Farmer v. Railway Mail Assn.

57 S.W.2d 744, 227 Mo. App. 1082, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 65
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 7, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 57 S.W.2d 744 (Farmer v. Railway Mail Assn.) 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
Farmer v. Railway Mail Assn., 57 S.W.2d 744, 227 Mo. App. 1082, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 65 (Mo. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

This is an action on an insurance policy issued by defendant, insuring plaintiff's husband against bodily injuries, resulting in death, received through external, violent, and accidental means.

The trial, with a jury, resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for $3,000, and judgment was entered accordingly. From the order of the court granting defendant a new trial, on the ground that defendant's instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence ought to have been given, plaintiff appeals.

The insured died as the result of a sunstroke suffered on July 11, 1930. At the time of his death the insured was chief clerk of the Railway Mail Service in the City of St. Louis. How long he had been in this office is not shown, but he had been a postal clerk for about forty years.

Plaintiff testified that on the day the insured suffered the sunstroke he left his home to go to his work about seven o'clock in the morning; that this was the usual time that he left to go to his work; that when he left home that morning his general appearance so far as health was concerned was perfectly all right; that she next saw him about half past four or five when he came home in the afternoon; *Page 1085 that when he came home he was very nervous and his face was black or purple; that he was holding one hand to his throat and the other to his head; that he said: "I have had a sunstroke. It seemed as though something hit me down the street. I caught to the fence or tree. The first thing I thought was, `Well, I am near enough home that if I should fall some one will know me and take me home.'" Plaintiff further testified that insured died about three o'clock on the morning of July 13, 1930.

Dr. John H. Coats testified, for plaintiff, that he called to see insured on the evening of July 11th, and found him with a temperature of 106, in convulsions, and in a semi-conscious state; that he made a diagnosis of sunstroke, and gave him the usual treatment for sunstroke; that sunstroke was the cause of his death.

Dr. R.B.H. Gradwohl testified, for plaintiff, as follows: "Sunstroke is an effect induced by the rays of the sun on the human body. It is a physical force which disturbs the heat regulatory mechanism of the body, that is, there is a center in the brain which normally controls the temperature by controlling the heat production and heat loss, and in this condition the mechanism is interfered with. I would say the cause of the death-dealing effects are due to the detention in the body of products that ought to be eliminated. In other words this condition of sunstroke prevents the individual from throwing off poisonous substances through his skin, through his kidneys, through his bowels, and through his lungs. It is a physical agent that brings about this sunstroke. I do not consider sunstroke as a disease in a medical sense. I consider it a condition brought about by the application of a physical agent, because we do not see any tangible evidences of disease in the dead bodies of people that die of this condition. It is well called a disturbed physiology rather than a disease in the sense of gross organic changes. Sunstroke is a physical force applying its physical effects to two centers, really four little points at the base of the brain, which are called the heat regulatory centers. The physical force applying itself is the heat. By physical force I mean some agency outside the human body that effects, for the bad, the health and life of the individual. In other words, a normal individual is struck down by an agency that is not a disease. Sunstroke is not a disease.

July 11, 1930, was a hot day, the temperature ranging from eighty-seven degrees at seven o'clock in the morning to 103 degrees at four o'clock in the afternoon.

In support of the court's action in granting defendant a new trial, defendant first contends that sunstroke is a disease and not a bodily injury, so that insured's death resulting from sunstroke is not within the coverage of the policy sued on. That sunstroke is a disease and not a bodily injury appears to have been held in a number of cases, but these cases are out of accord with the decisions in this State and *Page 1086 the weight of authority elsewhere. [Richards v. Standard Accident Ins. Co., 58 Utah 622; Bryant v. Continental Casualty Co.,107 Tex. 582, 182 S.W. 673; Kripplaben v. Greenspon's Sons Iron Steel Co. (Mo. App.), 50 S.W.2d 752; Taylor v. City Ice Fuel Co., recently decided by this court and not yet reported; Moran v. Peterson Const. Co., recently decided by this court and not yet reported; Morris v. Dexter Mfg. Co., 225 Mo. App. 449,40 S.W.2d 750; Van Kirk v. Hume-Sinclair Coal Mining Co. (Mo. App.), 49 S.W.2d 631; Schulz v. Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Co. (Mo.), 56 S.W.2d 126; State ex rel. Rau v. District Court,138 Minn. 250, 164 N.W. 916; Lane v. Horn Hardart Baking Co.,261 Pa. 329; Walsh v. River Spinning Co. (R.I.), 103 A. 1025; Young v. Western Furniture Mfg. Co. (Neb.), 164 N.W. 712.]

In Schulz v. Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Co., supra, the court, responding to the point expressly raised, definitely ruled that death resulting from heat prostration, or sunstroke, was death by accident, as defined in our Workmen's Compensation Act. This ruling, though the court does not in express terms so state, necessarily implies that death was the result of an injury as contradistinguished from disease, for the compensation act defines the word "accident," as used therein, to mean "an unexpected and unforeseen event happening suddenly and violently, . . . and producing at the time objective symptoms of an injury," and defines the term "injury" to mean "only violence to the physical structure of the body, and such disease or infection as naturally results therefrom." Under this definition obviously an injury, that is, "violence to the physical structure of the body," is an essential to a compensable accident under the act, and that disease is compensable only when it results from such injury, that is, "violence to the physical structure of the body."

That sunstroke results from the application of an external physical force can hardly be questioned. The action of the heat rays of the sun upon the body directly or indirectly is as much the action of a physical force as is the blowing of the wind. So that sunstroke, with respect to the manner of its infliction, has all the characteristics of an injury.

It appears that it was formerly the opinion of the medical profession that sunstroke, in its technical and pathological sense, was a disease, but modern science seems to have arrived at the conclusion that it is not a disease, but an injury, resulting from the application of physical force. But, whatever it may be technically, it is not regarded as a disease in the popular mind. In the popular understanding it is accounted a kind of violent personal injury. The word itself carries the idea of an injury by a sudden external force.

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Bluebook (online)
57 S.W.2d 744, 227 Mo. App. 1082, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmer-v-railway-mail-assn-moctapp-1933.