46 A.2d 127 | Conn. | 1946
The plaintiff, wife of John Fields, deceased, brought suit against the defendant upon a policy of life insurance issued to him. She claimed to be entitled to the double indemnity provided in the policy in case of accidental death. Judgment was for the plaintiff, and the defendant has appealed on the grounds that due proof of accidental death was not furnished to it and that in any event the death was not accidental under the terms of the policy.
The defendant admits that it issued a policy of life insurance to John Fields and that he died while it was in full force and effect. The plaintiff admits that the face of the policy, $290, has been paid. The provision in the policy covering accidental death reads, in part, as follows: "Benefit in event of death by accidental means as defined herein. Upon receipt of due proof that the death of the Insured resulted, independently of all other causes, from bodily injuries caused solely by external, violent, and accidental means, the Company will pay, as an additional death benefit, an amount equal to the amount payable under the Schedule. . . ."
The circumstances surrounding the death of the insured were not in dispute. He was admitted to the Connecticut State Hospital at Middletown on August 18, 1942. He was then fifty-three years of age and for at least a year had been suffering from cardiovascular disease and cerebral arteriosclerosis. On September 3, 1942, the insured fell, striking his head on the cement walk. As a result of the fall, his face was badly swollen, he had a gash in his lip and over his eye and his jaw was broken. The injuries received were sufficient to cause a cerebral hemorrhage. He continued to complain of these injuries when he was transferred to another building on September 22, 1942, but all external evidence of them had disappeared. *590 He died September 27, 1942, of a cerebral hemorrhage. The medical certificate of death gave accident as one of the causative factors. The trial court found as a fact and concluded that the death of the insured resulted, independently of all other causes, from bodily injuries caused solely by external, violent and accidental means. The defendant attacks this finding and conclusion.
Two doctors called by the defendant testified that the insured died from natural causes which were unrelated to the accident. One of them was in charge of the insured at the hospital and the other was the medical examiner, called after the death. The plaintiff relied on a doctor who testified, in response to a hypothetical question, that the cause of the cerebral hemorrhage was the accident and that the physical infirmities of the insured in no way contributed thereto. The defendant recognizes the difficulty of upsetting a finding of the trial court based on conflicting expert opinion but claims that, read as a whole, the testimony of the doctor called by the plaintiff is not sufficient in law to support his diagnosis, citing Driscoll v. Jewell Belting Co.,
The trial court also found that "The plaintiff furnished to the defendant due proof that the death of the insured resulted, independently of all other causes, from bodily injuries caused solely by external, violent, and accidental means." This finding was attacked by the defendant.
The evidence supporting the questioned finding is very brief. The plaintiff took the policy to the defendant, was paid its face value, surrendered the policy and was informed that if the decedent had died from accident she would have been given double the amount. Soon after she returned and asked for the double indemnity. She was informed that the matter was under investigation.
This evidence was insufficient to support this finding. The policy requires no particular form of proof and no time limit is set. "Due proof" is such proof as the law will pronounce reasonable and sufficient. Jarvis v. Northwestern Mutual Relief Assn.,
The plaintiff seeks to avoid this result on several *592
grounds. Her first claim, that this issue was not be fore the trial court, cannot be sustained in view of the pleadings. Her second, that the defendant waived the requirement, has more merit. It appears from examination of the record made in connection with the attack on the finding that the defendant made its own investigation and refused to pay the claim. 7 Couch, op. cit., p. 5558, note 43; id., p. 5568. Waiver must, however, be pleaded. Popowicz v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
As has been stated, the issue of proof of loss was in the case but the record tends to support the plaintiff's claim that the main question was that raised by the claim of accidental death and that the former was not actively litigated. The plaintiff should have an opportunity to present such evidence as she has to support it.
There is error in the finding that due proof was furnished to the defendant, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded for the retrial of that issue only.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.