The plaintiff • cannot recover under Clause B of the policy, unless the felon on his finger was due to an accidental injury resulting from some violent, external and involuntary cause, leaving external and visible marks of a wound upon the finger, which totally disabled him from the date of the accident. He could not tell when nor that he received an injury to the finger upon which the felon appeared. But there was evidence tending to show that on July 7, 1911, he was working as road commissioner with men and teams drawing gravel and replacing fallen stones in the abutment of a bridge, and that after dinner of that day he helped his men in replacing such stones, using an iron crowbar. He did no manual labor after thus helping to. replace the stones, up to the time in the forenoon of the next day when, according to the tendency of the evidence, his finger began to swell and became painful. The physician who examined the plaintiff’s finger in the afternoon of the latter day did not notice any abrasion of the skin. The finger was badly swollen, inflamed and reddened. It grew worse steadily, and a frog felon of the most severe kind developed.
We think the evidence fairly and reasonably tended to show that the felon resulted from, and was the natural consequence of, a bruise of the finger within less than twenty-four hours from the time of the injury, without any intervening, cause. That it was an accidental injury if such a bruise was received by the plaintiff, no question is made.
Did the felon constitute an external and visible mark of wound, within the meaning of clause B of the policy! The
We are of the opinion that the word “wounds” as used in clause B of the policy upon which the action before us is based, should be given the so-called legal, rather than the surgical, construction, and that it includes the bruise of the plaintiff’s finger, if any there was, of which the felon was the direct and natural consequence; and that in such circumstances the felon constituted “external and visible marks” of the wound left upon the plaintiff’s body by the accidental injury, within the meaning of that clause of the policy.
The claim that no recovery can be had under- clause B, because the plaintiff’s injury did not “totally disable him from the date of the accident,” must also be determined against the defendant on the tendency of the evidence and the construction of the contract. As already seen, the evidence tended to show that the felon appeared within less than twenty-four hours from the time of the injury. It further tended to show that total disability resulted from the time of its appearance. The question then is, Was such disability within less than twenty-four hours after the time of the accident, though on the next calendar day, “from the date of the accident” within the meaning of that clause of the policy? A construction making the words “from the date of the accident” mean from the calendar day on which the accident occurred, would be so unreasonable in some cases as to render it almost certain that such a construction was not contemplated by the parties to the contract. For instance, the insured might meet with accidental injuries between eleven and twelve o’clock at night, it being within the last hour of the calendar day, and yet if that is the date contemplated by the policy, the total disability of the insured must begin within the same hour and perhaps instantly, in order to entitle him to the benefits provided by clause B. Assuming that this provision was inserted in the contract by the insurer with intentions rea
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.