Anderson v. Ætna Life Insurance

74 A. 1051, 75 N.H. 375, 1909 N.H. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 7, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 74 A. 1051 (Anderson v. Ætna Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Ætna Life Insurance, 74 A. 1051, 75 N.H. 375, 1909 N.H. LEXIS 60 (N.H. 1909).

Opinion

*377 Pabsons, C. J.

The policy upon its face insures against loss of life, limbs, sight, or time, and states that the principal sum insured is $5,000 and that the weekly indemnity for total disability is $25. The plaintiff was injured during the life and within the terms of the policy, and offered evidence from which the court has drawn the inference that he was totally disabled within the meaning of the policy because of the results of the injuries proved. There is no contention that the evidence was not legally sufficient to authorize the finding of total disability. Why, then, should not the defendants pay the plaintiff the indemnity for total disability promised by the face of the policy ? If the plaintiff’s total disability is permanent, as it appears to be conceded it will be, he would, if he has any right to such indemnity, be entitled to weekly indemnity for 200 weeks, thus exhausting the full principal sum. But the engagements upon the face of the policy are made “ subject to the conditions and benefits printed on the following pages.”

The defendants, for the purpose of escaping their apparent liability for the principal sum insured, contend that one of the “ benefits ” to which the plaintiff is entitled is the payment to him of one fifth the principal sum, or $1,000, for the loss of his left hand, which was one of the injuries he received; and that a correct construction of the conditions of the contract releases them, upon payment of the fixed sum for the disability produced by this injury, from their engagement to indemnify the plaintiff for the total disability actually resulting from the injuries he received. The main controversy, therefore, is whether the plaintiff can recover the weekly indemnity of $25 stipulated in the policy, for the total disability resulting from an accident occurring during the life of the policy, or whether his recovery must be limited to the fixed sum which the policy provided should be paid for the removal of the left hand at or above the wrist. The plaintiff, standing on his policy, in this suit is necessarily bound by its provisions, and the defendants are liable only in accordance with the terms of the contract. Johnson v. Casualty Co., 73 N. H. 259, 260, 261, and cases cited. This does not mean that an insured who has been fraudulently induced to enter into an unconscionable contract, or deceitfully persuaded to accept as evidence of the contract a policy which misrepresents it, has no remedy, but merely that in a suit on the policy he must accept the contract proved by the evidence which he offers. The only question therefore is: What was the contract?

“ ‘In construing insurance policies courts are governed by the same general rules which are applicable to other written contracts. That is to say, it is the duty of the court to adopt that construction of the policy which, in its judgment, shall best correspond with the intention of the parties.’ Stone v. Insurance Co., 69 N. H. 438. The *378 intention of the parties so found from competent evidence is the contract the court in each case is called upon to enforce.” Johnson v. Casualty Co., 73 N. H. 259, 262. The evidence from which such intention is to be found is the language of the written instrument, read in the light of the situation and general purpose of the parties. As men in general do not enter into contracts that are absurd or frivolous, or understanding^ include in a written contract stipulations tending to defeat its main purpose, the inconvenience, hardship, or absurdity of one construction, or its contradiction of the general purpose of the contract, is weighty evidence that such meaning was not intended, when the language is open to a construction which is neither absurd nor frivolous, and is in agreement with the general purpose of the parties. Sanders v. Insurance Co., 72 N. H. 485, 497,498; Kendall v. Green, 67 N. H. 557, 562, 563. “Insurance, then, is a contract of indemnity,” under which “ satisfaction is to be made to the person insured, for loss he may have sustained.” Cummings v. Insurance Co., 55 N. H. 457, 458, 459.

The general purpose of the contract under consideration was therefore to indemnify the insured for loss resulting from accidental personal injury. With such end in view, it would be natural to expect that the greater the loss, the larger would be the sum payable- as indemnity. Such are the main provisions of the contract. For injuries producing a partial disability, disabling the insured from the performance of one or more of the duties of his occupation, payment aí the rate of $10 per week for twenty-six weeks is stipulated. For a. total disability, $25 per week is agreed to be paid during the continuance of such disability, for a time sufficient to exhaust the policy. The limit, therefore, of indemnity provided for partial disability is $260, while for permanent total disability the full face of the policy, or $5,000, is payable. The policy also prescribes the sums payable for certain specified results following an injury. For loss of life, death resulting within ninety days of the injury,’ the loss of both hands at or above the wrists, both feet at or above the ankles, one hand and one foot at those places, or the irrecoverable loss of the sight of both eyes, the full principal sum is payable; for the similar loss of the right hand, or of either leg at or above knee, one half the principal sum is payable; for the similar removal of the left hand, or either foot at or above the ankle, one fifth that sum is payable; and for the loss of one eye, one eighth is promised. These provisions grade the payment according to the injury. The eases where the full sum is payable are cases which would ordinarily result in total permanent disability, and the policy provides for the payment of the same sum which would be called for by the stipulation as to weekly indemnity; while where a less sum is provided the cases are of a disability not permanently total, *379 and the effect of the provisions is to define the liability of the insurer for such disabilities, for all these provisions are “ in lieu of weekly indemnity.” An insured who is immediately, continuously, and wholly disabled from prosecuting any and every kind of business pertaining to his occupation for the term of 200 weeks (using the language of the policy defining a permanent total disability) has, it would be generally considered, suffered a more serious loss than one who has merely lost his left hand at the wrist; and one who suffers such permanent total disability resulting from other injuries in the same accident would incontrovertibly suffer greater loss if the removal of his left hand were added to his other injuries.

In view of the general purpose of insurance — the satisfaction of the loss — and the general provisions of this policy which have been mentioned, it would be expected that for the greater loss the policy would in all cases provide the greater recompense. But the defendants, while conceding that they would otherwise be liable to pay the plaintiff weekly indemnity for the total disability resulting to him from the injuries received, contend that because he had the misfortune to lose his left hand they are only liable to pay one fifth the amount insured.

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Bluebook (online)
74 A. 1051, 75 N.H. 375, 1909 N.H. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-tna-life-insurance-nh-1909.