Finley v. Business Men's Assurance Co.

388 P.2d 459, 236 Or. 328, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 281
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 388 P.2d 459 (Finley v. Business Men's Assurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finley v. Business Men's Assurance Co., 388 P.2d 459, 236 Or. 328, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 281 (Or. 1964).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff, Venice W. Finley, from a judgment of the circuit court for Douglas County in favor of defendant, Business Men’s Assurance Company of America, which is based upon Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. This is a companion case to Finley v. Prudential Life and Casualty Insurance Company, 236 Or 235, 388 P2d 21, decided December 31, 1963. This case involves a different insurance company as party defendant and consequently a different insurance policy. But, aside from the wording of the policy, the cause of action arises out of the same fact situation as presented in Finley v. Prudential.

Plaintiff here seeks recovery under a double indemnity supplement attached to a life insurance policy issued to Jack Vernon Finley which named the plaintiff as beneficiary. The material part of the policy provides:

“In the event of the death of the insured while this policy and supplement are in force, during the period of payment of premiums and before the date of expiry shown above, if such death results from bodily injuries effected solely through accidental means and within ninety days from the date of such injuries, the Company will pay the beneficiary in addition to any benefits otherwise payable, a sum equal to the face amount of the policy. Such addi *330 tional amount shall be payable to the beneficiary upon receipt of due proofs of death.”
“Sisks Not Assumed—Agreement to pay under this provision does not cover death resulting directly or indirectly from the following causes:
* * *
“2. disease * * *”

The trial court’s findings reveal as the basis of the judgment “that the physical conditions, disease or injuries from which Jack Vernon Finley died on January 25, 1962, were not effected solely through means that were accidental,” and “that the death of Jack Vernon Finley resulted directly or indirectly from the said pre-existing active diseases.” (Emphysema, Chronic bronchitis). Plaintiff (appellant) assigns these findings as error.

Dr. Paul Kliewer, the physician who took care of Finley when the latter was brought to Lakeview Hospital and who is the only practitioner who testified upon the subject, stated:

“A I feel that the cause of death would be directly attributed to exposure in a man who previously had a long history of lung trouble with emphysema, bronchiectosis, [sic] chronic-bronchitis, all of which resulted in an acute bronchial pneumonia and death.
“Q Assuming, Doctor, that Mr. Finley suffered exposure to weather 85 degrees below zero and colder some two to four days prior to his admission to the hospital, and assuming that prior to such exposure he was suffering from asthma, emphysema, and chronic bronchitis, and that his left lower lung lobe had been surgically removed, can you state within the. reasonable medical probability whether the exposure to said cold weather brought *331 about and caused the condition which resulted in Mr. Finley’s death?
“A Yes, I believe this is the case. That exposure was actually the cause of death.
“Q Can you, within the realm of reasonable medical probability, say that there was no independent intervening cause unproduced or uninfluenced by the exposure, which, acting of itself and without stimulation by the exposure, tended to produce the death of Mr. Finley?
“A As far as I know, there was no independent intervening cause.”

Two basic questions under this policy are precipitated by this appeal: (1) whether Finley’s bodily injuries were effected by accidental means and (2) whether his death resulted directly or indirectly from disease. We will now consider the first question.

Rarely can a single cause be assigned to a trauma of the human body. Injuries are made up of a network of causes interacting that result in damage, and it would be practicably impossible to assign one sole cause that brought about the harm to the exclusion of all others.

By returning to the excerpt from the policy which is quoted in a preceding paragraph of this opinion, it will be noticed that the policy contains two provisions governing the defendant’s agreement to make payment of double indemnity to the beneficiary under circumstances such as those that are disclosed by this case. The first of the provisions requires the defendant to pay “if such death results from bodily injuries effected solely through accidental means.” The initial inquiry under that provision is whether the injuries were effected solely by accidental means; if this is found to be so, then the death, to be compensable, must *332 result from those injuries. However,- there is no requirement that death.must result solely from the injuries. The second provision is that the defendant’s agreement to pay “does not cover death resulting directly or indirectly from * * * disease.”

We held in Finley v. Prudential Life & Casualty Insurance Company, supra, that Finley, was injured by accidental exposure to sub-zero weather. He sustained frost-bite and lung damage which resulted in acute broncho-pneumonia and death. The reasoning and authorities set forth in that case are applicable here and we find no necessity for repeating them. The exposure was due to accident and .was the immediate predominant cause of Finley’s injuries.

The double indemnity supplement, as we have seen, excludes from its coverage death. resulting directly or indirectly from disease. Defendant (insurance company) contends the pre-existing bronchial disorders of insured were “virulent,” “active,” and “disabling.” It further argues that they directly or indirectly caused the death. We will give that contention more attention.

. Admittedly these lung maladies played a part in bringing on the death of Mr. Finley. His resistance to the effects of exposure was reduced by the.lung diseases maldng him more susceptible to harm from exposure. But this is not to say that the pre-existing diseasés were the cause of his death—directly or indirectly.

If we accept the contentions of the defendant, the coverage of the double indemnity provision would be restricted beyond the reasonable intendment of the parties. If there could be discovered in a man’s body a condition that under scientific test would be deemed *333 to render him less capable of resisting the results of accidental injuries, the policy would afford no coverage. A man may be suffering from some disease such as diabetes or tuberculosis which has weakened his resistance, but he may nevertheless become the victim of an accident resulting in death although death might have been less likely had he been in better physical condition. In such a case disease and low vitality do not rise to the dignity of concurring causes, but, in having deprived the body of its normal powers of resistance, appear rather as allies of the agencies set in motion by the accidental exposure.

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Related

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282 F. Supp. 555 (D. Oregon, 1968)
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424 P.2d 793 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
388 P.2d 459, 236 Or. 328, 1964 Ore. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finley-v-business-mens-assurance-co-or-1964.