DECISION AND ORDER
Plaintiff is the widow of Bernard, S. Reid and the beneficiary eligible to receive any accidental death benefits under a policy issued by defendant. That the poliсy was in effect when said Bernard S. Reid died is stipulated, and it is agreed that the only questions involved on cross-motions for summary judgment are the questions of law, under the stipulated circumstances, whether his fatal injury was “caused by violent, external and accidental means,” and, if so, whether such injury was excluded from coverage as “caused or contributed to by, or as a consequenсe of, * * * medical or surgical treatment," even though the proximate or precipitating cause of loss is accidental bodily injury. If coverage is affоrded by the policy, it is stipulated that plaintiff is entitled to judgment in the sum of $117,368 plus costs of suit. 1
The facts are that Bernard S. Reid, while normally recuperating from surgery perfоrmed for non-accidental ailments, was erroneously administered intravenously a drug known as succinylcholine, instead of a normal saline solution, as a carrier for an intended antibiotic known as keflin. After two injections of correct fluids, at 10:42 a. m. and 4:00 p. m., respectively, the error in ingredients was made by the nurse on the *1183 9:40 p. m. dosage, shortly after which the patient went into respiratory arrest, from which he never fully recovered, and he died five days later. It is agreed that this erroneous injection of succinyleholine, a muscle relaxant, was the proximate cause of death.
Both sides concede that this drug was given in error and not intеntionally. Plaintiff argues, however, that the erroneous drug administration was clearly violent, external and accidental, and was obviously not medical or surgical treatment, but the opposite thereof, which would establish liability. Defendant argues that there was clearly no violence, that the harm was done internally, thаt the “means” of treatment was as prescribed rather than accidental, the error being in the drug given, and that obviously the error occurred in the course of medical treatment, which clearly precludes liability. Both sides have provided scholarly briefs and strong arguments.
It is clear that under the rule of
Erie Railroad Co.
v.
Tompkins,
On this score there is no such clear-cut Illinois authority, but it seems clear, on careful analysis of a similar type as that employed by the Illinois Supreme Court, to reach the cоnclusions above noted, that the medical exclusion does apply to what happened here and that coverage is precluded thereby.
Thеre is no problem over the burden of proof, which is argued somewhat, because what happened is perfectly clear. There can really be no doubt that the death here involved was a direct consequence of medical treatment, i. e., the administration of keflin to control possible post-surgical infection, as prescribed by the physician. The accidental use of the killer drug as a carrier of the intended drug, in place of normal saline sоlution as such carrier, whether such use was negligence amounting to medical malpractice, or an unavoidable act of God, or something in betweеn, though obviously not prescribed, would not have occurred but for the treatment, and thus was a consequence thereof. Even though it be considered that the аccidental death was not caused or contributed to by the intended medical treatment, it was caused by the “accident” which occurred in the coursе of administering medical treatment.
No controlling precedents have been cited to the court on this issue and none have been found. Defendant cites as controlling
Baylis v. Travelers’ Insurance Company,
Defendant also cites several other overdose and medical negligence cases in which medical exclusion clauses in accident policies were held to apply.
See Barkerding v. Aetna Life Insurance Company,
Plaintiff would distinguish these cases as all involving: (1) a drug administеred for a valid medical purpose; (2) administration by a doctor or the patient himself; and (3) a part of normal treatment. Such distinctions are of no significаnce and they overlook the fact that here the prescribed antibiotic (keflin) was administered by the nurse as planned and directed by the doctor, the error being in the liquid carrier therefor.
Plaintiff also cites cases involving other exclusionary clauses in accident policies which were found inappliсable under the circumstances before the court in those cases. Such is
Scanlan v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company,
Likewise, with a similar exclusion in Aetna v.
Brand,
Courts are obligated to give effect to clear language of insurance policies, even though ambiguities are to be construed against the insurance carrier.
Hooker v. New York Life Insurance Co.,
Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED that plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment is DENIED and defendant’s motion for summary judgment is ALLOWED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that judgment enter for defendant.
Notes
. Allowance of plaintiffs attorney’s fees on a theory that defendant’s failure to pay was “vexatious and without just cause” is not justified.
