matter of the exact meaning of the -language employed. (1 Corpus Juris, 415;
Bayley
v.
Employers’ Liability Assur. Corp.,
The twenty-sixth instruction began with the words, “If yop find from all the facts and circumstances,” and these words
*82
are followed by a recital of the details of the accident, the contusion and the shock to his nerves, which Mr. Clarke experienced. Then occur the words, "and if you find
or believe” (t
he italics are ours), followed by a recital of respondent’s theory of the proximate cause of death, which they were told, if believed by them, would justify a verdict for plaintiff. Appellant’s counsel insist that this instruction is prejudicially erroneous, citing in that behalf
Fries
v.
American Lead Pencil Co.,
It is further asserted that the court committed radical error by instructing the jury that in order to defeat the claim the diseased condition of the heart or appendix "must have existed in the body of James T. Clarke at the time of the accident.” This statement, wrenched from its context, would of course be an erroneous one, but it occurs in the course of a long instruction to the effect that if the diseased condition existing at the time of the operation or autopsy was "not concurrent with the injury, or existing prior thereto,” and was "a natural result of the injury, and that the resulting death was solely due to the bodily injuries, and not to any independent cause,” the verdict must be for the plaintiff. The part of the instruction to which objection is made was followed by this sentence: "If you believe from the evidence that the acute suppurative appendicitis and the valvular heart disease, with hypertrophy of the heart, was brought about by the weakened condition of the body of James T. Clarke, as the result of said injuries, and not from some condition existing at the time or prior to the injury on December 10, 1914, then your verdict must be in favor of' the plaintiff and against the defendant. ’ ’
No other alleged errors in the giving or refusing of instructions require further comment than that we are of the opinion that the very exhaustive charge was fair and free from substantial error.
The judgment is affirmed.
Sloss, J., Shaw, J., Lawlor, 3"., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
Melvin, J., Olney, J., Shaw, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.
