Caulfield v. Aetna Life Insurance

19 A.2d 575, 144 Pa. Super. 257, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 119
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 15, 1940
DocketAppeal, 243
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 19 A.2d 575 (Caulfield v. Aetna Life Insurance) 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
Caulfield v. Aetna Life Insurance, 19 A.2d 575, 144 Pa. Super. 257, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 119 (Pa. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

Sarah Caulfield instituted this action in assumpsit on March 20, 1939, against the Aetna Life Insurance Company, seeking to recover the sum of $1000, as total and permanent disability benefits, upon a certificate issued to her by the defendant company under a policy of group insurance covering the subscribing employees of the Friends Hospital, in Philadelphia. Under the heading “Permanent Total Disability Benefit,” the certificate reads: “Upon receipt at the Home Office of the Aetna Life Insurance Company of satisfactory evidence that the employee, while insured hereunder and before reaching age sixty, has become totally disabled and that such disability will presumably prevent the employee for life from engaging in any occupation or employment for wage or profit, the Insurance Company will pay in accordance with the method designated under the terms of the policy the amount of insurance in force upon the employee’s life at the time the disability commenced.” The following provisions entitled “Notice of Claim” also appear in the certificate: “Notice of claim for benefits by reason of death or permanent total disability of the employee while insured under the policy should be given immediately direct to the Aetna Life Insurance Company or through the employer. It is not necessary to present a claim through a lawyer or any other person. Written notice of the death or permanent total disability of an employee while insured under the policy shall be given the Aetna Life Insurance Company at its Home Office within one year after cessation of the payment of premiums in respect to such employee; and if such notice is not given, the Insurance Company shall not be liable for any payment *259 on account of such death or permanent total disability.”

Copies of the certificate and the group policy were attached as exhibits to plaintiff’s statement of claim. The material facts averred in the latter are that defendant, on or before June 1, 1930, issued a group policy to the Friends Hospital, covering certain of its employees, of which plaintiff ivas one, as evidenced by the certificate issued to her; that on April 6, 1938, while still in the hospital’s employ and while the insurance was in full force and effect, she suffered an accident resulting in total and permanent disability ; that at the time of such disability, she was “fifty-ninc-years of age and would not reach her sixtieth year until August 30,1938”; and that “pursuant to the terms of said policy” she had filed “her written proofs of claim with the defendant” which failed and refused to pay the sum of $1000 due thereunder.

The affidavit of defense, filed April 11,1939, admitted the issuance of the policy and certificate under which plaintiff was insured, but alleged she was in fact more than sixty years of age when injured and that her disability was only partial and temporary. It avus also averred that plaintiff did not furnish to defendant, at its home office, satisfactory evidence with relation to her age and the extent of her disability.

The trial before Glass, J., and a jury, resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $1118.83, being the amount payable under the certificate, plus interest. The jury was properly instructed that the vital issues for determination from the evidence Avere: Whether or not plaintiff was totally and permanently disabled; if so, whether she had reached the age of sixty years at the time she became permanently disabled; and if not, whether she had given to the defendant company satisfactory evidence of her disability.

Defendant’s motions for judgment in its favor, n. o. v., or a new trial were denied and it has appealed from the judgment entered on the verdict.

*260 As to the nature and extent of her disability, plaintiff testified that on April 6, 1938, she was struck by an automobile at “C” Street and the Boulevard in Philadelphia and sustained “a dislocated shoulder” and “a wound in the head that took five stitches.” She further stated that her leg was “all smashed up” and she had “a bad heart from it.” She was taken to the Jewish Hospital for a while and then to the home of some friends where she stayed three weeks. Having developed pneumonia and being “in very bad shape,” she was moved to the Oak Lane Nursing Home where she remained seven weeks, being confined to bed until two days before she left. She then went to Minnick’s Hotel, 1622 Bidge Avenue, where she resided at the time of the trial. Plaintiff further testified she had since been unable to return to her domestic work at the hospital where she had been employed for twenty-six years, or to do any work at all because she took “dizzy spells,” had “a bad heart condition” and got weak if she walked any distance.

Her testimony was corroborated by Dr. Harold T. Antrim who testified that when he first examined plaintiff, about a month after the accident, “she was then in bed, and she had a lacerated wound of the left scalp about two or three inches long, ...... some residual evidence of a cerebral concussion,......a fracture of the left clavicle or collar-bone with no union at that time,......some severe contusions, and a lot of pain around the ribs of the left chest.. She was bruised up practically everywhere, particularly on the right leg, where she had a large hemitoma or blood tumor...... and probably was bed-ridden for some time afterwards.” Dr. Antrim did not examine plaintiff again until about December 27, 1939, at which time he stated “she had pain and limited motion in the left shoulder; she had pain and cramps in the right leg; she was suffering from dizziness, weak heart, arteriosclerosis — that is, hardening of the arteries — and high blood pressure, *261 along with the general conditions that accompany her age......” An excerpt from his testimony reads: “Q. Doctor, from yonr examinations, first back in April shortly after April 6, 1938, and the condition in which you found her on the 27th of December of 1939, are you able to express an opinion as to whether or not she was able to do any work? Can you express an opinion? A. You mean from both the accident and the heart and the arteriosclerosis? Q. Yes. A. I would say no. She is very short of breath, and the least exertion, when I examined her, she got short of breath, and her heart would jump twenty to twenty-five beats after walking around the room three or four times. She was in my opinion totally disabled as far as the accident is concerned, and taking the two together, I would say she is totally disabled as far as performing her duties are concerned.” The foregoing uncontradicted testimony furnishes, in our opinion, a sound basis for a finding of total and permanent disability. See Cooper v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, 317 Pa. 405, 408, 177 A. 43, 44, and Mirabella v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, 143 Pa. Superior Ct. 500, 18 A. 2d 474.

Upon the issue of fact as to the age of plaintiff, she had the burden of showing she was under sixty when injured. She testified positively she was born on August 30, 1878, at Irvinestown, County Fermanagh, Ireland, but was unable to obtain a certificate “from the rectory where [she] was born.” Her statement made her fifty-nine years seven months and six days old on April 6, 1938, the date her disability began. Various documents were offered and admitted upon both sides.

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Bluebook (online)
19 A.2d 575, 144 Pa. Super. 257, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caulfield-v-aetna-life-insurance-pasuperct-1940.