Fried v. State Life Ins. Co. of Indianapolis, Ind.

158 So. 20, 180 La. 927, 1934 La. LEXIS 1590
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 29, 1934
DocketNo. 32885.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 158 So. 20 (Fried v. State Life Ins. Co. of Indianapolis, Ind.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fried v. State Life Ins. Co. of Indianapolis, Ind., 158 So. 20, 180 La. 927, 1934 La. LEXIS 1590 (La. 1934).

Opinion

O’NIELL, Chief Justice.

This is a suit for disability insurance provided for in three life insurance policies. In fact there were six suits, which were consolidated and dealt with as one suit. The plaintiff claims that he was stricken with angina pectoris, causing frequent, violent and painful paroxysms, and total and permanent disability, and preventing him from performing any work for compensation or profit, or from following any gainful occupation. One of the policies is for $5,000 and the two others are for $10,000 each. All of them contain the stipulation for the payment of one per cent, per month in case of total and permanent disability. The insured first brought suit on each of the three policies for eight monthly installments, amounting to $2,-000, alleged to be past due, and after two months had elapsed he brought three more suits for two more installments, amounting to $500, alleged to be past due. He claimed also the penalty of double indemnity, and attorneys’ fees (amounting to $4,000 in the six suits), under the provisions of Act No. 310 of 1910. He prayed also for a return of the premiums, amounting to $868.40, paid under protest after his disability was said to have set in, and prayed that all subsequent premiums should be decree waived by the insurer, and not payable by the insured, according to the terms of the policies. The insurance company, answering the suit, denied that the insured was totally or permanently disabled, and denied that he was afflicted with angina pectoris. That was the ground on which the company had denied liability, after investigating the claim for nearly four months after the insured had furnished the proofs of disability, on forms furnished by the company. The district judge gave judgment against the company for all that the plaintiff sued for, except that the judge fixed the attorney’s fees at $3,500, instead of $4,000. The insurance company is appealing from the decision.

The main'issue in the case is the question of fact — whether the insured was afflicted with angina pectoris, causing total and permanent disability, and wholly preventing him from performing any work for compensation or profit, or from following any gainful occupation. That is, substantially, the language of the disability clauses in the policies. It is virtually conceded by all of the doctors and specialists who testified in the ease that if the plaintiff’s ailment was angina pectoris he was totally and permanently disabled, within the terms of the policies. He suffered frequent painful and violent paroxysms, in which he appeared to be dying. These spells, which threatened the life of the insured, were superinduced by mental or physical exertion, as well as by excitement or fear. It was on the advice of four of the most noted specialists on diseases of the heart, in the city of New Orleans, as well as on the advice of the family physician in Alexandria, where the insured resided, that he was compelled to give up all work and retire from business. His business was that of a wholesale grocery and produce dealer, on a large scale — -the sales amounting, approximately, to $1,009,000 annually, and the business being profitable. For. that reason, one of the specialists in New Orleans, after his first examination of the insured, declined to *932 take the responsibility of advising him to retire from business, without further investigation and time for development of the symptoms of the disease. But even that one of the specialists who testified in the ease admitted that they who had advised immediately that the insured should retire from business had advised him correctly. The diagnoses and observations which were made by the four specialists on heart.diseases, aided by one of the best known radiologists in New Orleans, were very thorough, extending over a period of nine months, and were confirmed by all known symptoms of angina pectoris, and by the most reliable tests, including the making of electrocardiographs, as requested by the insurance company’s medical director. On receipt of the proofs of disability, the medical director wrote that he would require further time . for investigation; and, some months later, he requested the insured to be examined by a doctor named in the request, and residing and practicing in Alexandria. The insured immediately complied with the request, and the examining physician reported to the company that the insured had not angina pectoris but had infected tonsils, filled with pus, causing the heart trouble; and that a removal of the tonsils would end the trouble. The physician expressed great respect for the opinions of the specialists who had pronounced the ailment angina pectoris, but adhered to his own diagnosis, and suggested an examination by a doctor'whom he named, residing and practicing in Alexandria, and specializing in diseases of the ear, nose and throat. The insured promptly submitted to the examination, and the report of the examiner was “throat acutely inflamed, with tonsils full of pus; * * * heart slightly enlarged with endocarditis; * * * no objective symptoms of angina pectoris.” “Endocarditis” means inflammation of the endocardium, which is the membrane lining the cavities of the heart.. Another physician in Alexandria, not a specialist, examined the insured at the request of the insurance company and pronounced the case septic endocarditis, caused by infected tonsils. But that doctor took the insured to another doctor in Alexandria, who also examined the insured, but reported that he found the tonsils and the area surrounding them normal, and that there was no pus or infection in or around the tonsils. The insured then consulted one of the best known throat specialists in New Orleans, and he, after a thorough examination, reported that there was. no pus or infection in or around the tonsils — no disease there — or cause for advising a removal of the tonsils. Several laymen who were often in the company of the insured testified also to the frequence and violence of the paroxysms, which the specialists said were sure symptoms of angina pectoris. The evidence leaves no doubt whatever that the insured was afflicted with angina pectoiis, causing total and permanent disability, at the time when he furnished the proofs thereof on the forms supplied by the insurance company.

The appellant complains of a ruling of the district judge, refusing to compel the insured to take the witness stand for cross-examination, under the provisions of Act No. 126 of 1908. The statute allows either party to a lawsuit to subject his opponent to cross-examination. But the1 attorneys for the insured objected to the procedure- in this case on the ground that the-ordeal might bring *934 on a paroxysm and be fatal to the insured. Before ruling on the objection, the judge appointed three physicians to examine the insured and give an expert opinion as to the danger of subjecting him to the ordeal of a cross-examination; and the three physicians, after mating the examination, reported unanimously that it would endanger the life of the insured to subject him to cross-examination. The judge therefore sustained the objection. We do not find that he erred in his ruling. There is no specific suggestion in the insurance company’s brief as to what advantage it would have been to the company to cross-examine the insured.

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

Related

Nomey v. Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co.
33 So. 2d 531 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1947)
Harris v. New York Life Ins. Co.
197 So. 579 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1940)
Fried v. State Life Ins. Co. of Indianapolis, Ind.
164 So. 634 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 So. 20, 180 La. 927, 1934 La. LEXIS 1590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fried-v-state-life-ins-co-of-indianapolis-ind-la-1934.