121 Iowa 528 | Iowa | 1903
In Omberg v. United States Mut. Acc. Ass’n, 101 Ky. 303 (40 S. W. Rep. 909, 72 Am. St. Rep. 413), which was an action to recover under an accident policy for death resulting from blood poisoning, following the bite of an insect, it was held that the death was within the terms of the policy, caused through “extraordinary, violent, and a'ccidental means,” and that it was not within an exception in the policy excluding liability for the result “of .poisoning in any form or manner,” or “contact with poisonous substances”; and the court says that, but for the bite, “the blood poisoning and death would not have
In International Benefit Ass’n. v. Grauman, 107 Ind. 289 (7 N. E. Rep. 233), it was held that death from apoplexy, caused by physical injuries of which there was visible external sign, was within the terms of a policy covering “bodily injuries, effected through external, violent, and accidental means, which had occasioned” death. The appeal was from the ruling of the trial court, holding the allegations of the complaint sufficient on demurrer, and the court say: “The averments leave no room to doubt that death
These cases support, therefore, the general proposition that death resulting from disease, which follows as a natural consequence, though not the necessary consequence, of a physical injury, which is accidental, is an accidental death, within the terms of an accident insurance policy, the death being deemed the proximate result of the injury and not of disease as an independent cause. The reasoning of the court in the case of Smith v. Accident Ins. Co., L. R. 5 Exch. 302, supports the same conclusion, although in that case it was held that the death, which was from erysipelas following an accidental cut on the foot of the deceased, was not within the terms of the policy, by reason of an express provision that the insurance did not cover “death resulting from rheumatism, gout, herania, erysipelas, or any other disease or secondary cause or causes arising within the system of the insured,before or at the time of, or following, such accidental injury (whether causing such death directly or jointly with such accidental injury).” But even in that case.one of the j udges thought that the effect of the condition was only to exempt the company from liability in respect to death from erysipelas where the erysipelas arose within the system, and was collateral to the accident. Our conclusion is also supported by the reasoning in Windspear v. Accident Insurance Co. (C. A.) 6 Q. B. D. 42, and Lawrence v. Accidental Ins. Co., 7 Q. B. D. 216, to the .effect that death from drowning, or physical injuries received consequent on unconsciousness and helplessness due to disease, was accidental death. In those cases, as in the case before us, the proximate cause
The decree of the lower court is aektrMJSD.