Dunning v. Massachusetts Mutual Accident Ass'n

59 A. 535, 99 Me. 390, 1904 Me. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 59 A. 535 (Dunning v. Massachusetts Mutual Accident Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunning v. Massachusetts Mutual Accident Ass'n, 59 A. 535, 99 Me. 390, 1904 Me. LEXIS 96 (Me. 1904).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

This is an action of debt on a policy of insurance against accident and disease, in which the plaintiff seeks to recover the sum of $108, being an indemnity of $12 per week for nine weeks, on account of a disability resulting from iritis. The case comes to this court on report. The policy bears date October 8, 1902.

It is not in controversy that the plaintiff suffered from iritis, or inflammation of the membrane of the eye called the iris, but it is contended in behalf of the company that his illness was not such as to be comprised in the terms of the policy giving an indemnity for loss arising from disease.

Benefit numbered 13 under the “Health Provisions” of the policy promises a weekly indemnity of $12 for not exceeding twenty-six consecutive weeks for loss through any of the extended list of diseases there specified including “ Iritis (primary).” But the insured expressly agreed in the application “to accept said policy subject to all of its conditions, agreements and provisions,” and the conditions of the policy respecting the “indemnity for sickness” are as follows, viz: “A disability resulting from sickness or disease in order to constitute a claim, must be continuous, complete and total, requiring absolute and necessary confinement to the house (except as provided under Benefit No. 15), and unless the period of total disability under the health provisions shall continue for four or more weeks, no claim shall be allowed for the first seven days' disability, and the sickness or disease shall be such as shall, independently of all other causes, continuously and wholly disable and prevent the insured from attend[392]*392ing to any business or duties pertaining to his occupation, profession or other remunerative employment.” Benefit No. 15, under the title of “Convalescent indemnity,” provides that “if the insured has been confined to the house for seven consecutive days and is thereafter permitted to leave the house by the physician in charge, the Association will pay one half of the weekly indemnity for sickness, for a period not exceeding two weeks.”

It has been seen, however, that the plaintiff is not seeking to recover the convalescent indemnity provided by benefit 15, but the full indemnity provided in benefit 13, under which the “disability from sickness or disease in order to constitute a claim, must be' continuous, complete and total, requiring absolute and necessary confinement to the house.”

It is contended in behalf of the defense that “absolute and necessary confinement to the house” is made by the contract an indispensable criterion of the disability which will entitle the insured to the indemnity, and hence a condition precedent to the right of recovery in the action.

The plaintiff does not claim that his disability was such as to require “absolute and necessary confinement to the house,” or that he was in fact confined to the house continuously during the time for which he asks the indemnity, or during the first seven days or any other seven consecutive days of his illness. But it is contended in his behalf that his affliction .was such as to “ disable and prevent him, continuously and wholly, from attending to any business or duties pertaining to his occupation, profession or other remunerative employment,” and that such a disability entitles him to the indemnity promised in benefit 13, although not such as to “require absolute and necessary confinement to the house.” It is furthermore insisted that there is no case of iritis which in any degree' of severity or at any stage of its progress “requires absolute and necessary confinement to the house,” and that if this requirement in the policy is to be construed as a condition precedent to the right of recovery, the promise of indemnity for that disease upon such a condition would be entirely nugatory and delusive.

It must be admitted that if confinement to the house would not be [393]*393proper treatment for any case of iritis, the two clauses in the policy providing an indemnity for that disease, and at the same time imposing a condition of absolute confinment to the house, would be mutually destructive and render the contract justly amenable to the plaintiff’s criticism.

Upon this question there is an apparent conflict in the testimony of the two experts who appeared as witnesses in the case. The plaintiff’s witness states that he doesn’t recollect that he ever saw a case or read of a case of iritis where confinement to the house was absolutely necessary. On the other hand, the expert for the defense testifies that cases of iritis exist in different degrees of severity and may conveniently be classified as mild, severe, and very severe; that in the first, and sometimes in the second class of cases, the patient may protect the eye by the use of colored glasses and go into the open air without injury; but in the third degree he should never go out of the house for the reason that all attempts to exclude the light by the use of cotton under colored glasses, or other similar means, involve pressure upon the inflamed tissue and an injury to the lids which should simply lie by their own weight and wink as nature intended. He states that he has seen many cases of iritis that required absolute confinement to the house.

When, therefore, the proposition set up by the plaintiff, that there is no case of iritis requiring absolute confinement to the house, is examined in the light of the positive testimony and subjected to the test of sound reason, it cannot be regarded as established by the evidence in this case. But it is conceded, as before stated, that the plaintiff’s case was not such as to require absolute confinement to the house, and he appears to have made a good recovery without it. This provision of the policy must therefore be accepted as a valid one.

In Paper Co. v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 92 Maine, 574, the court say: “It must be remembered, in the first place, that this policy of insurance is a contract of indemnity in which the parties have a legal right to insert any conditions and stipulations which they deem reasonable or necessary, provided no principle of public policy is thereby contravened. Like all other contracts it is to be [394]*394construed in accordance with its general scope and design and the real intention of the parties as disclosed by an examination of the whole instrument. Philbrook v. N. E. Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 37 Maine, 146; Blinn v. Dresden Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 85 Maine, 390. In case of ambiguity, or inconsistency, it is often said that the court will give the policy a construction most favorable to the assured, for the reason that as the insurer malíes the policy and selects his own language he is presumed to have employed terms which express his real intention. Wood on Fire Ins., 128, and cases cited. But, as remarked by the court in Imperial Fire Ins. Co. v. Coos Co., 151 U. S. 452, for the purpose of safeguarding this rule against abuse of its application, it should be considered in connection with another rule equally well settled, ‘that contracts of insurance, like other contracts, are to be construed according to the sense and meaning of the terms which the parties have used; and if they are clear and unambiguous, these terms are to be taken and understood in their plain and ordinary sense.’ ”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Limberis v. Aetna Casualty and Surety Company
263 A.2d 83 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1970)
Farm Bureau Mutual Ins. Co. v. Waugh
188 A.2d 889 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1963)
Penrose v. Commercial Travelers Insurance Co.
275 P.2d 969 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1954)
Malloy v. New York Life Ins. Co.
103 F.2d 439 (First Circuit, 1939)
Federal Life Ins. Co. v. O'connell's Committee
124 S.W.2d 1043 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1939)
Massachusetts Protective Ass'n v. Picard
76 F.2d 684 (Fifth Circuit, 1935)
Mutual Benefit Health & Accident Ass'n v. Burrow's
79 S.W.2d 222 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1934)
Langevin v. Prudential Insurance
171 A. 392 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1934)
Purcell v. Washington Fidelity National Insurance
30 P.2d 742 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1934)
Johnson v. American Automobile Insurance
161 A. 496 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1932)
Garvin v. Union Mutual Casualty Co.
222 N.W. 25 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1928)
Federal Surety Co. v. Waite
297 S.W. 312 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1927)
Stewart v. Continental Casualty Co.
250 P. 1084 (Washington Supreme Court, 1926)
Pirscher v. Casualty Co. of America
102 A. 546 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1917)
Union Central Relief Ass'n v. Johnson
73 So. 816 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1916)
American Life & Accident Ins. v. Nirdlinger
73 So. 875 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1916)
Blunt v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad
142 N.W. 532 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1913)
Lieberman v. Columbia National Life Insurance
47 Pa. Super. 276 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1911)
Pennsylvania Casualty Co. v. Perdue
51 So. 352 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1910)
Bader v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co.
112 N.W. 1065 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 A. 535, 99 Me. 390, 1904 Me. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunning-v-massachusetts-mutual-accident-assn-me-1904.