25 Haw. 536 | Haw. | 1920
OPINION OF THE COURT BY
This was an action brought in the circuit court of the first judicial circuit by John F. Colburn against the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, a foreign corporation, to recover $440 on an accident policy which Colburn carried in the defendant company, issued by the defendant in his favor on the 2d day of November, 1917. The case after answer was tried before a jury which returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the full amount claimed. The defendant corporation comes here on a bill of exceptions. After the cause reached this court the plaintiff Colburn died and by order of court John F. Colburn III and Richard H. Trent, the executors under the will o'f John F. Colburn, deceased, were substituted in his place and stead as plaintiffs-appellees.
All of the exceptions presented in the bill of exceptions of the appellant may we think properly be resolved without discussion in favor of the appellees save exceptions Nos. 1G, 11 and 13. In fact exceptions Nos. 11 and 13 are substantially to the same effect. The grounds forming the basis of the exceptions which we shall proceed to review may be summed up as follows: (1) That plaintiff cannot recover because he did not suffer an
The complaint after setting forth the terms of the policy and that it was delivered to Colburn by the defendant company alleges that on or about the 8th day of January, 1918, one of the feet of plaintiff, to wit, the right foot, became infected with blood poisoning which said injury so received by plaintiff as aforesaid, independently and exclusively of all other causes, continuously and wholly disabled and prevented plaintiff from the 8th day of January, 1918, to and including the 8th day of March, 1918, from. performing any and every kind of duty pertaining to his occupation, that is to say, for the period of nine weeks, and thereafter partially disabled plaintiff for the period o'f four weeks and that plaintiff thereupon was entitled on account of said total and partial disability to receive from defendant the sum of $440.
The evidence shows that early in January, 1918, the friction of an old slipper worn by the plaintiff unexpectedly produced an abrasion of the skin of one of his feet. This injury shortly thereafter became infected and caused blood poisoning which incapacitated plaintiff for the period above mentioned. It is the claim of the defendant that the injury as defined in the complaint does not fall within the term “accidental bodily injuries” within- the meaning o'f the policy and therefore the terms of the policy would not apply to the disability. By the terms of the policy Colburn was insured against accidental bodily injuries. The Supreme Court of the United States in Mut. Accident Ass’n v. Barry, 131 U. S. 100, affirmed a judgment founded upon a verdict where death had resulted from bodily injuries effected through external, violent and accidental means and approved an instruction
Western Commercial Travelers’ Ass’n v. Smith, 85 Fed. 101, is a case of remarkable similarity to the one at bar. The insured in that case, as in this one, suffered from blood poisoning which resulted from the abrasion of the skin of his toes caused by the friction of a shoe against his 'foot. The court there said: “Where blood poisoning results from an abrasion of the skin of a toe by a new shoe and death follows the death is properly attributable to ‘bodily injury effected by external, violent and accidental means’ within the meaning of an accident policy.” Counsel for appellant while recognizing this as an authority against the position he has assumed cites Mut. Accident Ass’n v. Barry, supra, as an authority not in harmony with Western Commercial Travelers’ Ass’n v. Smith supra. With this we cannot agree. There is nothing in the opinion in the Barry case which is at all in conflict with the opinion of the circuit court of appeals written by Judge Sanborn in the Smith case. On the contrary Judge Sanborn quotes from the opinion in the Barry case and each of these ‘opinions is in entire harmony with the other.
We are convinced that the plaintiff Colburn suffered such an accidental and bodily injury as was contemplated by the accident insurance policy issued to him by the company.
Counsel for appellant relies with confidence upon the rule announced in N. Y. Life Ins. Co. v. Fletcher, 117 U. S. 519, to overcome the judgment herein. The facts in that case, however, are dissimilar to those of the case at bar. In the Fletcher case the false information was written into the application by an agent of the company and the application containing the false information was signed by the insured. There was a clause in the application stipulating that the rights of the company could not be affected by verbal statements either .of the insured or of the agent. When the policy was returned to the insured upon it was indorsed in red type conspicuously printed the following notice: “For the information .of the assured and in order that any unintentional errors or omissions which may hereafter be found to exist may be corrected an abstract of the application upon which this policy is based may be found in the third page within. If corrections are desired, when satisfactory to the company, a certificate to that effect will be issued over the signature of the president and actuary.” Under these circumstances the court held that it was the duty of the insured to have read over the application at the time he signed it and failing to do this the indorsement
It is urged by defendant that its instructions numbered 7 and 12 should have been given to the jury and that error was committed by the trial court in refusing to give them. The effect of these instructions was to advise the jury that in determining whether or not the plaintiff was bound by the statements in the application regarding his having received no accident indemnities from other companies and also his never having been refused insurance by such companies and that no policy held by him had ever been canceled it was proper for it to consider whether or not at the time plaintiff paid his initial premium he knew that the application contained misstatements of fact respecting material matters and if the jury should find that the plaintiff when he received the insurance policy from the San Francisco agent of defendant knew that the same contained any such misstatements of 'fact and that plaintiff accepted the policy notwithstanding and thereafter paid his initial premium on the same then the plaintiff should be held to have ratified said misstatements and adopted them as his own and the verdict should be for the defendant. These instructions correctly state the law, but as we read the transcript of the evidence they are not justified by it. As mentioned above, the testimony of Colburn was to the effect that he did not examine the policy at the time he received it and knew nothing of its contents or of the false information in the application until after his injury. His testimony is capable of no other construction.
Instructions Nos. 7 and 12 were therefore properly refused by the trial court because not based upon any fact appearing in the record.
There is a pronounced tendency in many of the state courts to depart from the strict rule adhered to by the Federal Supreme Court in the Fletcher case, supra,
The exceptions are overruled.