132 Me. 220 | Me. | 1933
The Metropolitan Life Insurance Company of New York, on January 12, 1920, insured the life of Arthur B. Plunnner of Skowhegan, and included as a part of the policy a Total and Permanent Disability Provision in which it agreed that if, before default of the payment of any premium and before the insured attained the age of sixty years, the Company received due proof that, as the result of injury or disease occurring or originating after the issuance of the policy, he had become totally and permanently disabled so as to be unable at any time to perform any work or engage in any business for compensation or profit, the Company, commencing with the anniversary of the policy next following the receipt of such proof, would waive payment of each premium coming due during such disability, and in addition, com
On February 26, 1929, Mr. Plummer’s married sister, Helen Derbyshire, upon her petition alleging that her brother was of unsound mind, was appointed his Guardian by the Judge of the Probate Court of Somerset County and within a few weeks, the exact date not appearing in the evidence, applied to the Insurance Company for the benefits payable to him under the Disability Provision of his policy, representing that, through mental incapacity, he had become permanently and totally disabled. The claim having been allowed, the Insurance Company returned the last premium it had received and paid monthly annuities from September 2, 1929, until and including January 2, 1932, when it stopped payments and denied liability. On June 12, 1932, when the next premium fell due, it was paid under protest, and within two months this suit was brought to recover the amount of that premium and annuity payments for the seven months next preceding. The defendant Company pleaded the general issue and, having by brief statement set up the defense that the insured was not totally and permanently disabled within the terms of his policy, by stipulation of counsel the case was submitted to the jury on that issue of fact alone, with instructions that, if the plaintiff was entitled to recover, damages in the sum of $1,005.10 should be assessed. The case comes to this Court, after verdict for the plaintiff, on the defendant’s motion for a new trial and exceptions to the rulings of the presiding Justice on the admissibility of evidence. '
MOTION
A careful and thorough examination of the voluminous transcript which is brought forward on this review discloses credible
Several physicians gave their opinions on the stand as to Mr. Plummer’s mental condition and its causes, effect and duration. His family physician, who had known him for years and examined him repeatedly, was of the opinion that he was mentally deranged and the condition was permanent. He attributed Mr. Plummer’s breakdown to a mental shock received when his first wife died in 1926, and he had observed no improvement in his condition. The Superintendent of the Maine State Hospital for the insane, who had Mr. Plummer under observation for several weeks, at first found his symptoms suggestive of general paralysis, but came to believe that he was suffering from a “manic-depressive depression associated with an ordinary amount of arteriosclerosis and an abnormally high diastolic blood pressure.” There is evidence that the Superintendent later advised the family that Mr. Plummer had an organic brain disease, then dormant but of a type which warranted precautions against allowing him to become excited for fear of violence. On the stand, having made an examination of Mr. Plummer just before the trial, the Superintendent gave as his opinion that he was then “suffering from remote effects of manic-depressive disorder” and, though he said he did not know whether the condition was permanent or not, and thought the patient had ability and some capacity to work, admitted that “it is difficult for a patient in such a condition as that to work.”
Upon the facts just stated, the Insurance Company contends that it is established that the plaintiff lost his position with the automobile agency and has since been out of employment and business solely because of his own bad habits and the general business depression of the last few years. We are not convinced'that this is so. There is abundant and convincing evidence in this record that the plaintiff became mentally deranged as a result of the death of his first wife, and that his subsequent condition of incompetency and incapacity is the direct result of the shock he received at that time. It may be that his dissipation since his breakdown has prolonged and increased his disability, and it would not be strange if, having a “manic-depressive disorder,” he has become more depressed by current conditions and doubts as to the future. His marriage was against the advice and protest of his friends and family, and furnishes no proof of soundness of mind or body, and little significance, if any, can be attached to his operation of his automobile. It appears that his employment at the garage was. arranged by his family and physician in the hope that regular work would improve his mental and physical condition, but he was found to be inefficient and irresponsible and was soon discharged. And his work about his farm, when viewed in the light of testimony that in whatever he did he was unable to accomplish any more in a day than an ordinary man would in a few hours, was unable to finish what he began, and became easily confused in simple business matters, we think, falls short of proving that he could either oper
Upon the issue joined, the burden was upon the plaintiff to prove that at the time his claim of disability was filed he had become totally disabled as the result of disease, so as to be unable to perform any work or engage in any business for compensation or profit, and when the premium and Monthly Annuities here in suit accrued that he had not recovered within the meaning of the disability clause of his policy. It was not necessary for him to show that he had been reduced to and remained in a state of absolute helplessness, but it was sufficient if the evidence established that he was unable to perform the work in any occupation he was adapted to in the customary manner of a workman in that occupation working for compensation, and that he was unable to do all of the substantial and material acts necessary to the prosecution in the customary and usual manner, and for compensation or profit, of any kind of business for which he was adapted. This definition of “totally disabled” is in accord with the great weight of authority regardless of whether the policy is for accident insurance or for life insurance with a disability clause attached. In principle, if not in exact phraseology, it is approved in 14 R. C. L., 1315, and the Notes and cases cited in 24 A. L. R., 203; 37 A. L. R., 151; 41 A. L. R., 1376; 51 A. L. R., 1048; and 79 A. L. R., 857. It was applied to the disability of an insured to engage in business in Young v. Insurance Company, 80 Me., 244, 13 A., 896.
According to the terms of his policy, the plaintiff was also bound to prove he was permanently disabled and had not recovered. A reading of the contract, however, leaves no doubt that the term “permanent” disability, as there used, was not intended to limit liability to proof of a disability which must of necessity last for the remainder of his natural life without any hope or possibility of recovery before death. The Company in the last paragraph of its Disability Provision, having already agreed to pay monthly annuities and waive premiums upon receipt of proof of permanent disability, there expressly provided that, notwithstanding proof of
Applying the law of the case as stated to the facts in evidence, the verdict must stand. The jury were clearly warranted in finding that, as a result of mental disease, the plaintiff was totally and permanently disabled within the meaning of his policy of insurance and entitled to recover as claimed in his writ, subject only to the stipulations of counsel as to damages. On this record, the verdict in the trial court was just and proper.
EXCEPTIONS
When mental condition is the issue to be decided, the evidence, of necessity, must include a wide field of fact and circumstance, and greater latitude in the admission of testimony must be given than would be permitted in relation to a single fact. And “to enable the jury to determine the real state of mind, the action of that mind as shown by conversations, declarations, claims, and acts is the most satisfactory evidence.” Robinson v. Adams, 62 Me., 369. So too, although witnesses other than experts are not allowed to testify directly as to their opinion of.the mental condition of another when that question is the issue to be decided, “under the direction of the court, (they) may be permitted to describe peculiarities, conditions and situations, conduct and changes.” Fayette v. Chesterville, 77 Me., 28; Robinson v. Adams, supra. With one exception, the errors alleged in the Bill of Exceptions relate to the admission of evidence bearing on the plaintiff’s mental condition and are within the foregoing rules.
The plaintiff’s family physician, having testified that the in
Motion overruled.
Exceptions overruled.