Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. v. Shelton

611 S.W.2d 928, 1981 Tex. App. LEXIS 3219
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 29, 1981
Docket18395
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 611 S.W.2d 928 (Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. v. Shelton) 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
Connecticut General Life Insurance Co. v. Shelton, 611 S.W.2d 928, 1981 Tex. App. LEXIS 3219 (Tex. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinions

OPINION

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

Plaintiff policyholders under the Major Medical and Basic Medical expense covers brought suit against the issuing company. Following a trial before the court without a jury upon an agreed statement of facts, [929]*929judgment was rendered for the policyholders and against the company for amount which was the total of the hospital and medical, etc. expenses incurred in connection with elective remedial surgery on Mrs. Gray W. Shelton. Additional amounts for penalty and attorney’s fees were also awarded. From this judgment defendant Connecticut General Life Insurance Company brought its appeal.

We reverse and render a take nothing judgment.

Years ago Mrs. Shelton was married to a man by whom children were born in a state of health such that her physician advised that there would be extreme hazard to the health of any subsequent child born of the marriage. This was because of incompatibility of the Rh factor in the blood of the parents. There was no evidence of any danger to the mother; only to any child she might bear. The advice received was that any such child would probably perish. Because of this the woman, who later became Mrs. Shelton, decided that she should have tubal ligation, i. e. the operation commonly referred to as “having one’s tubes tied”. She did have such an operation and it was successful in that future pregnancy was thereby prevented.

Thereafter she married Shelton. She became “covered” by the policy of insurance upon which the instant suit was predicated. She and her husband desired to have a child of such marriage if that should be possible. By recourse to medical examinations and advice they learned that the state of the art of medical and surgical practice had advanced so that restoration of Mrs. Shelton’s fallopian tubes to a condition that she might become pregnant was more likely to be successful than unsuccessful. Also determined was that the Rh factors in the blood of Mr. and Mrs. Shelton were compatible; that in the event of the birth of a child there should be no expectation of complication or difficulty to either such child or to the mother.

Based upon this advice Mrs. Shelton elected to have the restorative surgery. An operation was performed and it was successful. In due course she and her husband have a reasonable expectation that a healthy child might be born of their marriage.

The policy of insurance was in force and effect at the time of the restorative surgery. If and in the event it should be properly construed to cover and provide for the payment of the expenses attendant thereto the Sheltons would be entitled to collect the benefits provided. The amount of these benefits are stipulated for purposes of the appeal; if the Sheltons have entitlement to any benefits it is for those awarded them by judgment.

The sole point of error of the company is that there was “no evidence that the Plaintiffs’ claims for expenses were incurred for the necessary care and treatment of an injury or sickness as defined in the group insurance contract.”

We will express our opinion at the outset, to be later elaborated, that absent any language of the policy of an intent to cover operations of the character here involved— either expressed or by necessary implication, — the general principles of the law relative to insurance forbid the holding that there was liability of the company therefor as a covered risk for which insurance was afforded. We do not find any such language in the policy and therefore have no doubt but that the decision is controlled by these general principles.

We copy from provisions found in the Shelton policy. The insuring provisions, in pertinent part, under the title “Major Medical Benefits”, provide as follows:

“If ... a dependent, while insured for Major Medical Benefits, incurs Covered Expenses as a result of an injury or a sickness, the Insurance Company will pay an amount determined as follows: [here the measure to be applied, not copied because immaterial under the only point of error presented]
“COVERED EXPENSES: The term Covered Expenses means the expenses actually incurred by or on behalf of .. . de[930]*930pendent for charges listed below, . . . only to the extent that the services or supplies provided are recommended by a physician as essential for the necessary care and treatment of an injury or sickness.”

The group insurance contract defines the term “injury” as follows:

“The term injury will include all injuries received by an individual in any one accident.”

The group insurance contract defines the term “sickness” as follows:

“. .. physical sickness, mental illness, functional nervous disorder and covered pregnancy....”

From the presentation of both parties we think it not to be doubted that the test to be made of coverage by the policy of insurance is upon the premise that the operation resulted because there was election to submit thereto by reason of either “injury” or “sickness” as defined by the policy, or — if not contradictory thereto — by legal definitions to be attributed to these terms. In any event, as already stated, we do not find any policy language which would alter general principles of the law of insurance so as to express an intent of the parties to the contract that an operation of the character involved should be a covered risk.

By the history of insurance in the United States the beginning theory was that risks or the chance of loss, to be insurable, must be pure risks and should not be based on a moral hazard. In addition to be insurable the risk must be measurable in quantitative terms for which purpose the law of large numbers and the theories of probability and chance are employed. The law of large numbers is based on the observation that the larger the number of instances taken, the closer the result approaches the theoretical probability, and, as applied to insurance, that means the probability of loss. Carried to the ultimate this means to have converted the probability of loss into “expectation of loss” or value of the risk. Thereby is determinable the consideration to be charged (ultimately or in advance, with — as applied to mutual companies — reasonably assured profits to be shared without likelihood of a necessity to make a greater payment, to insure an individual or group of individuals. Noticed is that in the case of a stock company the individual insured is generally not entitled to share in the company’s profits; but at the same time he is not expected to pay more in the event there should be a loss and not a profit for the term insured.)

In addition to the requirement that risks, to be insurable, must be of the pure variety as described above, and must also lend themselves to measurement in quantitative terms, certain other conditions must be met before the institution of insurance may function. (1) The risk must be genuine, must exist for large groups of people, and its existence must be recognized by a sufficient number of people to warrant the establishment of organization(s) to insure it.

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Bluebook (online)
611 S.W.2d 928, 1981 Tex. App. LEXIS 3219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-general-life-insurance-co-v-shelton-texapp-1981.