Dewey v. Abraham Lincoln Life Insurance

257 N.W. 308, 218 Iowa 1220
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 13, 1934
DocketNo. 42636.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 257 N.W. 308 (Dewey v. Abraham Lincoln Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dewey v. Abraham Lincoln Life Insurance, 257 N.W. 308, 218 Iowa 1220 (iowa 1934).

Opinion

Anderson, J.

This is an action on an accident insurance policy. On the 30th day of January, 1929, the defendant company issued an accident policy to R. L. Dewey, which policy was in full force and effect on the date of the death of the insured. The plaintiff in this action was the beneficiary named in the policy. Upon the trial of the case the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant appeals.

The policy in suit provided for the payment to the beneficiary of $1,000 in the event that the insured should die from:

“Sec. (a). The effects resulting independently and exclusively of all other causes, from bodily injury sustained during the life of this policy, solely through external, violent, and accidental means or causes.”

The sole question' involved in this case is whether the death of the insured' resulted from an accident as contemplated in the foregoing quoted provision. The record discloses that the insured, R. L. Dewey, was employed in the roundhouse of the Great Western Railroad Company in Des Moines, Iowa, as a boiler maker, and had been so employed for some time prior to February 2, 1933. On *1222 February 2, 1933, at about 3:30 in the afternoon, while working upon an engine in the roundhouse of his employer, Dewey received in some manner a wound upon the left side of his head. There was a cut about an inch and one-half in length which bled very profusely and which later was swollen up to the size of a hen’s egg and badly discolored. First aid was applied to the injury by one Albin, clerk of the Great Western Railroad Company. Dewey later went to his home and was taken by his wife to Dr. Coleman to have the injury attended to. Dewey returned to his work on February 3d and 4th, but on the 5th he went to bed and remained there until his death, which occurred on February 24, 1933. Dr. Coleman was called on February 6th, and continued in attendance upon Mr. Dewey until his death. The doctor testified that Mr. Dewey had no fever for four or five days; that she saw him every day after the accident and sometimes twice a day; that he (Dewey) complained of severe pains in his head, reaching down the side of his neck, and that his left arm was stiff. On the 9th his temperature started to rise, the bronchial tubes showed evidence of infection, bronchial pneumonia developed, from which he died on February 24th.

There is a conflict in the medical testimony as to the cause of the bronchial pneumonia; that is, as to whether or not it was caused or precipitated by the injury, the resulting shock due to the contusion and loss of blood, and the lowering of resistance of the patient, or whether the pneumonia was the natural result of a cold with which the patient had been previously afflicted. It appears that the general condition of Mr. Dewey’s health was good. There is no history of chronic or recurring colds. Dewey worked seven days a week on his job, including Sundays and holidays. He was off work thirty-one days in the year previous to his injury. He had a cold in February a year prior to his injury and was away from his work twelve days at that time. He was away from his work two or three days in each of the months of July, August, October, November, and December of the year previous to his accident. Some of the time that he was off he was sick, but not always. There is testimony that the only way he had of getting off from work was to claim that he was sick. He was supposed to work every dav of the week including Sunday the year around. There is no direct testimony that he was sick at any time during the preceding year except that he had a pleurisy pain a couple of days in August. There is testimony that he had a cold on two days just preceding *1223 his accident, but that it was not severe enough to confine him to the house. There is medical testimony to the effect that an injury such as was suffered by Mr. Dewey, with the consequent loss of blood, would be a shock to the system, lowering the resistance, and also to the effect that exposure to cold is a well known precipitating cause of pneumonia, especially in connection with any shock to the system which would tend to lower the resistance. There is testimony to the effect that the temperature at the date of the accident, and the two following days, was about freezing, and Dewey was exposed to this temperature outside as well as in the roundhouse after his injury. And there is also medical testimony to the effect that, where there is a cold and sore throat followed by bronchial pneumonia, there is ordinarily some reason why the germs overcome the resistance and precipitate pneumonia; that this may be due to the lowered resistance following an accident or shock; that, if the system receives some shock of some character immediately before an exposure to cold, then the exposure would be more of a precipitating cause than otherwise. Any shock to the system disturbs the respiratory reflexes and causes germs which may be present in the throat to enter the bronchial tubes or lungs and cause infection or pneumonia. The attending physician testified that “usually when a person gets pneumonia there is some precipitating cause, as there was in this case,” and that, in the opinion of this witness, “the injury that Mr. Dewey had received precipitated the pneumonia, and that without the blow or injury he would never have had pneumonia;” Several other expert medical witnesses testified directly that Mr. Dewey’s injury caused him to have bronchial pneumonia, and that the accident or injury was probably a precipitating cause rather than an accelerating cause; some of them testifying that in their opinion the accident was the sole cause of the bronchial pneumonia. It is true that some of the testimony of some of the expert witnesses called by the plaintiff was based in part upon a hypothetical question propounded to them which contained a statement in describing the injury and the result thereof to Mr. Dewey, that the blow on the head caused an unconscious condition. At the time the hypothetical questions were propounded, the records contained a statement from a witness Brennan that one Faust had told him of the accident, and that Mr. Dewey was “knocked out”. This testimony was later withdrawn from the, record by the court as being hearsay and not a part ’ of the res gestee. However, medical testimony we *1224 have quoted was elicited from the physicians in their examination other than their answers to the hypothetical questions. One of the experts, Dr. Fagen, was asked the same hypothetical question with the element of unconsciousness omitted and he gave it as his opinion that the accident was probably ihe cause of the pneumonia which later caused the death of Mr. Dewey. Several other medical witnesses had been in attendance and treated Mr. Dewey during his last sickness, and much of their testimony is based upon information they received in this manner. The testimony of the plaintiff’s medical experts was disputed by the testimony of Dr. Price, who was called by the defendant. But this witness testified that one with a lowered resistance due to any cause is more apt to have bronchial pneumonia than otherwise, and that, if a man has a cold, he is more susceptible to pneumonia than if he is not thus afflicted; that exposure to cold or a low temperature is not recognized as a predisposing factor to the pneumonia, unless there is in addition thereto a lowered resistance.

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257 N.W. 308, 218 Iowa 1220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewey-v-abraham-lincoln-life-insurance-iowa-1934.