194 Ind. 586 | Ind. | 1921
The appellant sued the appellee on a membership certificate of her deceased husband in the appellee association, in which certificate, the appellant was named as beneficiary in case of the death of the insured. A section of the constitution of the appellee association provided for the payment to the beneficiary named in such certificate of the sum to be realized from an assessment on the members, not exceeding $5,000, “whenever a member shall through external, violent and accidental means, receive bodily injury (subject to exceptions not here involved), which shall, independently of all other causes, result in death within twenty-six weeks”, etc.
The material allegations of the complaint, so far as they need to be considered, are that appellant’s husband was a member of the appellee association, in good standing, and “that on the 25th day of October, 1918, and while said policy was in full force and effect, the said William M. Husbands received a bodily injury through external, violent and accidental means, to wit: that on (said date) he went to the basement or furnace room of his residence for the purpose of shaking down the ashes in the furnace and replenishing the same with coal; that he did shake down the ashes in said furnace with the shaker attached to said furnace with great force and violence * * * and his violent physical exertion in shaking the ashes down in the furnace caused the rupture of a blood vessel in his right lung, which injury then and there wholly disabled said William M. Husbands and caused his immediate death; that said William M. Husbands and the (appellee) each duly performed all the conditions of said policy to be by each of them performed”, and that due notice was given and proof made.
Upon proper request, the court made a special finding of facts to the effect that appellant’s husband was
The trial court stated conclusions of law on the facts found, to the effect that “the law is with the defendant and the plaintiff is not entitled to a judgment thereon”, to which the appellant duly reserved exceptions, and which it has assigned as error.
The sole question for decision is whether the facts found make out a case of bodily injury “through external, violent and accidental means * * * which, independently of all other causes, resulted in death”, within the meaning of the policy sued on.
There is a line of decisions as to the effect of insurance policies binding the insurer to pay indemnity in case of “accidental death” or of “death by accident.” And there is also a line of decisions holding that a contract to pay indemnity in case death results from a bodily injury caused by “external, violent and accidental means” binds the insurer to pay in case death is caused as the accidental result of means not intended to cause it, on the ground (as these decisions state) that an accidental result produced by intentional acts which are not manifestly dangerous and from which death would not ordinarily follow is
Afterward the court held that a man who had trav
This was a contract made in Indiana, between an Indiana corporation and a citizen of Indiana, and the law of Indiana then in force necessarily entered into and became a part of it.- Supreme Council, etc., v. Logsdon (1915), 183 Ind. 183, 187, 108 N. E. 587.
In two later cases, the question whether or not the conditions of such a policy were satisfied by an accidental result of intentional means was presented on appeal, and twice the court has distinguished the facts of the cases then under consideration from those coming within the rule laid down in the cases cited above, while expressing unqualified approval of the rule. In a case where the insured had been poisoned by “ptomaine” contained in some mushrooms which were voluntarily eaten by him, but without any intent on his part to eat the poison,- the court said: “We quite agree with appellant’s counsel when they say that the means must be accidental, and that a mere accidental result would not suffice under the language of this policy, but we are of the opinion that the unintentional taking of the poisonous substance contained in what decedent supposed to be edible mushrooms constituted an accidental means which caused the death.” United States Casualty Co. v. Griffis (1916), 186 Ind. 126, 131, 114 N. E. 83.
And in the other case, where the holder of a policy issued in July, 1911, insuring him against “sunstroke * * * suffered through accidental means”, sustained an injury because of riding to his work on a street car in a position where he was exposed to the direct rays of the sun in August, and it was held that the sunstroke was caused by “accidental means”, the court said: “We are of the opinion that the better reasoning points out, and the weight of authority holds, the true test to be
The courts of Indiana having been fully committed to the rule of law thus declared for many years before the policy in suit was issued, at the time it was issued, and continuously down to the time of the death of the insured, that rule must control in the interpretation of this insurance contract.
The recital in the special finding of the conclusions that the wrenching and straining of his body in shaking the furnace was “accidental” and that the rupture of the bloodvessel was caused by “accidental means”, must be disregarded, except so far, if at all, as they are supported by the facts found. Harrison Tp. v. Addison (1911), 176 Ind. 389, 396, 96 N. E. 146.
And the facts found fail to show' that the insured slipped or stumbled, or that anything fell upon or against him, or that anything whatever that was unforeseen or not intended happened to him of an “ex
The judgment is affirmed.
Myers, J., absent.