The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of the Court by MR. JUSTICE WALKER. This is a petition to rehear this case, which was decided by us at Fall Term, 1911, and is reported in 158 N.C. at p. 29, where the facts are stated. There is no new question in the case, as now presented, but the learned counsel for the plaintiff think that we have misapprehended the true nature and meaning of the charge of Judge Adams, who presided at the trial, and that, if properly construed, it would deny a recovery in a case where there was a former malady and an accident and the latter directly produced the injury as the efficient cause thereof, provided the malady itself would have resulted in the same injury, though at a later time. It is also said that certain expressions of the Court in the opinion indicate that it was clearly not the intention so to decide. As to the latter suggestion, we agree with counsel, but we do not as to the former. *328
What the Court intended to decide, and did decide, was that there must have been a union of the two causes, so that they cooperated in producing the injury, and if the accident was the sole cause, or produced the result independent of all other causes, recovery could be had in such a case, and we are of the opinion now, as we were at the former hearing, that the judge so charged the jury. The instruction will not bear any other construction, as will appear from the following extract:
"If you find from the evidence, and by the greater weight of it, that the plaintiff has suffered the entire loss of the sight of his eye; that the loss of his sight is irrecoverable; that the loss was caused directly and independently of all other causes, through external, accidental, (402) and violent means, your answer to the second issue will be `Yes.' If you do not so find, your answer will be `No.'" The other part of the instruction merely informed the jury that if the accident did not cause the injury directly and independently of all other causes, but operated in connection with another cause, the case would be different, and the jury must have so understood it.
It must be remembered that we are construing a contract not of our making, and the terms of which we cannot alter, and not discussing the law of negligence and the doctrine of proximate cause. The plaintiff and defendant had the legal right to make any contract with each other, not unlawful in itself, both being at arm's-length and in the full possession and enjoyment of their mental faculties. We must decide the case, therefore, not by what we may think would have been a wiser and more discreet contract on the part of the plaintiff if he could have procured such a one, but by what is written in the contract actually made by them. Courts are not at liberty to rewrite contracts for the parties. We are not their guardians, but the interpreters of their words. We must, therefore, determine what they meant by what they have said — what their contract is, and not what it should have been. We said as much in our former opinion: "As long as parties who are capable of doing so shall be permitted to make their own contracts, it is the plain duty of the Court to enforce them as they are written, unless fraud or public policy shall intervene. Binder v. Accident Association,
We did not before fail to consider, in its full scope, the language of the learned judge in charging the jury, and, after a more careful examination of his instructions, we do not think that, in word or phrase, he so narrowed the terms of the insurance contract as to prejudice the plaintiff's rights, but that he correctly stated the law which is applicable to the case.
There was a disputed question of fact presented by the testimony, whether the plaintiff was suffering from a cataract on his eye at the time of the alleged fall, or whether the fall produced a cataract. In addition to the testimony recited in the brief for the petitioner, testimony by Dr. McGee was given as follows: "He complained of pain in his left eye and in the lower third thigh, right side. On examination of his eye, I found that he had an old cataract, and so told him. He had particles of dust around his eye. I put a little antiseptic solution on that. I found no evidence of traumatism or blow on the head, nor any inflammation. I found an old cataract and told him it was from an old injury; that it was produced by some injury in the past. It is possible to have a blow on the eye or on the head that will cause a rupture of the lens, and cataract follows. I found no sign of an injury resulting from a fall from the train. It takes a cataract some time to form and develop from a traumatic injury. The cataract I saw had been forming for months." The petitioner, as we understand, concedes, both in the petition and in the brief filed in support of the petition, that the decision is right in holding that if the jury had found that the injury was caused by the sum of two causes — that is, that the accident and preexisting cataract and diseased condition of the eye were together responsible for the subsequent blindness and united sensibly and efficiently (404) in producing it — the plaintiff could not have recovered, as the injury must have resulted from the accident, "independent of all other causes."
Reasoning from the authorities cited in the briefs filed by both parties in the appeal, and in the former opinion of the Court, and the admittedly *330 correct proposition above stated, it appears that under policy contracts such as the one under consideration, three rules may be stated:
1. When an accident caused a diseased condition, which together with the accident resulted in the injury or death complained of, the accident alone is to be considered the cause of the injury or death.
2. When at the time of the accident the insured was suffering from some disease, but the disease had no causal connection with the injury or death resulting from the accident, the accident is to be considered as the sole cause.
3. When at the time of the accident there was an existing disease, which, cooperating with the accident, resulted in the injury or death, the accident cannot be considered as the sole cause or as the cause independent of all other causes.
The petitioners rely on Fetter v. Casualty Co.,
The rules of proximate and remote causes, as understood in the law of negligence, cannot be justly or safely applied under a contractual stipulation that the injury or death must have "resulted from the accident, independently of all other causes," and when an issue of fact is presented whether the person was suffering from a disease which had causal connection with the injury or death.
As further evidence of the fact that a discussion of the doctrine of remote and proximate causation was not essentially involved in Fetterv. Casualty Co., supra, and that what was decided in that case does not necessarily conflict with the charge of the court in this case, we may well refer to two or three expressions of the Court, which seem to place its decision upon the ground that the accidental fall against the table, while attempting to raise the upper window sash, was the real, efficient cause of the death, and all sufficient. Judge Valliant said: "There is no question but that the fall of the insured against the table, striking his side heavily against its edge, was accidental, and that it produced the rupture of the kidney which caused the hemorrhage which caused his death. All the witnesses concur in that. . . . The undisputed evidence and conceded facts make out a prima facie case (406) for the plaintiffs, and the defense that there was a remote predisposing cause of the death was given as full and fair consideration as the defendant was entitled to, and there is not sufficient in the evidence bearing on it to justify any impeachment of the verdict. The theory of the instructions given at the request of the plaintiffs is that if the death of the insured resulted from the accidental rupture of his kidney, the plaintiffs were entitled to recover. These were supplemented by the modified instruction for defendant that the plaintiffs could not recover unless the `accident was the sole and direct cause of death.' Those instructions taken together put the case on the correct theory, and they include whatever there legitimately was in the defendant's theory of any other cause. There was really so little in the remote-predisposing cause theory that the court would have been justified in ignoring it altogether."
A discussion of proximate and remote causes can be pertinent only when it appears that there have been two or more causes and when a judicial selection must be made as between the different causes, and a choice made of one as the proximate cause. In such a case, two causes have operated together, and we are looking for the one which was the efficient, and therefore the legal, cause of the injury. This is entirely different from a case in which we are dealing with the condition of a policy, that the injury or death must have resulted from the accident "independently of all other causes." *332
Though the Court, in Freeman v. Accident Association,
(407) In White v. Ins. Co.,
Coming, then, to a particular examination of the instruction objected to, it seems to fall naturally within the terms of the third rule above stated, "that when, at the time of the accident, there was an existing disease which, together with the accident, resulted in (that is, had causal connection with) the injury or death, the accident cannot be considered as the sole cause or as the cause independent of all other causes." It should be understood that in the case of an accident resulting in injury or death, if there was an existing disease having also a causal connection therewith, it is not necessary that the disease should itself have been one which would ultimately have proved fatal, or that it should be, of itself, sufficient to have caused the injury or death. Under the rule that, where the injury or death has been caused by the *333
sum of two causes, it is sufficient to prevent a recovery on the policy, if any ordinary disease, not itself necessarily fatal, should contribute with the accident to cause the death, that is, if without the presence of the disease the accident itself would not have been sufficient to have caused the injury or the death. And so in this case, it would (408) have been sufficient to have shown a diseased condition of the eye which, together with the alleged accident, resulted in blindness. It is not necessary in such a case to show that the disease of the eye was such that it would ultimately have resulted in blindness. In this view of the case, the plaintiff certainly has nothing to complain of in the instruction given. If the verdict and judgment had been for the plaintiff, the defendant might have had ground of complaint, in that the instruction virtually told the jury that the plaintiff could recover unless they should find that the blindness was caused by the combined effect of the alleged accident and such a disease of the eye as would ultimately have resulted in blindness, because both causes might have produced the blindness, without either being completely sufficient to that end. The instruction of the court must be read in view of the facts in the case, and with the alternative proposition stated: "But if you find from the evidence and by the greater weight of it that the plaintiff has suffered the entire loss of sight of his eye; that the loss of his sight is irrecoverable; that the loss was caused directly and independently of all other causes, through external, accidental, and violent means, your answer to the second issue will be `Yes.'" Not only is the instruction within the third rule above stated, upon reason, but there is authority (Freemanv. Accident Association,
The decision of this Court, that injury or death caused by the sum of two causes, namely, accident and disease, is not covered by the policy, is sound, as we think. The instruction excepted to, when properly considered, is but one way of stating the rule, and is well within the rule, and on the facts testified to, the jury had the right to find that the blindness was caused by the alleged accident combined with a disease which affected the eye at the time of the accident.
It would be idle and useless to repeat what was said in our former opinion about this case and the rule which controls its decision. We then discussed the matter at great length, because of the importance of the principle involved, and cited numerous authorities, which we think sustain our view. Before taking final leave of the case, we will refer toFishblate v. Ins. Co.,
The judge's charge should be construed as one connected whole, and not in detached or isolated portions (Kornegay v. R. R.,
Petition dismissed.
Cited: Wheeler v. Cole,
(411)