Mrs. Lemma B. Kellar, the designated beneficiary under an insurance contract between John C. Kellar and
*454
Prudential Insurance Company of America brought suit against the insurer to recover an additional sum of $3,000, alleged to be payable under the accidental-death-benefit provision of the policy, the principal sum having been paid to the beneficiary. After the evidence had been submitted by the parties, the motion of the insurer for a directed verdict in his favor was denied, and the jury returned a verdict for the petitioner. The insurer's motions for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict and for a new trial were denied. The insurer’s exceptions to these orders were, upon appeal to the Court of Appeals, overruled and the judgments of the trial court were affirmed.
Prudential Ins. Co. of America
v.
Kellar,
95
Ga. App.
332 (
The insurer issued a group-insurance policy to Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, under which John C. Kellar was issued a certificate and was covered by the terms of the policy. The certificate issued to Kellar provided for $3,000 in life insurance and an additional $3,000 accidental-death benefit. The accidental-death benefit was made payable in the following words of the certificate: “$3,000.00 payable to the Beneficiary in addition to the amount of insurance, specified above, immediately upon receipt of due proof that the death of said employee occurred while said employee was in the employ of the Employer and insured under said Policy, as a result, directly and independently of all other causes, of bodily injuries, effected solely through external, violent and accidental means, of which, except in case of drowning or of internal injuries revealed by an autopsy, there is a visible contusion or wound on the exterior of the body, and that such death occurred within ninety days of the accident, provided, however, that no Accidental Death Benefit shall be payable if such resulted . . . directly or indirectly from bodily or mental infirmity or disease in any form.” (Italics supplied).
On the trial, the facts were stipulated to such an extent that the sole issue was whether the cause of the insured’s death was such that, under the terms and conditions of the policy, the accidental death benefits would be due and payable. The only *455 evidence on this issue was a certified copy of the death certificate filed with the Georgia Department of Public Health by the insured’s physician, and the testimony of this physician. The undisputed evidence shows that Kellar was injured in an accident when struck by a truck on November 7, 1955, wherein he sustained a fracture of the neck of the left femur and a fracture of the left wrist. His hip was nailed on November 8, and he was discharged from the hospital on November 18, his general condition being good at that time. On November 28, 1955, he was returned to the hospital when it was discovered that the nail had withdrawn from the hip. On November 30, the plate and nail in his hip were repositioned and he was released from the hospital. On December 6, he suffered a severe myocardial infarction and was returned to the hospital, where he remained for three weeks. He died suddenly on January 14, 1956. The insured’s physician, in the certificate filed with the Department of Public Health, stated: ‘T. Disease or condition directly leading to death: (a) Myocardial infarction. Antecedent Causes due to: (b) Hypertensive cardiovascular disease. 2. Other significant conditions. Condition? contributing to the death but not related to the disease or condition causing death: Fracture neck left femur.” The insured’s physical! testified: that he first treated the insured in June, 1953, for high blood pressure, and, through treatments, his blood pressure was reduced from 236/136 to 150/80; that from June, 1953, until the time of the aceident, the insured had worked the entire time except for a period when he had a slight stroke in 1955. The physician further testified that he did not believe that the accident and subsequent surgery was the cause of the heart attack, but that, in his opinion, “it was certainly an aggravating factor both in the attack and its course.” As to what relationship the injuries that the insured received in the accident had to his death, the physician stated: “As to whether or not I would say that he didn’t die directly and independently of all other causes from the injuries he received in the accident; well, we have already said that he died from the heart attack, that was the thing that killed him right then, but these injuries and things, I think contributed to it. When I say ‘contributed’, I mean they may have aggravated his high blood *456 pressure; well, yes, sir, I say aggravated his general status of his high blood pressure and others, and hardening of the arteries, together. . . As to whether or not I think that it helped to bring on his death sooner than he otherwise would have if he hadn't had these injuries; well, if he had not sustained these injuries, it would be reasonable to assume that he would have been in better shape physically to have withstood a heart attack.”
The Court of Appeals ruled that, under the provisions of the life policy in the instant case, double benefits could not be recovered “if the insured has a pre-existing physical impairment which contributes to the injury in whole or in part, directly or indirectly”; but where “the physical impairment does not contribute to the injury but merely aggravates the consequences of the occurrence, recovery is not thereby precluded as a matter of law”; and held that there was sufficient evidence to authorize the jury to find that the injuries sustained by the insured accelerated and aggravated the insured’s heart and circulatory condition and thus caused his death. The case of
Thornton
v.
Travelers Ins. Co.,
116
Ga.
121 (
In
Harris
v.
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
66
Ga. App.
761 (1) (
Under the terms of the policy, the insurer in the instant case was not liable to pay double the amount of the policy if the death of the insured resulted directly or indirectly from bodily infirmity. The undisputed evidence disclosing that the primary cause of the insured’s death was heart failure brought on by previous high blood pressure, and that the injuries he sustained to his hip and wrist in the accident, 68 days before his death, merely aggravated or accelerated his existing bodily infirmity, the insured’s beneficiary was not entitled to a recovery and a verdict in favor of the insurer was demanded.
Our conclusion is supported by practically all of the authorities of other jurisdictions. In Appleman, “Insurance Law and Practice,” Yol. 1, 494, § 403, it is said: “As a general rule, it has been *459 stated that if there is a pre-existing disorder or illness at the time an injury is received, recovery may still be had if the injury was severe enough to have caused the entire damage or considerable damage, but not if the disease was the proximate cause or principal cause thereof. From this, it has been held that where a diseased condition aggravates the result of the injury or is, itself, aggravated thereby, there can be no recovery, where the combined result is to cause the death or disability. This has been particularly supported where the death or disability would not have resulted from the external injury alone, but, with the combination of injury and disease, the loss is produced.” See cases cited in annotation, 131 A. L. R. 251, 254.
The Court of Appeals erred in its ruling that the trial court did not err in denying the insurer’s motion for a judgment in its favor notwithstanding the verdict.
Judgment reversed.
