17 S.E.2d 463 | N.C. | 1941
On 6 November, 1922, the defendant issued to the plaintiff a life insurance policy for $4,000.00, containing, inter alia, the following provision: "If the Insured, after payment of premiums for at least one full year, shall, before attaining the age of sixty years and provided all past due premiums have been duly paid and this Policy is in full force and effect, furnish due proof to the Company at its Home Office either (a) that he has become totally and permanently disabled by bodily injury or disease, so that he is, and will be, permanently, continuously and wholly prevented thereby from performing any work for compensation, gain or profit, and from following any gainful occupation, or (b) . . . The Company will, during the continuance of such disability, waive payment of each premium as it becomes due, commencing with the first premium due after approval of said due proof. . . . The Company will, during the continuance of such disability, pay to the Insured a monthly income at the rate of ten dollars for each one thousand dollars of the face amount of this Policy."
The defendant waived the premiums due on and paid the plaintiff the permanent and total disability benefits provided by the policy from 1932 to 1 January, 1939, when it notified plaintiff that it would no longer *335 waive premiums or pay benefits. Whereupon, the plaintiff instituted this action against the defendant to compel the further waiver of premiums and a continuation of the payment of the disability benefits.
The cause was submitted to a jury upon the following issues: "Has the plaintiff, since January 1st, 1939, been totally and permanently disabled by bodily injury or disease so that he is and will be permanently, continuously and wholly prevented thereby from performing any work for compensation, gain or profit and from following any gainful occupation? 2. What amount, if any, is the plaintiff entitled to recover of the defendant?"
The jury answered the first issue "Yes," and the second issue "Payment in full, with interest." There was an agreement between the parties that in the event the first issue should be answered in the affirmative the second issue should be answered as it was answered, and in the event the first issue should be answered in the negative the second issue should be answered nothing. There was no controversy as to the amount involved, the sole question being as to whether the plaintiff was entitled to recover any amount whatsoever.
From a judgment for the plaintiff predicated upon the verdict and the agreement the defendant appealed, assigning errors. The sole question presented by the exceptive assignments of error is as to whether the court erred in refusing to allow the defendant's motion to dismiss the action or for judgment as in case of nonsuit duly lodged when the plaintiff had introduced his evidence and rested his case and renewed when all the evidence on both sides was in. C. S., 567.
The question presented involves the interpretation of and the application to the evidence in the case of the clause in the policy which reads: "that he (the insured) has become totally and permanently disabled by bodily injury or disease, so that he is, and will be, permanently, continuously and wholly prevented thereby from performing any work for compensation, gain or profit, and from following any gainful occupation. "
The appellant admits in its brief that there is evidence of the insured's being "permanently disabled" but denies that there is evidence of his being totally disabled, its brief reading as follows: "It may be frankly conceded at the outset that no attempt was made to controvert the plaintiff's testimony as to his physical condition; but the defendant contended that whether or not the alleged physical disability did exist, the plaintiff's own evidence and that of his witnesses demonstrated conclusively that *336 the plaintiff was not only not prevented from performing work for gain or profit, but that he did in fact regularly perform such work and did engage in various gainful businesses; and therefore that he was not entitled to any recovery under said disability provisions."
So that the question ultimately left for us is was there sufficient evidence to be submitted to the jury upon the issue of the insured's (the plaintiff) being totally disabled so that he is, and will be, wholly prevented from performing any work for compensation, gain or profit, and from following any gainful occupation.
The testimony of the plaintiff himself when construed in the light most favorable to him tends to show that in 1919, while a traveling shoe salesman, he conceived the idea of a fireworks business as a side line, and that he opened up a fireworks stand on the side of the highway; that in 1922 he extended this business by engaging in the wholesale of fireworks under the trade name of Dixie Fireworks Company; that the plaintiff married in 1925; that the he continued his shoe sale business and his fireworks business from 1922 till 1929; that in 1929 he discovered his eyesight was failing and gave up his shoe sale business; that he bought a local insurance business in Zebulon and operated it at a loss for a year and a half and sold it out; that in 1932 he filed a claim with the defendant company alleging total and permanent disability, and commencing in May, 1933, the company paid him disability benefits through December, 1938, when it ceased such payments; that the fireworks business increased from year to year, that he did not attend to the office work, as this was done by Mrs. Medlin, that he "directed the employees around there and told them what to do," and that he "hired and fired people around the Dixie Fireworks Company," that both he and his wife signed the checks for the business, that the employees were paid by him and Mrs. Medlin, and she and he, who owned the business, shared in the profits; that he does his banking with the Peoples Bank Trust Company, and from year to year he has given financial statements to it, and negotiated with it about borrowing money and that he and his wife signed the notes given to the bank; that in 1935 his wife and he serviced stands on a
The testimony of Mrs. Medlin, the wife of the plaintiff, is practically to the same effect as that of her husband, except she states "I am the operating head or manager of the business (fireworks business). . . . Mr. Medlin is not physically able to do any work or assume any responsibilities. The only thing that he does with this fireworks business is he signs some checks, either Mr. Pierce or I will write those checks out and he signs them and he answers the telephone sometimes. Mr. Medlin's presence is not necessary at Zebulon for the operation of the Dixie Fireworks Company, because it has been run when he wasn't there for three months at a time. When he goes to Hot Springs the office is not closed up, it is open and the business goes on exactly like it does when he is there. . . . The fireworks season lasts two months out of each year, that includes the 4th of July and Christmas."
There being ample evidence of the plaintiff's permanent disability, the ultimate question confronting us is reduced to whether the testimony of the plaintiff himself negatives his allegation and contention that he is, and will be, wholly prevented from performing any work for compensation, again or profit, and from following any gainful occupation.
This Court has frequently construed total and permanent disability clauses in life insurance policies to mean that the insured cannot recover disability benefits if he is able to engage with reasonable continuity in his usual occupation or in any occupation that he is physically and mentally qualified to perform substantially the reasonable and essential duties incident thereto. This rule of law has been given application to the extent of denying benefits to an insured who, though suffering from a severe disability, continues to work at a gainful occupation.
In Thigpen v. Ins. Co.,
In Boozer v. Assurance Society,
The principle that an insurance company is liable to an insured under policies of insurance containing disability provisions similar to the policy in suit only if the insured becomes both permanently and totally disabled to pursue any occupation for compensation or profit has been enunciated in many cases in this jurisdiction. See Hill v. Insurance Co.,
The evidence of the plaintiff not only fails to show that the insured in the case at bar was wholly disabled to pursue any occupation for gain or profit but shows affirmatively that he, together with his wife, operated *340 and conducted a very successful business, a business that was his "idea" and which was well on the way of development when he was married, and which continued to grow by such leaps and bounds that the plaintiff was able after being forced by the failure of his eyesight in 1929 to give up his "regular line," the shoe sale business, to make a livelihood for his family and himself out of the former "side line," the fireworks business, and to increase his net worth thereby from 1935 to 1939 from $26,875.00 to $46,365.25, nearly $20,000.00.
We do not concur in the contention of the appellee's brief that such services as the evidence tends to show the plaintiff rendered to the fireworks business or such things as the plaintiff did therefor were mere "odd jobs of a comparatively trifling nature," which would not preclude recovery, as was the case in Leonard v. Insurance Co.,
The services the plaintiff rendered and the things he did were executive in their nature, but nonetheless material and essential for the very existence of the business. One cannot read the record without being impressed with the business acumen, even genius, the plaintiff displayed in his conception, organization and operation of the fireworks business. Handicapped, as he doubtless was by his faulty eyesight and physical infirmities, he nevertheless kept a constant and careful supervision of the business, being continuously on the lookout to extend and increase its volume, making trips and negotiating contracts and looking after the financing and successfully upbuilding of the business to a point where it furnished a livelihood for himself and wife and children, and provided employment for many others, and withal increasing his net worth nearly $20,000.00 in five years. Such services, attended with such results, cannot be properly designated as "odd jobs of a comparatively trifling nature."
The case at bar is distinguishable from Guy v. Insurance Co.,
We have omitted to comment upon the evidence relating to the hauling and trucking business of the plaintiff for the reason that the fireworks business is by all of the evidence the principal source of occupation and income of the plaintiff. However, it appears that the plaintiff's activities with relation to this business were proportionately as great and as essential as they were in behalf of the fireworks business — executive and supervisory in their nature.
We reach the conclusion that the testimony of the plaintiff himself and his other evidence, when construed in the light most favorable to him, giving him the benefit of every reasonable inference and intendment to be drawn therefrom, while it tends to establish the plaintiff's permanent disability, it negatives his allegation and contention that he has been, since 1 January, 1939, and will remain totally disabled, so that he will be wholly prevented thereby from performing any work for compensation, gain or profit, and from following any gainful occupation, and that, therefore, the motion of the defendant for a judgment as in case of nonsuit should have been allowed. The case is remanded that judgment may be entered accordant with this opinion.
Reversed.