Bailey v. Interstate Casualty Co.

8 A.D. 127, 40 N.Y.S. 513, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 942, 1896 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2302
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 8 A.D. 127 (Bailey v. Interstate Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Interstate Casualty Co., 8 A.D. 127, 40 N.Y.S. 513, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 942, 1896 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2302 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Merwin, J.:

This action is brought ■ to recover weekly indemnities to the amount of $481.50 under a policy issued by the defendant to the plaintiff on the 28th of April, 1894, by which the defendant insured the plaintiff for the term of twelve months “ against bodily injuries, sustained through external, violent and accidental means.”

In the complaint it is alleged that on the 6th of November, 1894, the plaintiff sustained bodily injuries through external, violent and accidental means by reason whereof, independently of all other causes, he was disabled for the period of twenty-two weeks; that the plaintiff is a physician and surgeon, and at the date stated, while he was in his carriage in the highway between the towns of Hague and Ticonderoga, and administering to himself in his leg for extreme exhaustion, medicine with a hypodermic needle, his carriage suddenly started, by reason whereof he accidentally inserted the needle deeply into his leg, causing an injury thereto, and on account of and by means of which blood poisoning and suppuration immediately set in, whereby the plaintiff was disabled as before stated.

Most of the material allegations of the complaint were denied by the answer, and it was averred that the injuries complained of were not occasioned by any accident within the terms of the policy. It was also set up by way of further defense that the injuries complained of resulted from voluntary exposure to unnecessary danger, and wholly or in part from poison accidentally or otherwise taken and administered by plaintiff to himself pursuant to a habit and practice of taking and administering such poison as a stimulant; [129]*129also that the injuries resulted directly or indirectly from the use of anaesthetics or narcotics voluntarily administered by the plaintiff to himself.

Upon the trial it appeared that in November, 1894, the plaintiff' was a practicing physician. He testifies that he was not robust on account of an injury which he had received a year or two before-which caused him a good deal of pain and he was somewhat emaciated,, and v hen he took long rides became very much exhausted; that on the sixth of November he was on his way home from Hague village-driving in a booted road cart, and the horse did not like to stand very well; that he was very much exhausted and had no stimulant and would either have to take a stimulant or use morphia in order to get along and get home in any comfort ; that lie thereupon dissolved a one-eiglith grain tablet of morphia in antiseptic water and injected it into his leg with a hypodermic needle by inserting the needle into the skin under the skin and the tissue below; that the next day his leg was sore and a little inflamed, and after that became worse so that he was disabled for about twenty weeks; that the difficulty was inflammation resulting from the puncture of the hypodermic needle; that the effect he intended to produce by taking the morphia was nothing but a slight stimulating effect and he did not take it at all for a narcotic effect; that he had probably used the hypodermic needle 10,000 times in his practice, and had used it before on himself; that doctors give it to subdue inflammation of any kind and to relieve pain or nervous exhaustion, and in medicinal quantities as used by him it was not a poison; that he was sitting still in his road cart when he took it; that he never knew of a case or saw a case reported where morphia injected into a person’s leg acted as a poison upon the tissues when injected with a hypodermic needle, and that, in his opinion, the morphia did not cause the injury which he sustained, and he attributed the poisoning of the blood and the inflammation to the same cause as if he had received the prick of a pin or a blister; that he attributed the inflammation to the use of the needle and not to the substance which the needle injected into the veins; that he imagined there was nothing on the needle that conveyed any blood poisoning; that there might have been some peculiar condition of the system at that time; that [130]*130erysipelas inflammation is a possible cause that would produce the inflammation; that there was cellular tissue where he put the needle in, and from the horse starting it may possibly have gone deeper and injured the tendon or something of that sort; that in all other cases where he had administered morphia he never had any trouble with the after effect —■ nothing more than a little superficial inflammation that would last but ten or twelve hours and pass away.

Dr. McLaughlin, who attended the plaintiff during his illness, states that after a day or two the limb became badly swollen, and inflamed, and he recognized it as a case of cellulitis; that after it had progressed for five or six days he opened the leg and that a large quantity of pus was discharged, and that after a week or so he made an incision from the knee to near the ankle joint and treated it for three or four months, and it was a severe form of cellulitis; that in his judgment the morphia had nothing whatever to do with the condition he found; that the same results would have occurred if the needle had been inserted without anything in it, or even with water in it; he did not think the morphia had anything to do with it. It was the wound. It was the introduction of the needle together with some condition of the skin or needle that caused the inflammatory trouble; he attributed the condition of the patient to the wound. Either the needle was not clean or the skin was not.”

At the close of plaintiff’s evidence a nonsuit was granted, the court being of the opinion that the illness of the plaintiff was not in .any sense an injury sustained through external, violent and accidental means, and that is the main question on this appeal.

The plaintiff claims that upon the evidence this question should have been submitted to the jury.

The plaintiff voluntarily injected the morphine, and if that caused the injury it could hardly be accidental. Upon the evidence, however, it might have been found that the injury was in no way attributable to the morphine. If not, then the question would be whether the injury was attributable to the introduction of the needle deeper than was intended and so an irritation produced which induced the inflammation of the cellular tissue, or whether by reason of the needle or skin not being clean, something was, in the act of puncturing, transferred to the wound which induced the resulting condition.

[131]*131The defendant says it was not an accident because the plaintiff voluntarily inserted the needle. According to Webster an accident is an event that takes place without one’s foresight or expectation ; an event which proceed! from an unknown cause, or is an unusual effect of a known cause, and, therefore, not expected.

In Mutual Accident Assn. v. Barry (131 U. S. 100) the insured voluntarily jumped from a platform four or five feet high to the ground, and it was alleged that the jar from the jump produced a stricture of the duodenum, from the effects of which death ensued. The court, at page 121, says: “ It must be presumed, not only that the deceased intended to alight safely, but thought that he would. The jury were, on all the evidence, at liberty to say that it was an accident that he did not.

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Bluebook (online)
8 A.D. 127, 40 N.Y.S. 513, 74 N.Y. St. Rep. 942, 1896 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-interstate-casualty-co-nyappdiv-1896.