69 Minn. 14 | Minn. | 1897
The defendant, an accident insurance company, issued its policy to plaintiff, whereby it insured him as a merchant by occupation, under classification preferred,
“in the sum of $25 per week, against loss of time not to exceed twenty-six consecutive weeks, resulting from bodily injuries effected through means aforesaid (of which there shall be external and visible signs), wholly and continuously disabling said member from irons- • acting any and every Jcind of business pertaining to the occupation above stated.”
Plaintiff alleged that on May 21, 1895, and during the life of the policy, he was accidentally thrown from his bicycle, and violently thrown forward on his face, thereby dislocating the thumb of his right hand, breaking loose some of his teeth, and so injuring or jarring his head and neck as to affect his spine and nerves to such an extent as to produce severe nervous prostration, by reason of which injuries he was wholly and continuously disabled from transacting any and every kind of business pertaining to his occupation as a merchant for 17 weeks. The principal contest is as to the construction of that part of the policy which we have italicized, and particularly of the term “wholly disabled.” Accident insurance being of comparatively recent origin, the policies do not seem to have acquired any settled form, and the decisions construing them
The cases which have placed a construction upon the term “total disability” might seem to be divided into two classes, viz., those which construe it liberally in favor of the insured, and those which construe it strictly against him. Among those of the first class, may be cited Hooper v. Accidental, 5 Hurl. & N. 545, 556; Young v. Travelers, 80 Me. 244, 13 Atl. 896; Turner v. Fidelity, 70 N. W. 898; and of the second class, Lyon v. Railway, 46 Iowa, 631, and Saveland v. Fidelity, 67 Wis. 174, 30 N. W. 237. Any apparent conflict in the decisions may, however, be mostly reconciled in view of differences in the language of the policies, and of the different occupations under which the parties were insured. As is well said in Wolcott v. United, 55 Hun, 98:
“Total disability must, from the necessity of the case, be a relative matter, and must depend largely upon the occupation and employment in which the party insured is engaged.”
One who labors with his hands might be so disabled by a severe injury to one hand as not to be able to labor at all at his usual occupation, whereas a merchant or a professional man might by the same injury be only disabled from transacting some kinds of business pertaining to his occupation. In policies of this character the aim of the insurer usually is to get as large premiums as possible by incurring the least possible liability; and, on the other hand, after an accident occurs, the usual aim of the insured is to recover the greatest amount of indemnity for the least possible injury. All that the courts can do is to construe the contract which the parties have made for themselves; but in doing so they should give it a reasonable construction, so as, if possible, to give effect to the purpose for which it was made.
There are a few propositions applicable to the construction of the policy under consideration, which, under the evidence, are decisive of this case. The first is that total disability does not mean absolute physical inability on part of the insured to transact any
But the mere fact that he might be able, with due regard to his health, to occasionally perform some single and trivial act connected with some kind of business pertaining to his occupation as a merchant would not render his disability partial instead of total, provided he was unable, substantially or to some material extent, to transact any kind of business pertaining to such occupation. To-illustrate this proposition by reference to the evidence in this case,, it appears, as we shall assume, that on one or two occasions where-the plaintiff went into his store when down town for other purposes, he handed out some small article to a customer, and took the change for it. This would not necessarily prove that he was able to attend to the business of waiting on customers, and that he was not “wholly disabled” within the meaning of the policy. He might be able, on temporary visits to the store, occasionally to perform a trifling act of this nature, and yet be substantially and essentially unable to transact any kind of business pertaining to his occupation of merchant. The frequency and nature of these acts would be for the consideration of the jury in determining whether he was totally-
It only remains to apply these principles or rules to the evidence. The evidence was, as might be expected, conflicting; but that introduced on part of the plaintiff reasonably tended to show that the dislocation of his thumb was by no means the most serious of his injuries; that by his fall he so injured his head and neck as to produce severe nervous prostration, which so seriously affected his general health and strength as to render him unable to transact, to any material or substantial extent, any part of his business as merchant; that due regard to his health required him wholly to desist from attempting to do so, and that he was so advised by his physician; that when at home he went down town several times a week to receive medical treatment from his physician, and to get shaved; that when he did so he would frequently go into his store, and sit down for a brief time, but when there took no part or interest in the transaction of the business except the trivial acts on two or three occasions already referred to; that upon the advice of his physician he went to Chicago to consult a medical specialist; that when he returned, his health not appearing to be improved, his family took him off on two occasions on a summer outing; and that it was not until the last of September or the first of October that he was sufficiently recovered to give any considerable attention to any part of his business. This evidence, in our judgment, justified the jury in finding that he was, for the full 17 weeks, wholly disabled, within the meaning of the policy, from transacting any and every kind of business pertaining to his occupation as a merchant.
The requests to charge referred to in the assignments of error were properly refused, for the reason, if no other, that they all assumed that if the plaintiff on some particular date performed some single act connected with his business, — as, for example, handing a customer a package of garden seeds, or a dozen of nails, — it necessarily followed that he was not “wholly disabled” at that date within the meaning of the policy.
In his application for this insurance the plaintiff stated the value of his time to be $25 a week. It cropped out on the trial that he held like insurance for like amounts in three other companies. As
Order affirmed.