Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal by the defendant company from a judgment on a verdict for $7,776 in favor of the appellee, Buby M. Bich, the beneficiary named in an accident insurance policy issued to her husband, Charles A. Bich, indemnifying “against loss caused directly and exclusively by bodily injury sustained solely and independently of all other causes through accid’ental means”; and providing that “blood poisoning resulting directly and exclusively from such injury shall be deemed a bodily injury.”
It appears from admittedly competent evidence that April 21, 1916, the insured was a man 35 years old in good health. His wife, the appellee, had then been sick 10 days with erysipelas of the head and face. He took care of her—washed her eyes and face. Qn that day there was a slight wound on the fore finger of his right hand, which bled freely. He treated it with home remedies and did not regard it of much importance. Pour days later he was suffering with a temperature and pain and swelling of that arm, and was ordered to bed and properly treatеd by a physician from that time until his death from streptococcic toxemia, or blood poisoning, May 4, 1916, 13 days after the injury. • The fatal germ entered his system through the cut on his finger either at the time of the scratch or afterwards. The evidence leaves the time of the infection uncertain, and from the nature of the case we presume no evidence could be obtained showing clearly whether the germ entered at the time of the cutting or some minutes, hours, or perhaps 2 or 3 days thereafter. Appellee testified on the trial that her husband cut his finger opening a bottle of pop, but on her cross-examination • it appeared that her eyes were swollen shut at that time, and we agree with appellant that her statement as to how the finger was injured should be disregarded. Appellant says that leaves no evidence of an accidental injury and therefore the case fails. The presumption of law that all men are animated by the instincts of self-preservation аnd the natural desire to avoid personal injury is sufficient' to make a prima facie case that the cut was accidental. (Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Weise,
Appellant relies on Central Accident Ins. Co. v. Rembe,
In the present case it is not denied that if the accident causеd the diseased condition it is to be considered the cause of the death. The question is whether it did cause the diseased condition, and that is the question discussed and decided in Delaney v. Modern Accident Club, supra, and other cases above referred to holding the same rule, many of which cite and follow the Delaney case. An extended note and discussion of authorities is found in L. R. A. 1917A 1056, following the report of Ballagh v. Interstate Business Men’s Acc. Ass’n, supra. There is much in the cases there noted, most of them citing the Delaney case, supporting the conclusion in that case that it matters not when the germs got into the wound, nor where they came from, if it be a fact that they did actually enter through the wound as a portal, then the wound is the proximate cause and blood poisoning an intervening cause.
The only cases cited by appellant on this point are Martin v. Equitable Acc. Ass’n,
In the other Martin case, supra, the Supreme Court said if the inoculation occurred at the time the wound was made, the death might be attributed to the accident as the sole and proximate cause, although blood poisoning ensued. In each of these cases the court is discussing the law applicable when the injury and poisoning occurred at the same time. It may be inferred that the court considered it material and necessary to plaintiff’s case that the poisoning should be coincident with the wound; but in neither case was that question clearly before the court and considered, discussed and decided as it was in the Delaney case and other cases hereinbefore mentioned in which a contrary conclusion was reached.
To analyze and discuss all of the numerous cases above cited and referred to in those cited cases would unduly extend this opinion. We have found no case in which a reviewing court held that a jury should be instructed, as matter of law, that the infection must be coincident with the wound to warrant recovery. There are cases where the jury have been so instructed and have found for the plaintiff and the reviewing court has refused to disturb their verdict where the evidence, as in the present case, made it clear that it was a mere matter of conjecture whether the germ entered the wound at the time of its infliction or soon afterwards, and some expressions indicating that even if the germ entered afterwards it was still a question of fact for the jury whether the accidental wound in permitting the introduction of the germ into the blood was the sole cause of death. If the question in the present case should be treated as one of fact-’ and submitted to a jury, the issue would be presented under instructions much less favorable to the defendant than in this record. Their verdict here that the germ entered coincident with the accident affirmatively answers such issue; and while it is very doubtful whether the germ did enter at the time of the accident, and may reasonably be presumed that another jury might not so find, we see no ground for a presumption that a jury should or would find that the wound was not the portal through which the fatal germ entered either at or after the time of the accident. If it is to be treated as a question of law, we think the decided weight of authority is with the Delaney case that it is immaterial when the germ entered the wound. In either view, whether a question of law or fact, we regard the verdict abundantly justified by uncontradicted and compеtent evidence. Cases have arisen where it is 'extremely doubtful whether the accident caused the disease; as for instance, typhoid fever, which was claimed to have been fatal because the accident had resulted in reducing the vitality of the patient, but it might have been contracted had the patient been in perfect health. In cases of this class there is much room for controversy both on the law and the fact, but in the present case the -poisonous germ could only enter through an abrasion of the skin. There is, therefore, no room for suggestion that the germ might have entered the blood had the accident not occurred.
The policy provided that “in event of accidental death immediate nótice thereof must be given to the company,” and that it might be given by the beneficiary to the company at Hartford, Connecticut, or to any authorized agent, and that failure to give such notice should not invalidate any claim if notice was given as soon as was reasonably possible. Two days after Mr. Rich’s death, appellee placed her claim in the hands of her attorney, and 5 days thereafter the attorney wrote a letter to appellant advising it of the death and asking for blanks to make proof of loss. One of. appellant’s representatives came to Peoria 9 days after the death, and asked for an autopsy on the body of the deceased, which was granted. After-wards, 16 days after the death, appеllant’s ■ representative advised appellee’s attorney that he considered there was no liability on the policy. The court, at the instance of the plaintiff, instructed the jury if after the death of said Eich the defendant, by its agent, denied liability on the policy, then such denial was a waiver of the provision of the policy requiring proofs of death, and also waived all other notices required by said policy. Appellant claims that while the provision for notice only required notice within a reasonable time after the loss, yet it was a question for the jury whether, under the above facts, notice was given in a reasonable time, and that the court by that instruction withdrew that question from the jury and that the denial of liability, as above recited, was not a waiver of notice or of proof of loss if the requirement of notice within a reasonable time had not been complied with. Assuming that to be the law, can it be fairly presumed that the jury would or should have defeated the plaintiff on the ground of unreasonable delay in giving notice of death? . This court in Sun Accident Ass’n v. Olson,
There was a coroner’s inquest and the jury returned a verdict finding streptococcus infection “received in a manner to this jury unknown” the cause of death. The defendant offered the verdict in evidence, and the court refused to admit that part of it above inclosed in quotation marks. This is argued as error. We do not see why the whole verdict was not competent evidence, but we cannot see that it would have been of any material benefit to appellant to have the jury informed that the coroner’s jury did not know in what manner the injury was inflicted.
Appellant urges that the court erred in permitting hypothetical questions that stated facts and called for opinions of the witnesses as to what did cause instead of what might have caused death. The questions were incorrect in form and all, or somе of them, recited as facts that a woman was afflicted with erysipelas and was waited upon by a. man, and that during the care and attention given the woman the man suffered a cut upon his right index finger; that 5 days after that he suffered a chill and prostration, and was confined to his bed with a swelling in the arm and variable temperature, and died 13 days after the wound of streptococcic toxemia. It cannot be harmful error to recite uncontroverted facts. Appellant says it was harmful to assumе that the man sustained a cut on his finger during the time he was treating his wife, the erysipelas patient. That, and the other recited facts we regard established beyond dispute. We do not see hów the error could have harmed appellant. Appellee’s expert witnesses were also asked how, in their judgment, those germs were communicated to Mr. Rich, through what medium, and the witnesses answered through an abrasion of the skin. Witnesses were asked how the poison of which Mr. Rich died was communicated to 'him, аnd answered that having waited upon his wife, who was suffering from an infectious disease, the man, having suffered from an injury to the sldn whereby it was possible for a germ to obtain access to bis general circulation, that is the most plausible theory. Other witnesses answered that they thought the germs entered the wound through the index finger; that the most probable source of infection was the injury received to the finger, and that they considered the erysipelas from the patient the cause of death, and that the finger was the source of infection. These questions and answers violated the rules of evidence governing expert testimony. If 'there was any reasonable doubt that the insured’s death was caused by a disease germ entering his system through the cut on his finger the contention that the judgment should be reversed because of that error would deserve careful consideration, but the. facts are free from doubt. All a layman needed to learn from experts was that a germ from the head of an erysipelas рatient entering a wound on the finger of the attendant might cause blood poisoning and death. The rest of the problem was easily solved without expert testimony.
Appellant complains of remarks of appellee’s conn-. sel in his address to the jury. The matter is not shown in the bill of exceptions but in the record proper. We do not understand counsel to seriously contend that we can consider the question so presented.
We conclude that the record does not disclose аny reversible error, therefore the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Rehearing
.on rehearing:
It is urged there was a sharp conflict of evidence on the question whether the infection entered through the wound at any time. This claim is mainly based on the testimony of experts that examined the déceased at the inquest or autopsy and testified on the assumption that there was no wound on the finger, admitting if there was one it was the probable port of entry or at least might have been. The evidence that there was a wound is so conclusive that those expert opinions are of little weight.
