Evans v. Great Northern Life Insurance

167 S.W.2d 118, 237 Mo. App. 317, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 124
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 2, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 167 S.W.2d 118 (Evans v. Great Northern Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. Great Northern Life Insurance, 167 S.W.2d 118, 237 Mo. App. 317, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 124 (Mo. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinions

This case has been reheard. After the first hearing an opinion prepared by Commissioner Sperry was adopted. There were four points for decision, viz., claimed error of the court in overruling the demurrer; in giving plaintiff's Instruction No. 1; in the admission of evidence; and in giving plaintiff's Instruction No. 2, authorizing the allowance of penalty and attorney's fee. No new points were presented on rehearing. After re-examination of the record and consideration of the briefs and argument it is found that the former opinion correctly disposes of the first three points, and it is now quoted and adopted to that extent as follows: *Page 323

"Plaintiff, Elmer E. Evans, was the beneficiary in an accident insurance policy issued by defendant, Great Northern Life Insurance Company, a Corporation, whereby defendant undertook to insure plaintiff's wife, Anna Etta Evans, against accidental loss of life. Insured was accidentally killed by being thrown from an automobile in which she was riding and plaintiff obtained judgment in the total sum of $1000 on the policy, $115.33 interest, and $200 attorney's fees. Defendant appealed.

"The policy sued on was in evidence and provided for payment of indemnity for loss of life:

"`Sustained through external, violent and accidental means . . ., by wrecking or disablement of any private . . . automobile . . . in which the Insured is riding or driving, or by being accidentally thrown from such wrecked or disabled vehicle or automobile.'

"There was evidence tending to prove that in 1937, eight or nine months previous to the accident in question, the right front door of plaintiff's car which opens toward the front, while open, was caught when the automobile backed down the street, breaking the door check and causing a small crack or space between the door and the frame when the door was closed; that the door closed easily afterward and gave no trouble about coming open; that the hinges of the door were bent and sprung; that the door was pushed forward; and there was expert evidence tending to prove that such a condition would cause a shortening of the overlap of the catch where the latch comes into said catch. Plaintiff had the door check repaired, but made no other repairs.

"At the time of the accident sued on, August 23, 1938, plaintiff was driving his car and his wife was riding in the front seat with him, she being seated facing plaintiff, with her arms folded, when plaintiff started to pass an automobile going in the same direction. Plaintiff decided that he would not have time to pass that car because of an approaching automobile coming in the opposite direction, and put on his brakes suddenly and turned the car to the left. The insured was thrown against the right front door which opened, and she fell from the car. She struck her head and received injuries from which she died two days later.

"The evidence further shows that at the time of the accident there was no collision or any contact of plaintiff's automobile with any other automobile or object, and that the right front door, on no other occasion, ever came open, either prior to the accident or following the accident, although the automobile was used continuously from that date until it was wrecked in a subsequent accident while driven by the plaintiff.

"Plaintiff gave evidence to the effect that, before the occurrence of the fatal accident, there was a small crack between the door and the door post but that the door closed easily, the latch caught, and it gave *Page 324 no trouble; that immediately after the accident occurred, "the door was a little hard to close, when you closed it up — it was binding; . . . yes, sir, ordinarily — prior to the accident you let the door loose and it would go shut, but it wouldn't after that, had to shove it to." He testified that, upon examination of the door, after the accident occurred, he found that the catch overlapped the latch but a very small amount, much less than had been the overlap prior thereto as shown by the worn parts of the catch and the latch; that the hinges of the door were sprung when insured's body struck the inside of the door; that the hinges were sprung but that he did not have them repaired because his attorney advised him to leave them in that condition so that the door could be used in evidence on a trial of this claim.

"There was testimony offered and received which tended to establish that if the hinges of the door were sprung it would have the effect of moving the door forward and thus reducing the overlap of the catch in relation to the latch of the door; that repairs on the door would be required in order to restore the door to its normal position; that the door could be shimmed back into position, and that, if the door was in such a condition prior to a sudden hard application of the brakes while traveling at a speed of fifty miles per hour, and a simultaneous and sudden swerving of the car to the left, it would result in stretching the right side of the body of the car, causing a further separation of the door from the door post, and a further reduction of the `margin of safety' in the overlap of the catch and latch.

"Defendant's theory is that the damage sustained in 1937 was not a disablement within the provisions of the policy, and that even though it was, the insured's death was the result of a new and independent cause disconnected from the prior damage, and not a part of a continuous course of events as contemplated by the policy provisions. It contends that its offered demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained: First, because the car was not "disabled" within the meaning of the policy; and, second, because if the car was "disabled," then such disablement did not occur at the same time that insured was thrown therefrom but was "disabled" long prior thereto; that the disablement of the car was not the "result of the same continuous sequence of events terminating in the injury."

"Plaintiff's theory is that the above quoted policy provision is ambiguous and that the combination of circumstances shown in evidence, to-wit: The sudden swerving of the car to avoid a collision which caused the right side of the car to stretch so as to release the latch on the door, it not extending far enough into the catch to be safe against being relased under such circumstances, combined with the propulsion of insured upward and outward against said door with sufficient force to cause it to fly open and cause insured to be thrown from the car, brought insured's death within the terms of the policy. He contends that the opening of the car door, under such circumstances *Page 325 as are here shown constituted a disablement of the car within the meaning of the policy provisions above quoted.

"We have previously construed the following language used in an insurance policy: "By the wrecking or disablement of any . . . automobile . . . in which the insured is riding or driving," and we held that language to be ambiguous. [Kimbrough v. National Protective Ins. Ass'n, 35 S.W.2d 654, l.c. 656.]

"We there held that the term `disablement' was indefinite and ambiguous in its meaning and that a car which received a bent fender in a collision with a wagon, was disabled within the meaning of the policy, although such disablement was of a temporary character and did not interfere in any manner with the continued use and operation of the automobile, which was driven to plaintiff's home without repairs.

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Bluebook (online)
167 S.W.2d 118, 237 Mo. App. 317, 1942 Mo. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-great-northern-life-insurance-moctapp-1942.