292 S.W. 297 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1927
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *752 Reversing.
The appellant, whom we shall call the defendant, issued to J.F. Caskey a policy of accident insurance, and in this action by the administrator of Caskey, whom we shall call the plaintiff, a judgment for $1,000.00 was awarded against the defendant, to reverse which it prosecutes this appeal. In December, 1923, defendant issued this policy to Caskey and thereby insured his life in the sum of $1,000.00 against death resulting, directly and independently of all other causes, from bodily injury sustained through external, violent and accidental means, "if the insured shall . . . by being accidentally thrown from any private horse drawn vehicle . . . suffer loss of life." On April 15, 1924, Caskey was engaged in hauling logs or wood on his farm in Logan county, Kentucky, and it is claimed that he was then seated upon a load of logs driving the wagon, when one of the logs fell off, the horses started, Caskey was thrown from the wagon, and falling upon one of these logs, received an injury, to his right side. Caskey was assisted to his home. On the third day after the injury he summoned a physician, went to bed and remained there until April 24, when he died. It is admitted that Caskey died of pneumonia, but there is a sharp issue as to whether that pneumonia was traumatic or the result of an influenza infection. Defendant is asking for reversal because of four alleged errors.
It first complains of the instructions, and its objection to the first instruction is well taken, for by its terms the jury was told to find for the plaintiff if it believed that Caskey came to his death as a result of any bodily injury received through external, violent and purely accidental causes. The defendant did not by this policy insure Caskey against every form of accident, and the instruction *753 should have limited the recovery to that character of accident mentioned in the evidence, and insured against by the policy. To enable the plaintiff to recover, it was necessary that he should establish by evidence that J.F. Caskey while riding on this wagon was accidentally thrown therefrom and thereby received injuries from which, independently of all other causes, he died. Under the instructions given, the jury might have concluded because of the bruise that was shown to be in Caskey's side, that he had sustained an accidental injury and that that injury, independently of all other things, caused his death, and yet the jury might not believe that that injury was received in the manner insured against by the policy. For this reason, instruction 1 was erroneous.
It contends that the widow of Caskey, who was present at the time that it is claimed Caskey was thrown off of this wagon and who testified over the objection of the defendant to that effect, was not a competent witness. As the widow of the insured, Mrs. Caskey was interested in this recovery, and by subsection 2 of section 606 of the Civil Code, as construed by this court in the case of Combs v. Roark,
The defendant's next complaint is that nonexperts were permitted to testify as to the cause of Caskey's death. Forsee, a witness, who assisted in preparing Caskey's body for burial, testified to finding a bruised spot on Caskey's side, and he was asked if he found anything else the matter with him. He said, "No." We do not regard this as seriously as the defendant does. Forsee was not attempting to testify as an expert. His answer amounts to saying he found no other wounds on Caskey's body. He was testifying to a physical fact, to what he saw, and the defendant's objection to that evidence was properly overruled. However, there was testimony introduced to which the defendant objected, and to which its objection should have been sustained. For instance, the witness Deal should not have been permitted to testify that he thought Caskey did not have pneumonia. In attempting to answer that question, Deal was testifying not to a physical fact, observed by him, but was testifying as an expert about the condition of Caskey's lungs, a physical fact, of course, but one which Deal could not see, and concerning which he had no expert knowledge that would qualify him without seeing to testify on the subject. The statement of Forsee was competent for he was testifying to what he could see, but Deal was attempting to testify about something he could not see, and about a fact, the existence or nonexistence of which could only be determined by the exercise of judgment based on training and experience and upon such facts and symptoms as he could see. In other words, Deal was attempting to *755
testify as an expert, and a nonexpert layman is not competent to testify under such circumstances. Sovereign Camp, W. O. W. v. Morris,
Other witnesses were asked about the apparent health of Caskey, and the defendant has objected to that, but that objection is not well taken. It is generally held that laymen are competent to testify as to the apparent health of a person, such testimony being confined to matters open to observation of the party testifying, such as eyesight, hearing, nervousness and general health. Sovereign Camp. W. O. W. v. Morris,supra; Heddles v. Chicago Ry. Co.,
The defendant's final contention is that the court should have directed the jury to return a verdict for it. The basis of this contention is that, when the evidence which we have held in this opinion to be incompetent, is excluded, there is nothing left upon which to base a verdict for the plaintiff; but as the evidence upon the next trial may be very different from the evidence on this trial, nothing we might say now would be of any assistance to the court then. Therefore, we do not now pass on this question. The judgment is reversed, and defendant is awarded a new trial to be held in conformity to this opinion.
The whole court sitting. *756