Cantor v. Metropolitan L. Ins. Co.

164 A. 145, 108 Pa. Super. 1, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 140
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 10, 1932
DocketAppeal 318
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 164 A. 145 (Cantor v. Metropolitan L. Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cantor v. Metropolitan L. Ins. Co., 164 A. 145, 108 Pa. Super. 1, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 140 (Pa. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

The plaintiff had a life insurance policy in the defendant company which contained a clause waiving payment of premiums and providing for the payment of monthly benefits to the insured on his furnishing due proof to the company that he had become totally and permanently disabled and would for his lifetime be unable to perform any work or engage in any busi *3 ness for compensation or profit. The relevant provisions of the policy are printed in the margin. 1

In November, 1922, plaintiff gave notice to the company that he was totally and permanently disabled within the meaning of the policy, and, after receipt of proofs submitted and investigation, the company paid him disability benefits of $100 a month from May, 1923 up to and including December, 1931, and waived the payment by him of premiums on the policy during that period. During January, 1932 it refused to pay him any further benefits, on the ground that he was not totally disabled. He offered to submit himself for examination to the defendant’s medical examiner,1 but was refused. He brought this action for the two months benefits payable January 14 and February 14, 1932, respectively. The case was tried in the municipal court before a judge without a jury. From the judgment for the plaintiff, based on the finding of the judge in his favor, the defendant has appealed.

Dr. Leavitt, who attended the plaintiff from the inception of the disease, testified that he was suffering from progressive spinal muscular atrophy, which, he *4 said, “is a condition affecting the motor system or central nervous system that produces paralysis and wasting, progressive over a period of years. It is an incurable disease, progressive in its degree, and in nearly all cases results in the death of the individual.” He further testified that “there is no medicine known that has any effect in stopping the progress of the disease;” and that “his [plaintiff’s] condition has gotten progressively and steadily worse;” and again, “When I saw him in 1922 it—he was complaining of weakness in the entire upper extremity and I have seen him on an average of once every four months since that time and I should say the left upper extremity is now practically paralyzed, although he can now move it around a little bit but for no useful purpose, not only have the muscles become atrophied in the upper arm but the entire shoulder girdle has become atrophied with fibrillations and twitching of the muscles which is an indication of the death of the muscles due to the death of the spinal cord. That condition is spreading over the entire upper extremity involving the right arm so that it now shows a wasting of the hand and forearm and the group of muscles to the right hand. He has fairly good power in the shoulder group of muscles but there also exists some wasting, atrophy in the left lower extremity and there' is a wasting and loss of power in the left extremity and he complains of pain in the spine in the neck, and the back region and the cervical-dorsal region that is steadily progressing, becoming very pronounced, and arthritis which prevents movement of the spine forward and back and rotation of the head to either side to any degree. I sent bim to the Graduate Hospital of the University some few months ago to have an X-ray of the spine, because that is evidently becoming very pronounced, to see whether there was any malignancy, but the X-ray showed no malignancy, just an arthritis......This man is in an absolutely incurable condition......I *5 ■would say lie is unable to engage in any useful occupation which has been his customary occupation.” Q. “Is he able to engage in any useful occupation for compensation or profit?” A. “I would say no.” As to claimant’s disability being a medical question, see Runkle v. U. S., 42 Fed. (2d) 804.

The doctor admitted that the plaintiff’s mentality was not affected; that he could walk for short distances ; that he might be able to sit in his drug store and give directions, or pick up a package and hand it to a customer and receive the money for it, or give a salesman an order; but said that he could not compound a prescription or conduct the business.

The defendant claims it was entitled to judgment in its favor because of these admissions and because the plaintiff himself admitted that he was the “manager” of the drug store which was conducted under his name. He was a registered pharmacist, by profession, before he became ill.

A careful reading of the evidence satisfies us, as it did the court below, that the plaintiff was not the “manager” of the store in the way that term is usually employed; that his explanation of his activities qualified it so as to cover only a few desultory acts in connection with the actual management of the store by his wife and son, the latter of whom was a registered apprentice. Such prescriptions as the latter could not fill were sent to Benjamin Zipin, a cousin, who was a registered pharmacist at 13th and Jefferson Streets. The plaintiff’s bedroom was directly over the store room; he lay there a good deal of the time, and when downstairs sat outside the store, or in the store room, where he occasionally may have handed la customer a small purchase, or received the money for it, or signed a delivery receipt. It was not his usual practice. The actual work of conducting the store, buying goods, paying for them, making sales and receiving the money was done principally by his wife and son or sons. It *6 would have been impossible for him to have taken, held or performed the job of conducting, managing, or even clerking or holding any paid position in this or any other store.

With these facts in mind, do the provisions of the policy before referred to require a directed finding for the defendant, or was the matter a question of fact for the judge sitting as a jury? We think the latter.

The answer depends on the construction to be given the term “totally disabled,” as it is used in the policy. If it requires absolute physical and mental helplessness, the judgment of the court below should be reversed; but if it is used relatively rather than literally, and means such disability as will prevent the insured from engaging in and carrying on any gainful business or occupation and himself performing a substantial and essential part of the work incident thereto, then it would be for a jury—or in a trial by a judge without a jury, for the judge—to decide, unless the evidence was clear and decisive one way or the other, whether the insured was totally disabled within the terms of the policy.

In Losnecki v. Mutual Life Insurance Co. of N. Y., 106 Pa. Superior Ct. 259, 161 Atl. 434, we had occasion to construe the word “permanently” as used in the phrase “totally and permanently disabled” in a similar policy of insurance, and we held that it was not used in the sense of absolute perpetuity, but relatively in contradistinction from “temporary” or “transient.” We think the policy, considering the whole clause involved, requires a similar construction of the word “totally”; that the term “totally disabled” is not used in á sense of absolute helplessness, mentally and physically, but rather, as was expressed by the Supreme Court of Rhode Island, in Pannone v. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co., 157 Atl.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 A. 145, 108 Pa. Super. 1, 1933 Pa. Super. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cantor-v-metropolitan-l-ins-co-pasuperct-1932.