Cary v. Preferred Accident Insurance

106 N.W. 1055, 127 Wis. 67, 1906 Wisc. LEXIS 182
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 106 N.W. 1055 (Cary v. Preferred Accident Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cary v. Preferred Accident Insurance, 106 N.W. 1055, 127 Wis. 67, 1906 Wisc. LEXIS 182 (Wis. 1906).

Opinion

Siebeckee, J.

The defendant insured Eugene Cary for the term prescribed in the policy “against the effects of bodily injury caused solely by external, violent, and accidental means,” in the sums and upon the conditions specified, and among other things agreed that, “if death shall result from such injury within ninety (90) days from the date thereof, the said company will pay the stun of $5,000” to the beneficiaries designated in the policy. There is no controversy but that Mr. Cary sustained an injury to his right leg, which [71]*71caused an abrasion of the skin, that bacteria, .causing septi-csemia -or blood poisoning, entered bis system through such abrasion, and that his death resulted therefrom; but there is a wide divergence between the claims of the parties as to what was the proximate cause of Mr. Cary’s death under the established facts in the case. One provision of the contract is: “This insurance does not cover . . . any case of disability or death whatever, except where the claimant shall furnish to the company direct and positive proof that such disability or death resulted proximately and solely from accidental causes.” The jury found specifically that Mr. Cary’s death resulted “proximately and solely from bodily injury caused solely by external, violent, and accidental means.” This finding is assailed upon the ground that it is impeached by the undisputed facts established by the evidence and the findings in the special verdict. These findings are, in effect, that bacteria, causing septicaemia or blood poisoning; entered Mr. Cary’s system through the abrasion of the skin caused by Mr. Cary’s accidental fall, and that his death was immediately caused by the septicaemia produced frión the infection by such bacteria. This contention involves the inquiry as to what is meant under the law of insurance by the proximate cause as applied and used by the parties to the contract. The term “proximate cause” as here employed must be understood to have been used by the parties to the contract in its common and accepted meaning, as adopted and approved in the law under like conditions and circumstances. While attempts to define it are numerous and the phraseology employed in these attempts differs in the use of terms, they all aim to express a certain and definite meaning, which has been observed and applied on many occasions in the decisions of this court. The proximate relation of cause and effect, establishing legal responsibility, implies that the result produced had its inception in some responsible agency. The difficulty lies in ascertaining the agency to which the result is legally attributable. As [72]*72stated by tbis court, the proximate cause “is not necessarily the immediate, near, or nearest cause, but the one that acts first, whether immediate to the injury, or such injury be reached by setting other causes in motion, each in order being started naturally by the one that precedes it, and altogether constituting a complete chain or succession of events, so united to each other by a close causal connection as to form a natural whole, reaching from the first or producing cause to the final result.” Deisenrieter v. Kraus-Merkel M. Co. 97 .Wis. 279, 288, 72 N. W. 735. To determine it we must as- - certain the cause which from its inception acts in a continuous sequence and produces the injury as a natural and probable result. It cannot be ascertained by any specific and direct test, but must be determined as any ultimate fact is inferred from evidentiary facts. If different agencies share in producing a result, it then becomes necessary to determine which is the responsible and efficient cause from which the injury proceeds, by tracing it to the active agency from whose inception the injury naturally follows, either directly or through other causes set in action by it. Deisenrieter v. Kraus-Merkel M. Co., supra; Milwaukee & St. P. R. Co. v. Kellogg, 94 U. S. 469; 3 Joyce, Ins. ch. 60; 1 Cyc. 273.

The facts upon which the jury based their finding of the special verdict that Mr. Cary’s death resulted proximately and solely from bodily injury caused solely by external, violent, and accidental means are, in effect, that he accidentally fell and sustained an abrasion of the skin on his right leg, which wound appeared somewhat red and infiamed on the second day; that on the eighth day a physician first saw the wound and then found Mr. Cary to be suffering from blood poisoning; and that two days thereafter he died. The evidence also shows that the abrasion of the skin furnished the portal of entrance through which bacterial infection entered Mr. Cary’s system and caused the septicaemia which was the immediate cause of his death. It is urged that unless the [73]*73■evidence establishes tbe fact that tbe bacterial infection occurred at tbe time of tbe bodily injury by tbe fall, it cannot ■be found that bis death was proxiniately and solely caused by tbe accident. As above stated, responsible causation, as applied in tbe law, is not dependent on time, distance, or a mere succession of events. If an injury is inflicted by an event, and it is found that it has set in motion all tbe succeeding agencies sharing in the result, then such event, as tbe efficient producing cause of tbe injury, is held to be tbe proximate cause of tbe injury. Under such circumstances tbe causal connection in the chain of events is shown by tbe dependence of each event for its action on tbe one preceding it, which thus form a continuous whole, with a proximate relationship established between the event which acted first through those naturally succeeding and the'point of injury. Apply this test to tbe facts before us, and it is shown that no such bacterial infection would in all probability have. occurred bad there been no abrasion of tbe skin. This leads to the inevitable inference that tbe bacterial infection and tbe resultant septicaemia were in tbe natural course of events dependent upon and set in motion by tbe abrasion of tbe skin caused by tbe fall. Tbe entry of bacteria into tbe system cannot be considered as an independent cause and as having intervened between tbe accidental fall and tbe death because of tbe fact that it was conditioned on tbe existence of tbe abrasion of tbe skin and was wholly incidental to and set in motion by it, thus making it one of tbe events in tbe chain of causation. We are satisfied that the jury were well warranted in their conclusion that Mr. Cary’s death resulted proximately and solely from bis accidental falling on tbe floor.

Tbe policy exempted tbe defendant from any liability for any injury “resulting from any poison or infection, or from anything accidentally or otherwise taken, administered, absorbed, or inhaled.” Exemption from liability is claimed [74]*74under this provision, under tbe jury’s finding that “the immediate cause of the death of Eugene Cary [was] infection from bacteria producing the septicaemia.” This provision of the policy exempts defendant from liability in case Mr. Cary’s death ivas caused by poison or infection. Nothing further need be said to refute the idea that bacterial infection proximately caused his death under the terms of the policy. This provision of the policy is an exemption from liability only where the resultant injury was proximately caused in the manner specified in the provision. We have shown that the infection which produced the septicaemia, which the jury found was the “immediate cause” of death, cannot be held to be its proximate cause, and therefore it does not come within the terms of this exemption.

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Bluebook (online)
106 N.W. 1055, 127 Wis. 67, 1906 Wisc. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cary-v-preferred-accident-insurance-wis-1906.