104 Mo. App. 54 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
The defendant is a mutual benefit association organized under the laws of Illinois and is doing an insurance business on the .assessment plan. On June 2, 1897, plaintiff became a member of the defendant association and received a certificate of membership therein, which contains a contract whereby the defendant insured the life of plaintiff in favor of his wife in the sum of two thousand dollars. The certificate of insurance also provides that if plaintiff should become disabled the association will pay him such an
“If a member lose a foot or hand by accident, he shall receive one-fourth of the amount of his certificate of membership in cash and the other three-fourths at death. ’ ’
The certificate states that it was issued upon the express condition that the insured should comply with the constitution, laws, rules and regulations of the order then in force or that might thereafter be enacted. In May, 1900, the defendant association amended its constitution by enacting section 106, article 13, which reads as follows:
“If a member lose a foot or hand by accident, resulting in amputation or severance at or above the ankle or wrist, he shall receive one-fourth of the amount of his certificate of membership in cash.”
On October 24, 1901, plaintiff, while pursuing his usual avocation (operating a brick plant) accidentally caught his left hand under a brick press and it was severely lacerated and injured. The suit was to recover for the loss of the left hand. Plaintiff recovered a judgment of $500 from which the defendant appealed.
There are but two questions presented by the briefs and arguments of counsel (all other questions arising at the trial are conceded to have been correctly resolved in favor of the plaintiff). The first question is, does the evidence show that plaintiff lost his hand within the meaning of the certificate of insurance 1 The evidence is that the brick press came down on plaintiff’s left hand and mashed off the two middle fingers at'the knuckle joint and the index finger above the second joint.
Dr. T. E. Walter testified that he was called to. treat the injury at the time it happened and that he. found the hand pretty badly mashed up, but not so badly injured as to require an amputation of the entire hand in
Plaintiff testified that the circulation in his hand was bad; that his hand got cold and even in hot weather he had to keep it in his pocket or hold it in his right hand to keep it warm; that it was weak and got tired very soon when he attempted to use it; that he used it •all. he could but found it was practically useless as a hand; that he was keeping a small general store and assisted his wife in selling goods but could not use his left hand to tie up packages; that he could lift light articles for a little while with it but in trying to handle queens-ware, such as cups and saucers and plates, he would let them fall, they would slip out of his hand and he could not hold on to them; that the leaders in the back of his hand seemed to be drawn and on account of this he could not bend his little finger without pain, and that his thumb was weak and the thumb and little finger were of very little use; that he never gave his consent to the passage of section 106, article 13, supra, and did not know that any change had been made in the constitution until after he had received his injury.
There was countervailing evidence not material to be noticed in this discussion as the question for solution is, should the court have nonsuited the plaintiff on his own evidence? In other words, does the evidence introduced on behalf of plaintiff tend to show that he lost his left hand within the meaning of the certificate of insurance? The term “accidentally” in a policy, it has been repeatedly held, is used in its ordinary and popular sense. United States Mutual Accident Association
In Sheanon v. Pacific Mutual Life Ins. Co., 77 Wis. 618, it was held that the entire destruction of both a person’s feet by paralysis, caused by an accidental pistol wound in the back, was within the provisions of an accident insurance policy, providing for the loss of two entire feet, notwithstanding they were not amputated from the body.
In Sneck v. Traveler’s Ins. Co. of Hartford, 88 Hun 94, the plaintiff was injured by an accident. His insurance policy provided for the payment of certain sums if by certain enumerated causes he should lose an entire hand by severance. The evidence tended to show that about one-half of plaintiff’s hand, anatomically considered, was cut off by a planer, but that the rest of the hand was absolutely useless. Plaintiff was nonsuited by the trial court. On appeal the Supreme Court of New York said that inasmuch as some men might conclude from the evidence that for all practical purposes to which a hand is adapted there was an entire loss of the use thereof; while others might consider that neither in its anatomical construction nor in its practical use as-a hand was it entirely destroyed, the question was one of fact for the jury and it was erroneous for the court to decide it as a matter of law.
We are of the opinion that the phrase, ‘ ‘ should lose a hand,” used in section 1, article 12, of the constitution of the defendant association, in force when plaintiff received his certificate of insurance, was used in its ordinary and popular sense and does not mean that there should be a total destruction of the hand, anatomically speaking, but that the loss of the use of it for the purposes to which a hand is adapted would be a loss of it, within the meaning of section 1, supra, of the laws of the society. The physician who operated on his hand and treated it afterwards testified that it was lost in the sense that it was of no practical use. The evidence of
The second question presented for solution is whether or not the contract of insurance must be interpreted by section 1, article 12, of the constitution in force at the time of its issuance or by the amendment of May, 1900. In his application for membership and insurance plaintiff agreed to conform in all respects to the constitution, laws, rules and usages of the order then in force or which might be adopted thereafter by the supreme council of the association. By reason of this agreement and a similar one in the certificate of membership and insurance it is contended that plaintiff is bound by section 106, article 13, supra, passed in May, 1900, and could not recover for the reason he had not lost his whole hand. In the case of Morton v. Supreme Council of Royal League, 100 Mo. App. 76, 73 S. W. 259 Judge Goode of this court made an exhaustive review of the authorities on this question, citing numerous cases in this and other States and conclusively demonstrated that the doctrine is well established that stipulations in a contract of insurance like the one in hand, to comply with future by-laws and regulations, mean the member will comply with such by-laws, rules and regulations as relate to his duties as a member of the association, but do not mean that the society may interfere with the essential provisions of the contract of insurance, and that it is powerless, by by-laws or otherwise, to change or modify the essentials of the contract of insurance without the express consent of the member. 'We adhere to this ruling and hold that the certificate of insurance is in nowise affected by section 106, article 13, supra.
The judgment is affirmed.