Combined American Insurance Company v. McCall

497 S.W.2d 350, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2855
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 1973
Docket8376
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 497 S.W.2d 350 (Combined American Insurance Company v. McCall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Combined American Insurance Company v. McCall, 497 S.W.2d 350, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2855 (Tex. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, Justice.

From a judgment rendered following a jury trial awarding the beneficiary recovery of the benefits provided for accidental death by two accident insurance policies, the appellant-insurer has appealed. The one point of error is that the trial court erroneously overruled appellant’s motion for instructed verdict because the undisputed evidence established that uninsured disease contributed to the decedent’s death which did not result solely from insured accidental bodily injuries. The point is sustained. Reversed and rendered.

Appellant Combined American Insurance Company issued its two policies employing slightly differing insuring language, but insuring Rufus P. McCall

“ . . . against loss resulting directly and independently of all other causes from accidental bodily injuries received . while this policy is in force and which loss or injuries are in no way caused or contributed to by disease

and specifying that death benefits of $1,500.00 under one policy and $2,000.00 *352 under the other are payable conditional that the insured, while driving or riding in any automobile or truck, suffer such accidental bodily injuries that, under the one policy, are “ . . . the sole cause of loss of life by the Insured, . . . ” and that, under the other policy, “ . result directly and independently of all other causes in . . . ” loss of life. Appel-lee Pauline McCall, the insured’s wife, was named the beneficiary in each policy.

In mid-afternoon of February 9, 1972, Rufus P. McCall left his home driving a pickup truck. On the next morning of February 10, between the hours of six and seven o’clock, the body of McCall was found floating near his pickup in a shallow playa lake located six-tenths of a mile east of Littlefield, Texas, adjacent to Farm Road 94. The pickup was submerged in the lake up to the top of the hood and the left front door was open. The ignition key was in the “on” position, but the engine was not running. There was a wind out of the north or northeast, the weather was extremely cold, and the chill factor was between eighteen and twenty degrees below zero. It was established that the pickup had veered off the asphalt surface of the road at a forty-five degree angle, gone over a metal reflector post causing a slight dent in the vehicle’s front chrome strip, travelled more than ninety feet in a straight line down an embankment into the lake, and stopped some twenty-five feet into the lake.

Justice of the Peace Stanley Doss ordered an autopsy, which was performed by Dr. H. P. Clifton, Jr., a medical doctor specializing in pathology. In performing the autopsy after the body had been embalmed, Dr. Clifton found no external evidence of trauma; 1 the only abnormal external finding recorded was hemorrhage in the area of the embalming incision attributable to the embalming process itself. He recorded “ . . . the heart to be slightly enlarged . . .” and in “ . . . the coronary vessels a moderate to severe degree of atherosclerosis with an area of recent occlusion of the anterior descending branch of the left coronary artery.” As a result of his autopsy, Dr. Clifton’s pathological diagnosis was “CORNONARY ATHEROSCLEROSIS WITH RECENT THROMBOTIC OCCLUSION AND OLD MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION”; the cause of death was stated to be “CORONARY ATHEROSCLEROSIS WITH THROMBOTIC OCCLUSION.” Dr. Clifton reported to Justice Doss by telephone that he had found no evidence of trauma or drowning and that McCall “ . . . died of a heart attack.”

Justice Doss conducted an inquest consisting of his several visual views of the scene of the accident and his talking with and securing information from the deputy sheriff who discovered the accident, the wrecker operator who removed the pickup from the lake, the attending mortician, and the investigating highway patrolman. The purpose of the inquest was to determine if anyone had criminal responsibility for McCall’s death. Following this inquest and having before him a copy of Dr. Clifton’s autopsy report, Justice Doss filed an inquest report and made the finding therein that McCall “ . . . died as a result of a thombotic (sic) coronary occlusion brought about and caused by a motor vehicle accident.” The next day Justice Doss completed the certificate of death to show the immediate cause of death as “Cardiac arrest” due to “Automobile accident,” and described how the injury occurred by inserting the words “heart attack caused by an automobile accident.”

Mrs. McCall’s claims to the death proceeds of the two policies were denied on the ground that death was attributable to a disease process and not solely to an acci *353 dent independent of all other causes. This suit resulted.

It was and is Mrs. McCall’s contention that her husband’s death resulted from accidental bodily injuries and that disease neither caused nor contributed to his death. She testified that her husband had been in good health the last year or so before his death, he was not taking medication, there had been no complaints about his physical, mental or emotional state, and he had been working without any limitations on his activities. The theory advanced is that the accident occurred because McCall fell asleep while driving his pickup and it ran into the lake. Awakened, McCall opened the door, at which point he had to be alive and healthy to exert the pressure required to open the submerged door, and stepped into the water to walk back to dry land. This reconstruction of events, so the investigating highway patrolman testified, is consistent with his investigation of the accident. Proceeding, the theory is that the extreme cold and the extremely cold water were such a violent shock to McCall’s system that he suffered bodily injury and died from a heart attack, the sole cause of death, after ventricular fibrillation, the immediate cause of death, developed. This reconstitution is maintained supportable by Dr. Clifton’s testimony and the certificate of death admitted in evidence. The basic reliant testimony of Dr. Clifton is his statements that ventricular fibrillation was the immediate cause of McCall’s death, 2 the heart attack was the sole cause of death, and his response of “Right” when asked if it was true that a person can derive ventricular fibrillation from sudden shock of ice cold water, irrespective of whether a person is an exact medical replica of Rufus P. McCall or not as he existed at the time of the autopsy. The certificate of death is asserted to be, by virtue of Rules 40a and 54a under Article 4477, 3 pri-ma facie evidence of the deceased’s accidental death. The conclusion drawn is that the theory is sufficiently supported by the evidence to require jury determination of, and to sustain its findings with respect to, fact issues and, responsive consequentially to appellant’s point of error, to preclude an instructed verdict.

To support its defense that pre-existing disease was a contributing cause, and an accidental bodily injury was not the sole cause, of McCall’s death, appellant presented the deceased’s recorded medical history and the testimony of two, and the only, medical witnesses. In a 1948 examination and treatment by Dr. Gordon, McCall had bronchopneumonia and an acute paroxysmal atrial tachycardia, “ . . .

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Bluebook (online)
497 S.W.2d 350, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/combined-american-insurance-company-v-mccall-texapp-1973.