288 Mass. 206 | Mass. | 1934
This case comes before us on the exceptions of the plaintiff, who seeks to recover upon a policy of accident insurance. The trial judge made these findings: The defendant issued to the plaintiff a policy of accident insurance. The plaintiff suffered an injury solely through external, violent and accidental means on March 27, 1931. That injury consisted in the fracture of the middle phal
The chief controversy at the trial appears to have been whether the neurofibroma resulted from the injury which broke the fingers, or from an independent cause. The testimony on this point came chiefly from physicians and surgeons and was in considerable conflict. The trial judge examined the right hand of the plaintiff. There was evidence that the fractures of the fingers were comminuted and not compound and did not extend into the joint, and that there was no surface disturbance or injury.
These findings mean that the condition of inability of the plaintiff at the time of the trial and for a period subsequent to six months immediately following the injury to perform the work of his employment was not due to the accident but was due to" the neurofibroma, which appeared three ■weeks after the accident and had no causal connection with the accident. Since this is an action at law, these findings must stand and be accepted as true provided there is any evidence to support them. Moss v. Old Colony Trust Co. 246 Mass. 139, 143.
The defendant by its policy of insurance described the plaintiff as a “Draw frame operator, and Spinner by occupation.” Other parts of the policy material to the pres
The plaintiff excepted to the refusal of the trial judge to grant certain requests for rulings and findings of fact, to the granting of one request for ruling presented by the defendant, and to the inadequacy of the damages awarded.
The denial of these requests, so far as they ask for findings of fact, presents no question of law. A trial judge in an action at law is not required to pass upon such requests. His duty is to pass upon relevant requests for rulings of law and to decide the case. Davis v. Boston Elevated Railway, 235 Mass. 482, 494-495.
The clauses quoted from the policy are parts of a single contract. They are to be construed as constituting a contract between the parties intended to be a complete and harmonious instrument designed to accomplish a reasonable end. Every word and phrase must be presumed to have
The insuring clause in express and indubitable words confines the liability of the defendant to such consequences as come to the plaintiff “directly and exclusively of all other causes, from bodily injury” sustained as prescribed in the policy. It imposes no liability upon the defendant for harm befalling the plaintiff from a cause other than that stated. The insuring clause, therefore, does not afford protection to the plaintiff against such injury as he suffered from the neurofibroma because (according to the findings) that was not causally connected with the injury received by him on March 27, 1931. Thus the ground of liability on the part of the defendant is specified in unambiguous language. The extent of the liability of the defendant to the plaintiff arising from the specified injury is divided into two classes: (1) that resulting in total disability and (2) that resulting in partial disability. In both classes it is a condition precedent to recovery that the disability must arise from an injury in conformity to the terms specified in the insuring clause, and not from some other cause. In order that the disability may be total, it must commence immediately on the date of the accident, operate continuously, and incapacitate the insured utterly from performing his occupation. The disability is partial when it prevents the insured from performing work substantially essential to the duties of his occupation. There was no error of law disclosed on this record in the interpretation of the policy by the trial judge. There is no incompatibility between the several provisions of the policy. There is nothing illegal about the partial disability clause. See G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 175, § 108; O’Roak v. Lloyds Casualty Co. 285 Mass. 532, 535-536.
The fundamental question is whether there was evidence to support the finding that the effects of the bodily injury received by the plaintiff on March 27, 1931, “directly and exclusively of all other causes” produced “total disability” for a period of six months and “partial disability” for a
Several of the plaintiff’s requests for rulings of law were not sound because they did not confine the disability of the plaintiff to the “effects resulting directly and exclusively
Exceptions overruled.