39 Minn. 548 | Minn. | 1888
This action is for the recovery of the amount of a policy of insurance, whereby, in consideration of $20 premium paid,
The defendant classified such insurance risks with regard- to the hazard attending the occupation of the assured. Miller was a banker, one of the least hazardous kinds of occupation, and he was insured as such, the risk being classified in the policy as select. In the body of the policy, following the agreement to make payment in case of injury causing disability or death, is the following language: “Except that, if injured in any occupation or exposure classed by this company as more hazardous than that here given, his insurance and weekly indemnity shall be whatever the premiums paid by him will purchase at the rates fixed for such increased hazard.” By the terms of the policy the agreement was made and accepted subject to the conditions appearing on the back thereof, among which was the following: “This insurance does not cover * * * accident, nor death or injury, resulting wholly or partly, directly or indirectly, from any of the following causes, or while so engaged or affected: * * * Entering, or trying to enter, or leaving a moving steam-vehicle. * * * (This clause does not affect railway employes.)” The court dismissed the action for the insufficiency of the plaintiffs’ case. In our opinion this was right. It is certain that the assured was killed in an attempt to enter or get upon a moving steam-vehicle, and that the accident and death are referable directly to that as the cause. It is distinctly expressed in the policy that the insurance shall not
The appellants claim that by force of the language of the policy first above recited, limiting the liability of the company if the assured should be injured in any occupation or exposure more hazardous than that in which he was classed in the policy, a recovery should be allowed of such sum as the premium paid by this assured, $20, would have purchased as insurance as to one whose proper business it would be to get on or off moving railroad trains; for example^ a railroad conductor, as to whom, under a policy like that in question, the condition respecting accidents from that cause would not be applicable. This is not a reasonable construction of this contract. The terms “occupation or exposure classed by this company as more hazardous, ” etc., refer, as we understand, to distinct classified occupations or employments, such as railroad conductors, railroad brakemen, railroad engineers, blacksmiths, carpenters, etc. To bring a case within the provision limiting the liability of the company to a less amount than that named in the policy, the assured must be within one of such classes; that is, engaged in one of the more hazardous occupations. Such a case would, perhaps, be presented, if one insured as belonging to a non-hazardous class, as a banker, were to become, during the term of the policy, engaged in a more dangerous class of employment, as that of a railroad conductor, and were to suffer injury in the course of that employment. This is not such a case. The assured was not a railway conductor or employe, with the skill, judgment, and experience which one in that occupation may be presumed to have acquired, and which might enable him to get upon a mov? ing train with safety, when one unaccustomed to such things might incur great danger in doing so. The construction which the appellants would have us put upon this provision would render of no effect the more plain condition of this contract, that “this insurance does not
Order affirmed.