Aetna Life Insurance Company v. June Kegley, a Widow

389 F.2d 348
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 9, 1967
Docket23437_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 389 F.2d 348 (Aetna Life Insurance Company v. June Kegley, a Widow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aetna Life Insurance Company v. June Kegley, a Widow, 389 F.2d 348 (5th Cir. 1967).

Opinions

NOEL, District Judge:

This appeal is taken on the ground that the district court’s instructions to the jury pertaining to sole cause of death and visible contusion or wound on the exterior of the body were not in conformity with the language of the accident insurance policy or with the Texas law. We agree. The judgment of the district court is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to enter judgment for Aetna Life Insurance Company.

In 1961, Aetna Life Insurance Company issued a group accident policy to Halliburton Company for the benefit of the company employees. Joseph Felix Keg-ley, deceased husband of appellee, was an employee and entitled to coverage under this policy on the date of his death.

Kegley was forty years old, considered to be a good worker and appeared to be in good health immediately before his death. In his work for Halliburton, Kegley was described as a treater, a cementer, and a supervising foreman of the frac crews.

During the five-day period preceding death, Mr. Kegley was under some emotional strain and had been working between ten and nineteen hours a day. After sleeping about four hours, Kegley reported for work on the morning of December 30, 1961. He began the day by loading out a Halliburton truck, which included lifting a number of 100-pound sacks of chemicals and some pipe. Keg-ley drove the truck to a lease site. After arriving at the lease, he set up a frac-o-meter and pressure recorder (weighing 75-85 pounds and 45-50 pounds, respectively). This was work he normally, although intermittently, performed. Keg-ley did not complain of any difficulties, and nothing unusual was reported.

When the employee of the lessee arrived, Kegley and another Halliburton employee walked over to meet him. After walking about fifty feet, Kegley grabbed onto a nearby truck and immediately fell to the ground, unconscious. He never regained consciousness. Several witnesses to the incident recalled that after he had collapsed, his lips turned a bluish color.

An ambulance took Kegley to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead upon arrival. The attending physican, Dr. Fred Prout, concluded that death was caused by a coronary thrombosis and recorded this conclusion on the death certificate.1 No autopsy was performed.

[350]*350June Kegley, the widow of deceased and plaintiff below, gave Aetna notice of the death, but Aetna has refused to recognize the death as one covered by the terms of the group policy.

Trial was to a jury, which returned a verdict for the widow, and judgment was entered accordingly.

The pertinent provisions of the policy read as follows:

“If an employee suffers a bodily injury caused by an accident and as a direct result of such injury and, to the exclusion of all other causes * * * [sustains a covered loss, he may recover] * * * provided:
******
“(b) the injury is evidenced by one or more visible contusions or wounds on the exterior of the body, except in the case of drowning; and “(c) the loss resulting from the injury is not excluded from coverage in accordance with Section 3 * * *
* * * * * *
“Section 3. Exclusions No insurance is provided and no benefits shall be payable * * * if the loss * * * is caused or contributed to by, or is the consequence of, or is in any way attributable to, any of the following excluded risks, even though the proximate or precipitating cause of said loss or disability is a bodily injury caused by an accident :
“(a) bodily or mental infirmity; or
******
“(c) disease of any kind, except a pyo-genic infection attributable solely to and * * * the proximate result of an injury not excluded. * * * ”

It is the contention of appellee that overexertion for four or five days preceding death caused a blood vessel to rupture, thereby releasing an abnormal amount of blood into a coronary artery, which caused the artery to become blocked or occluded, producing a coronary thrombosis. Appellee argues that this was a “bodily injury caused by an accident,” and that recovery can be had under the policy provisions. Appellee further argues that the blueness in the lips observed after Kegley’s attack met the policy requirement that there be “one or more visible contusions or wounds on the exterior of the body.”

It is the contention of Aetna that Keg-ley was suffering from atherosclerosis, a degenerative heart disease which results in the narrowing of blood vessels, and that the disease contributed to or caused an occlusion of the artery, a coronary thrombosis. Aetna further contends that blueness in the lips is not a visible contusion or wound on the exterior of the body.

At trial, a considerable amount of medical testimony was received. Plaintiff offered the testimony of Dr. Fred Prout, who had been Kegley’s physician for a number of years. He was the only medical witness who examined Kegley. Dr. Prout stated that Kegley had no prior history of heart trouble.

Dr. Prout had last examined Kegley in late September of 1961, after Kegley had suffered an attack of virus influenza. On making his diagnosis, Dr. Prout found Kegley to be suffering from some embarrassment of the heart muscles and the vessels surrounding the heart. Kegley’s blood pressure, however, was normal. The doctor asked that Kegley return at a later date for a complete physical examination but he did not do so.

Dr. Prout stated that he bowled with Kegley weekly and that this continued after the last examination; that Kegley never complained of any illness or pain; and that when last seen by the doctor, Kegley appeared to be in good health.

After hearing counsel for the appellee state a series of hypothetical facts corresponding to those surrounding the death of Kegley, Dr. Prout gave his opinion [351]*351that the coronary thrombosis was caused by overexertion.

The same hypothetical facts were stated to two other medical experts called by the appellee. They, too, were of the opinion that overexertion, fatigue, and mental stress and strain caused a blood vessel to rupture, and that the resulting hemorrhage caused the coronary thrombosis. Assuming Kegley had a normal heart, the two doctors gave their opinions that overexertion could have been the sole cause of the coronary thrombosis.

The appellant called one medical expert who was of the opinion that there could be no coronary thrombosis without preexisting disease (atherosclerotic coronary heart disease), and, therefore, Kegley could not have had a normal heart at the time of the attack leading to his death.

The district judge, over the objections of appellant, gave the jury the following instructions:

Under the law of Texas, if said overexertion, overfatigue, physical and mental stress for the period of four to five days preceding the death * * * was a proximate cause of his death, by either causing the coronary thrombosis, or by aggravating the preexisting disease, if any, * * * under the law a bodily injury2 occurring under such circumstances would be one to the exclusion of all other causes.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
389 F.2d 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aetna-life-insurance-company-v-june-kegley-a-widow-ca5-1967.