19 Ga. App. 162 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1917
On March 13, 1915, J. W. Wilkins brought an action against the Georgia Casualty Company for $1,000 in the city court of Floyd county, the same being a suit under the terms of a policy of accident insurance, for loss of the sight of an eye. The clause in the policy under which suit was brought, so far as pertinent to an understanding of the case before us, is as follows: “If such injuries . . shall result, independently and exclusively of all other causes in one of the losses enumerated below . . within ninety days from the date of the accident . . the Company will pay the sum set opposite such loss . . for loss of . . sight of one eye, % principal sum. . . Loss shall mean . . with regard to eyes, -entire and irrecoverable loss of sight.” The trial judge granted a nonsuit, on the ground that it was not shown that the loss of the sight of the eye was “irrecoverable,” as required by the terms quoted from the policy. The only question this court is now called upon to decide is whether or not the trial judge erred in sustaining the motion to nonsuit, for the reason indicated.
Dr. L. W. Garard testified for the plaintiff as follows: “I am a practicing physician and do a little surgery. I have been practicing about nine years. I am a graduate from the University of Georgia. In my opinion, assuming that on the 3d day of October, 1914, a piece of steel flew from a wrench or hammer and struck the plaintiff in the center of the cornea of the right eye, and imbedded itself to such an extent that it had to be located by an X ray to be removed, that immediately he lost, from the striking, as soon as it was struck, the vision of that eye, that it has remained lost from then until the present time, in my opinion it would be a permanent injury. I examined Mr. Wilkins’s eye in there a moment ago. There seems to be opacity in the eye there; and some
1-2. We can not agree with the contention of counsel for the plaintiff in error in their application of the doctrine of the “presumption of continuity” as applied to this case. It is argued by counsel that when a state of things is once proved to exist, there is a presumption that it will continue until a change or some adequate cause of change is made to appear. The true doctrine of the rule invoked is that when a condition is shown to exist prior to the trial, there is a legal presumption of its continuity at the time of trial; and the application of this rule should not be applied to a presumption of future continuity. Where the question is whether an injury is recoverable or irrecoverable, there can be no application of the doctrine invoked, as the issue itself relates entirely to the future. The doctrine of presumption of continuity does not raise a presumption that something shown to exist will continue, but raises the presumption that something shown to exist has continued. We do not think that our construction of this doctrine is contravened by the rulings in Anderson v. Blythe, 54 Ga. 507, and Coleman & Burden Co. v. Rice, 105 Ga. 163 (31 S. E. 424), or the ruling in Sasser v. Byrd, 8 Ga. App. 824 (70 S. E. 157), cited by counsel for the plaintiff in error. By the terms of the policy'under which the suit was brought, it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to allege and prove that the injury to his eye, which is the basis of his suit, was not only entire, but also irrecoverable. If, therefore, by the evidence for the plaintiff, the injury to the eye has been established to be “entire,” in accordance with the terms of the policy, there is no presumption of law, arising from such proof, that such condition will continue, so as to shift the burden of proof upon the defendant. Even where the doctrine of presumption of continuity can be properly applied, it is a well-settled principle that presumptions, except conclusive presumptions, must give way to proof; and the plaintiff is therefore compelled to stand upon the evidence introduced in support of his contentions.
It is, therefore, the judgment of this court that the ruling of • the trial judge granting a nonsuit was erroneous.
Judgment reversed.