This case presents us with the opportunity to clarify the law as it pertains to “total disability” clauses in insurance policies. At issue is whether or not a cardiologist was totally disabled following an accident which left him unable to perform many of the duties of his occupation.
In 1994, Dr. Todd Gammill purchased two disability insurance policies — an individual disability income policy and business overhead expense policy — with Provident Life and Accident Insurance Company, listing his occupation on the application as “invasive cardiologist.”
After his accident, Dr. Gammill filed a claim with Provident, and beginning April 1, 1996, the insurance company began making payments under the total-disability provisions in the policy. However, in February of 1997, Provident requested that an independent neurologist examine Dr. Gammill. That doctor subsequently opined that Dr. GammilTs disability prevented him from performing any invasive cardiac procedures, and that his motor and sensory losses would be permanent. Despite this evaluation, Provident concluded that Dr! Gammill was continuing to work in his profession, and thus suspended payments of monthly total-disability benefits in April of 1997. However, after Dr. Gammill and his attorney contacted the insurer, total-disability payments were restored after about seven months, with Provident making payments under a reservation of rights.
In December of 1997, Provident filed a complaint for declaratory judgment, asserting that Dr. Gammill continued to perform the substantial and material duties of a cardiologist, and was thus not totally disabled under the terms of the policy. Dr. Gammill answered, and also filed a counterclaim against Provident, alleging breach of contract and bad faith and seeking payment of additional benefits, to which he alleged he was entitled under his policy. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and after a hearing, the trial court denied Dr. GammilTs motion, but granted Provident’s, ruling that Dr. Gammill was still capable of performing the “majority” of the duties as a cardiologist and was, in fact, working as a cardiologist.
On appeal, we must construe the phrase “total disability.” First, however, we must deal with the procedural issues raised by Provident. Citing Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. v. Thomas,
Provident also contends that Dr. GammilTs arguments regarding the ambiguity of the policy were not preserved because the trial court did not rule on them. We dismiss this suggestion as well, because the trial court, in ruling in favor of the insurer, concluded that the relevant policy terms were unambiguous. Had the court determined that the terms were ambiguous, it would have been required, as a matter of law, to rule in favor of the insured, Dr. Gammill, because there was no disputed extrinsic evidence offered in connection with the summary-judgment motions on the meaning of “total disability.” See, e.g., Farm Bureau Mutual Ins. Co. v. Foote,
Arkansas has grappled with the issue of what constitutes “total disability” since at least 1910. In that year, this court decided the case of Industrial Mutual Indemnity Co. v. Hawkins,
In the years since the Hawkins decision, this court has had numerous occasions to consider similar questions. In each case, the outcome has depended on the policy definition of “total disability,” but nevertheless, the general consensus of most of these cases was that an insurance policy requiring the insured to be “totally disabled” “[does] not require that he shall be absolutely helpless, but such a disability is meant which renders him unable to perform all the substantial and material acts of his business or the execution of them in the usual and customary way.” Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Spencer,
A handful of cases from the 1940s appeared to take a more literal or restrictive approach to construing disability policies, holding that where an insured was unable to work at his occupation but could still perform “some work,” he would be precluded from recovering under the policy. See Metropolitan Lfe Ins. Co. v. Guinn,
Subsequent cases have consistently applied this liberal construction. For example, in Avemco Life Ins. Co. v. Luebker,
Similarly, in Continental Cas. Co. v. Davidson,
[I]t can be said that [the instruction is] ambiguous in that [it] would require [the insured] to be unable to perform all the substantial and material acts necessary to the prosecution, in a customary manner, of ány occupation or business for which the insured is reasonably qualified by reason of his education, training and experience. It is only necessary that he be unable to perform any of such acts in order to qualify for benefits. [Citing Avemco and Alexander.] We clearly expressed a preference for an instruction using the word “any” in Avemco. If the words “any of’ had been substituted for “all” in the offered instructions, appellant would have clearly been entitled to have one of them given.
Id. at 42-43.
The most recent discussion of the total-disability issue is found in Colonial Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Whitley,
[I]t is only necessary that it be shown that he is unable to perform any one or more of the substantial or material acts of his occupation in his usual and customary manner. Nor does the mere fact that one continues to work at his regular job establish a lack of disability. It is only a factor to be considered, and where an insured is able to continue his employment with the aid of his fellow employees or in some manner other than his usual and customary one, he may still be “disabled. ”
Whitley,
We agree that Whitley sets out the correct statement of the law, and the only question left to be decided is whether or not Dr. Gammill falls within Provident’s definition of “total disability.” “Total disability” was defined in Provident’s insurance policy to mean that “due to injuries or sickness you are not able to perform the substantial and material duties of your occupation.” Dr. Gammill’s occupation under the policy was listed as being a cardiologist.
We note at this point that the present case is before us in a different procedural posture than any of the other cases cited. In each of those instances, this court was reviewing a jury’s verdict to determine if the facts were sufficient to support a finding of total disability.
As discussed above, we agree with Dr. Gammill that the controlling law here is whether he can perform any of the substantial and material acts of his occupation in his usual and customary manner. In this respect, Provident concedes that Dr. Gammill can no longer perform at least three substantial and material duties of his occupation as a cardiologist. First, Dr. Gammill cannot perform invasive procedures at all. Second, because of the injuries to his back, he cannot conduct hospital rounds on his patients. Finally, due to the loss of sensitivity in the fingers of his right hand, he cannot complete cardiovascular exams on his patients in his usual manner, because he cannot feel cardiac impulses in the patients’ chests.
As noted above, the policy Provident issued to Dr. Gammill provided that he would be considered totally disabled if he were to become unable to perform “the substantial and material duties of [his] occupation.” This definition does not speak in terms of “any,” “all,” “some,” or “a majority” of the insured’s duties, and since different reasonable interpretations can be given this policy’s definition of total disability, the policy must be construed in favor of the insured, Dr. Gammill. See Smith,
We do, however, need to address Provident’s argument that Insurance Department Rule and Regulation 18 supplants this court’s caselaw and that it, rather than our holdings, controls the outcome of this case. Provident asserts that Regulation 18 provides that total disability may be defined by insurers as the inability to perform all of the substantial and material duties of one’s regular occupation. During oral arguments, Provident also argued that Regulation 18 states that “total disability” cannot mean one material and substantial duty. We disagree. That regulation, governing the kinds of policies that insurance companies may issue, provides merely that “[a] general definition of total disability shall not be more restrictive than one requiring the individual to be totally disabled from engaging in any employment or occupation for which he is or becomes qualified by reason of education, training or experience and not in fact engaged in any employment or occupation for wage or profit.” This language is not made a part of the contract between the insurer and the insured, and it merely sets a floor or a minimum standard for total-disability policies. It certainly does not supplant or replace this court’s holdings on the construction of insurance policies, and we reject Provident’s argument to the contrary.
Because we reverse and remand for entry of judgment with respect to Dr. Gammill’s first point on appeal, we find it unnecessary to address his second and third points regarding waiver and estoppel. However, Dr. Gammill also raises an argument regarding certain additional benefits under his policy.
This provision provides automatic increases in the Monthly Benefit for Total Disability shown on Page 3. . . . An UPDATE increase will apply to a Period of Disability which starts after the effective date of the increase. It must qualify as a separate Period of Disability. If the premium for the policy is being waived on the effective date of the increase, the premium for the increase will also be waived. When you resume paying premiums for the policy, you must also start paying the premium for the increases.
The emphasized language is the portion to which both sides point in support of their argument. Dr. Gammill contends that he was entitled to UPDATE benefits because he was within a period of disability that started after the effective date of the increase. His period of disability started on December 22, 1995, and the effective date of the “First UPDATE Increase” was, according to the policy, July 18, 1995. Provident, on the other hand, contends that an UPDATE increase does not apply to an existing period of disability, and that upon disability, benefits begin to be paid — and stay — at the level of the most recent UPDATE increase because additional premiums for the higher UPDATE benefits have not been paid.
Thus, there is an ambiguity inherent in the UPDATE provision concerning the effective date of the increase and the question of whether an increase applies during a “period of disability.” Our general rule has been stated many times: “If. . . the policy language is ambiguous, and thus susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation, we will construe the policy liberally in favor of the insured and strictly against the insurer.” Norris v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.,
The order of the trial court is reversed, and the matter remanded for entry of judgment in favor of Dr. Gammill.
Notes
Invasive cardiology involves procedures whereby the cardiologist physically invades the patient’s body, either by breaking the skin or entering through the mouth; common invasive procedures include things such as catheterizations, angiograms, pacemaker insertions, angioplasty, coronary stinting, and other such procedures.
All cases cited have dealt with the proper definition or use of total disability in the context of whether properjury instructions were given or whether a directed verdict should have been granted.
Dr. Gammill cannot perform this latter task with his left hand, either, as he lost the tips of the first two fingers on that hand in an unrelated accident years ago.
Provident asserts that Dr. Gammill did not preserve this point because the trial court did not rule on the issue. We disagree. When the trial court found that Dr. Gammill was not entitled to any benefits, it impHcidy found that he was not entitled to the UPDATE benefits.
