Bryant v. Continental Casualty Co.

182 S.W. 673, 107 Tex. 582, 1916 Tex. LEXIS 113
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1916
DocketNo. 2427.
StatusPublished
Cited by97 cases

This text of 182 S.W. 673 (Bryant v. Continental Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryant v. Continental Casualty Co., 182 S.W. 673, 107 Tex. 582, 1916 Tex. LEXIS 113 (Tex. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Chibe Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mrs. Amelia Bryant, joined by her husband, brought this action to recover upon an accident insurance policy issued by the defendant in error to Calvin R. Perry, her brother, in the sum of $2000, in which she was named as beneficiary. The case was tried without a jury, resulting in a judgment for the company, affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. 145 S. W., 636.

Calvin R. Perry suffered a sunstroke on an unusually warm afternoon in the month of August while walking upon the streets of Houston in the ordinary course of his occupation as a collector of accounts, from which he died on the following day. • The issue presented is whether *585 there is any liability under the policy for a death by sunstroke occurring under such circumstances.

The general insuring clause of the policy reads:

“If the insured, while this policy is in force, shall receive personal bodily injury (suicide, sane or insane, not included) which is effected directly and independently of all other causes through external, violent and purely accidental means, and which causes at once and continuously after the accident total inability to engage in any and every labor or occupation, the company will pay indemnity for loss of life, limb, limbs, sight or time resulting therefrom.”

Part VI of the policy, under the title, “Special Accident Indemnities,” contains the following provision:

“If sunstroke, freezing, or hydrophobia, due in either case to external, violent and accidental means, shall result, independently of all other causes, in the death of the insured within ninety days from date of exposure or infection, the company will pay said principal sum as indemnity for loss of life.”

The defense of the casualty company is, that sunstroke is a disease, and therefore not an accidental happening; that as a disease it was named as a risk of the policy; and that no indemnity is due for death resulting from it, under the policy, unless the preceding exposure be itself the consequence of an accident. This is the construction, in other words, which the company insists should be given the term, “due to external, violent, and accidental means,” as used in the policy in relation to sunstroke; and such was the view of the case taken by the District Court and the Court of Civil Appeals, the company being held exempt from liability because Perry voluntarily went into the sun. As illustrative of the casualty company’s theory, we take the following instances from its brief as presenting, in a general way, the state of circumstances necessary to exist, under its contention, for the creation of any liability under a policy of this kind for the suffering of a sunstroke by an assured: The happening of a shipwreck or train wreck, as a consequence of which he is exposed to the sun, with a sunstroke resulting. The breaking down of a vehicle in which he might be riding, causing similar exposure. Or being thrown from a horse, and thereby compelled to walk some distance on a hot day. Etc., etc.

This position, it will be observed, requires that the prior accident be alone regarded as the means by which the sunstroke is effected. If sunstroke is a disease and therefore caused, never accidentally, but naturally, by excessive heat, it follows from the argument that the actual casualty, in such a case, is not the sunstroke, but the preceding accidental occurrence. Dnder this theory all idea of there being any element of accident in the sunstroke itself, or in the operation and effect of the abnormal heat as a direct cause of the stroke, is repudiated; and all that is unforeseen, unexpected, and unusual in the general event is related to merely the prior accident. It declines to consider ordinary sunstroke as having in any sense the quality of an immediate and fortuitous in *586 jury; and treats it merely as a result, and more than that, a result not directly incurred in or produced by an accident, it will be noted, but as only influenced by a condition or situation which an accident creates.

One trouble with this position is that it assumes sunstroke was insured against in the policy merely as a disease, when a vital question in the case is whether such was the purpose of the policy. Another is that it denies any standing as “a means” to that which is essentially the cause, or in any event a very important part of the cause, of every sunstroke, namely, the operation of the rays of the sun if it be the usual form of sunstroke, or the operation of artificial heat if it be induced, as it may be, by other than solar heat (Continental Casuahy Company v. Johnson, 74 Kan., 129, 85 Pac., 545), and is alone that which, in common understanding and in fact, makes the cause of a sunstroke “external and violent.”

There have been certain decisions which announce that sunstroke is a disease. Among them, are Sinclair v. Maritime Passengers Assurance Company (England, 1861), 3 Ellis & Ellis, 478, and Dozier v. Fidelity & Casualty Company of New York (U. S. Dist. Court), 46 Fed., 446. But whatever it may be, technically, it is not regarded as a disease in the popular mind. In the common understanding it is accounted a kind of violent personal injury, from the very idea of sudden and external force canned by the word. If classed by medical authorities as, technically, a disease, as to which it is not improbable that there is a conflict of expert view, to none but an expert medical mind would the provisions of this policy have carried the significance that it was insured against as a disease. To men in general, such as those with whom a company of this kind deals and to whom its policies are issued, whether educated or ignorant, the use of the term in any character of contract, and particularly, we think, in an insurance contract, not generally insuring against death by disease, but against death from accidental injury, would have denoted merely what sunstroke is commonly understood to mean,— heat prostration, frequently a casualty, a species of bodily injury, distinct in its kind and individual in its cause> and of known and not unusual occurrence. With the term having, as it does, this recognized popular meaning distinctly different from any technical significance it may possess, the proposition that the latter must prevail in the construction of the policy, is not to be allowed. But let the question be further tested.

The best method for arriving at the accurate construction of a contract is for a court to simply put itself in the place of the parties, and, having particular regard to the subject matter of the agreement, endeavor to ascertain their intention in their use of the terms employed. Let that method be applied here. What is. the result? That Perry, the assured, intended, under an accident policy, to insure against sunstroke, as, technically, a disease, and, in addition to that, as a disease which could be accidentally effected only in some such involved remote, and improbable way as the casualty company here contends it is possible *587 for a sunstroke to be accidentally caused, or that he understood such to bé the effect of the policy, is hardly to be believed. Nor, in our opinion, is any such intention to be attributed-to the casualty company in the making of the contract, if it is to be credited with a purpose, as it ought to be, of writing an.

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W. 673, 107 Tex. 582, 1916 Tex. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryant-v-continental-casualty-co-tex-1916.