It is admitted by counsel for the defendant that the accident occurred at a time and in a maimer, which under the terms of the pоlicy, would impose liability upon the defendant for the medical and hospital expenses incident to the repair of. thе hernia sustained by the plaintiff’s son were it not for the exclusion provisions contained in the policy.
The only issue presented for determination is whether, as a *398 matter of law, the pоlicy of insurance, properly construed, covers the medical and hospital expenses necessitated by the аccident. Counsel for the defendant contend that the expenses sought to be recovered were caused by the hеrnia which the plaintiff’s son sustained as the result of an insurable accidental injury, and the expenses occasioned by herniа are, by the terms of the policy excluded. Counsel for the plaintiff contends on the other hand that the expenses were occasioned by an insurable accidental injury, were not caused by the hernia, and that the hernia was only one of thе incidents of the insurable accidental injury.
The words used in policies of insurance, as in all other contracts, bear their usual and common significance (Code § 20-704 (2)), and policies of insurance are, as all other contracts, to be construed in their ordinary meaning. “In construing contracts, ‘The cardinal rule of construction is to ascertain the intention of the parties. If that intention be clear, and it contravenes no rule of law, and sufficient words be used to arrive at the intention, it shall be enfоrced, irrespective of all technical or arbitrary rules of construction.’ Code, § 20-702. ‘The contract of insurance shоuld be construed so as to carry out the true intention of the parties'.’ § 56-815. It was said by this court in
Great American Indemnity Co.
v.
Southern Feed Stores,
51
Ga. App.
591 (
We think the contract of insurance is unambiguous and subject only to the construction implied by the policy. Under the “еxclusions” clause of the policy, “No payment of any kind shall be made for injury, death or any other loss caused, wholly or рartly, directly or indirectly, by . . . hernia of any kind, however caused.” This language is clear. The medical expenses covered by the policy under thе general insurance agreements are such as result from 'an insurable accidental injury. The injury sustained by the plaintiff’s son was such an injury under the general insurance agreements. He was accidentally struck in the stomach and injured by a fellow student while playing tоuch football at school. However, losses caused, wholly or partly, directly or indirectly, by hernia, however caused, are, by the exclusions сlause, removed from the general insurance agreements. The hernia sustained by the plaintiff’s son was caused by his accidеntal injury, but the expenses sought to be recovered were occasioned by the hernia—the petition reveals no expenses save those occasioned in repairing the hernia—and those expenses are not covered by thе terms of the policy, for, by the exclusions clause, it is provided that losses caused by hernia are not compensablе “however” the hernia was caused. The expenses sought to be recovered, consequently, come within the terms of the exclusiоns clause and not within the terms of the general insurance agreements even though the hernia was occasioned by an insurable accidental injury, for it matters not how the hernia was caused, no payment is to be paid for losses caused, “wholly оr partly, directly or indirectly, by hernia.”
*400
The line of cases, exemplified by
Atlanta Accident Association
v.
Alexander,
104
Ga.
709 (2) (
In
Thornton
v.
Travelers Ins. Co.,
116
Ga.
121, 126 (
The plain import o'f the language of the exclusion clause of the policy presently under consideration is that the policy is not to insure against injuries resulting from disease, nor injuries resulting in hernia or as the result of hernia. The phrase, “hernia, however caused,” can have no other reasonable import, as the phrase, “however caused,” is to our minds all inclusive. The word “however” used in this context in the exclusion сlause bears its usual and ordinary meaning, and is defined by every reputable dictionary to mean “in whatever manner, way, or state; by whatever means.”
The expenses sought to be recovered by the plaintiff are not covered by the terms of the policy, construed as an entire contract, and the trial court, consequently, erred in overruling the defendant’s general demurrer thereto.
Judgment reversed.
