Coad v. Travelers' Insurance

85 N.W. 558, 61 Neb. 563, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 79
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1901
DocketNo. 9,313
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 85 N.W. 558 (Coad v. Travelers' Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coad v. Travelers' Insurance, 85 N.W. 558, 61 Neb. 563, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 79 (Neb. 1901).

Opinion

Holoojib, J.

A policy of accident insurance was issued to plaintiff in error, also plaintiff below, by the defendant insurance company, in which it was provided that the insurance was “against loss of time not exceeding 26 consecutive weeks resulting from bodily injuries effected during the ierm of this insurance, through external, violent and accidental means, which shall, independently of all other causes, immediately and wholly disable him from transacting any and every kind of business pertaining to his occupation.” In the policy the occupation was given as a capitalist, it being a preferred classification of risks. The plaintiff, according to the allegations of the petition, received, during the continuance of the policy, a personal injury by the bursting of a bottle, cutting his left hand, the cut being, it is alleged, “quite deep, severing several of the tendons of the fingers and damaging others; and he thereby became totally disabled from attending to any business, said hand being totally disabled.” After issues were joined and a trial to a jury, the court, on the request of the defendant, peremptorily instructed the jury that “Under the pleadings and the proof in this case the plaintiff cannot recover and the jury will therefore return a verdict for the defendant.” An exception to the instruction was duly taken, and upon a motion for a new trial being overruled and judgment entered on the verdict, error proceeding was begun in this court to secure a reversal of the judgment.

The sole question presented and argued is whether, under the evidence, the question of total disability of the plaintiff from the effects of the injury sustained and pleaded in the petition should have been submitted to [565]*565the jury as a question of fact for their determination; or, to state the proposition in another way, would the evidence support a verdict for the plaintiff had the jury so found? The injury occurred September 17, 1893. It is described by the physician called to dress it as “a slight laceration, as I remember it now, over the back of his left hand * * * an inch and a half back of the knuckle of the first finger. * * * . I think it was probably about a quarter of an inch [across]. * * * It went through the skin and, as I remember it, through the outside of this tendon [of the first finger]. I removed a small piece of glass from the wound and then I dressed the wound.” On February 5, “as I recollect, there was a slight elevation at the seat of the original injury, and on pressure I felt confident that I detected a piece of glass. I opened it, made a slight opening and extracted a small piece of glass that I had failed to discover on the 18th of September, 1893.” The witness had seen the' wound professionally several times between the time when the injury occurred and February 5, when the second piece of glass was removed, and once afterwards. In describing the injury further he says: “His hand was quite tender in that location and there was inability to—that is what causes him pain—to extend or flex these fingers of his left hand. * * This tendon that supports and controls the first finger was very much lacerated.”

The following, aside from the foregoing, may be regarded as a fair epitome of the testimony of the case regarding the plaintiff’s ability to conduct, oversee and attend to his business. He went to his office the day following the injury, which occurred on Sunday, and was not at any time subsequently prevented, by reason of the injury, from going to his office and directing the management of his business affairs. He visited the World’s Fair at Chicago for a week the latter part of the same month the injury was received. He was able to attend meetings of the board of directors of banks in which he had an interest in both Omaha and South Omaha. He Vrote a [566]*566letter, dictated others and signed checks. He was at his office to look after his business interests every day, unless called elsewhere on other business matters or ivhen visiting the World’s Fair. He was unable to button his collar, tie his shoes, or divide his food at meals. He experienced a great deal of pain in consequence of the accident. He had interests in different parts of the state, in California and Texas, which he claims he did not and could not personally visit and look after during the time mentioned and when the injury is claimed to have totally disabled him from attending to his business. While the plaintiff testifies to his disabilities from the accident, he does not testify to facts upon which to base an inference that he was prevented from performing any of the more important duties or work pertaining to his business or occupation as a capitalist. It is not, we think, shown that he was unable to do any usual and ordinary work, pertaining to his occupation, with the possible exception of letter writing, and he says on this point that his correspondence was limited, that he dictated some of it, and also that he could write by holding his left hand up, which position it appears was necessary to avoid severe pain from the injury.

The policy indemnified him against loss of time, when, independent of all other causes, he was wholly disabled by accident “from transacting any and every kind of business pertaining to his occupation.” Will the evidence sustain a recovery under these provisions? What are the just deductions to be made with reference to the ability of the plaintiff to attend to and carry on his business notwithstanding the injury received? We think the only just inference warranted is that the conduct of his own business was substantially carried on by him after the injury the same as before. He attended to his business at all times.. He employed no substitute during any portion of the time. At no time was he prevented from leaving his home, attending his office, directing his business, or takiiig part in the deliberations of the boards of di[567]*567rectors of the banks in which he was interested. The injury was of the left hand and doubtless a very painful one, but it does not appear that the pain, notwithstanding its severity, incapacitated him from the management and direction of his various business enterprises in which he was engaged or had an interest. He was required to exercise his mind and business judgment rather than employ any member of his body in prosecuting his work. His correspondence is perhaps an exception, and yet from his testimony it is quite clear that this branch of his business affairs suffered no substantial impairment by reason of the injury, and his letter-writing and check-signing were performed substantially as before the injury. It may be conceded that he was unable, during the time of the injury, to visit and personally inspect his business enterprises in other states; and yet this could only be regarded as a minor part of his general business, and especially in view of the fact that the management of such enterprises was generally by proxy and through correspondence. The injury at most deferred for a short time a personal* visit, but did not prevent the management of the business in the usual way.

To sum up, it appears from the record that plaintiff’s business matters were attended to, looked after and directed by him during the period for which a recovery is sought, much in the same manner, speaking generally, and substantially in all important particulars as he was accustomed to do before the accident.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 N.W. 558, 61 Neb. 563, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coad-v-travelers-insurance-neb-1901.