Globe Life Insurance Company of Alabama v. Howard

147 So. 2d 853, 41 Ala. App. 621, 1962 Ala. App. LEXIS 160
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 13, 1962
Docket7 Div. 683
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 147 So. 2d 853 (Globe Life Insurance Company of Alabama v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Globe Life Insurance Company of Alabama v. Howard, 147 So. 2d 853, 41 Ala. App. 621, 1962 Ala. App. LEXIS 160 (Ala. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

The Globe Life Insurance Company of Alabama appeals to this Court from a judgment suffered by it in favor of Virgil Howard in the Circuit Court of St. Clair County, Alabama, and assigns eight grounds of error committed by the trial court.

The appellee maintained this suit on an accident insurance policy purchased from the appellant company, which contracted to-indemnify him for medical expenses due to sickness or injury caused by accidental means.

Howard testified that he was injured in an -accident at Hanna Steel Company on April jS. *7, 1961, at which time the premium on such insurance policy was fully paid. According to the undisputed evidence, the accident resulted in the breaking of his leg and foot and the crushing of his ankle. Howard further testified that he was hospitalized for a period of eighteen days, that he was administered an anaesthetic and hypodermic shots, that numerous x-rays, were made, that gauze was used, and that ■ he was carried to the hospital in an ambulance. The testimony further shows that appellee was treated by Dr. C. B. Thuss, of Birmingham, Alabama, and that, although he first filed a claim as required by the terms of the insurance policy, he was not paid, and according to the record no-protest was made by the appellant as to the accuracy or the reasonableness of the claim prior to the date of the trial. Plaintiff’s. Exhibit 2 is a statement from Dr. Thuss,’ who made eighteen trips to the hospital to treat Howard, according to the undisputed evidence.

Appellee Howard testified that his hospital and doctor’s bills had been paid by the American Mutual Insurance Company under the terms of a group insurance policy carried and paid for by his employer. Mr. Howard further testified that he had been paid Workmen’s Compensation, that he did not then owe any hospital or doctor’s bills arising out of his injuries, that his injuries *623 had not cost him one penny, and that he did not contribute anything to the group insurance carried with the American Mutual Insurance Company. In this connection we agree with the trial judge who, during the progress of the trial, properly reached the following conclusion: “Well, he was helping pay for it. It might have been that the company was simply not handing it to him and then taking it back, but certainly he was helping produce.”

Following the testimony of Virgil Howard, his son Ed Howard testified that he went to the office of the Globe Insurance Company and there discussed collection of his father’s claim with some individual who ■stated that he was in charge of the claims department, and that this person told him that a check would be mailed to his father ■“before the next Wednesday”.

Appellant’s assignment of error No. 1 charges “that the court erred in overruling Appellant’s Demurrers to Appellee’s Complaint as Amended”, which was as follows:

“The Plaintiff claims of the Defendant the sum of Eight Hundred and no/100 ($800.00) Dollars, due on a policy whereby the defendant on the 1st day of May, 1960, insured the plaintiff against loss by reason of hospital residence, due to sickness on to wit: the 7th day of April, 1961, of which defendant has had notice. Said policy is the property of the plaintiff and was in force and effect.”

Appellee amended the above complaint by adding the following: “The Plaintiff suffered loss by reason of hospital residence due to the sickness”. The complaint was further amended by leave of the Court at the conclusion of the trial by adding the following: “Now comes the Plaintiff and further amends his Complaint by avering that the Plaintiff was insured against loss by reason of injury and sickness.”

Under, what purports to be the Judgment Entry in this cause, we observe the following: “defendant refiles demurrer to complaint as amended. The demurrer is ■overruled and the defendant pleads in short by consent the general issue.” The record contains only the above reference to a ruling on the demurrer by the court. Such language does not constitute a judgment either sustaining or overruling the demurrer; and under the rule supported by numerous decisions, our Supreme Court states that the appellant can take nothing by an assignment of error based upon such a recital. Tallassee Falls Manufacturing Co., for use, etc., v. Western Railway of Alabama, 128 Ala. 167, 29 So. 203; Jasper Mercantile Co. v. O’Rear, 112 Ala. 247, 20 So. 583. We quote in part from Alabama Fuel and Iron Co. v. Vaughan, 205 Ala. 589, 88 So. 857. “ * * * the ruling on the demurrer is not available to appellant because no judgment thereon is shown by the record. A mere recital in the minute entry that the demurrer was overruled is not sufficient.”

Under Rule 9, Revised Rules of Supreme Court, assignments of error not substantially argued in brief will be deemed waived and will not be considered by this court. The transcript of the record reveals eight assignments of error; however, in appellant’s brief, there is no argument in support of assignments of error Nos. 2 and 4, and such are waived. Rogers v. W. M. Dunbar Co., 39 Ala.App. 180, 96 So.2d 710; Pierce v. Floyd, 38 Ala.App. 439, 86 So.2d 658; Foreman v. Smith, 272 Ala. 624, 133 So.2d 497.

Assignment of error No. 3 alleges error in the trial court’s refusal to grant a nfew trial. As grounds for that motion the appellant assigned substantially the same errors to the trial court which he here assigns. These grounds were not sufficient for the trial judge to grant a new trial, and properly, the motion was overruled.

Assignment of error .No. 5 charges that the court erred in rendering judgment in favor of appellee. This assignment is predicated upon the proposition .“that there was a fatal variance between .the allegations of the Amended Complaint and the proof adduced at the trial” because the complaint alleged hospitalization due to “sickness”, *624 whereas the testimony established an “injury”. We have sought the meaning of sickness and discovered that it has been defined to embrace injury. “[It is] any affection of the body which deprives it temporarily of power to fulfill its usual functions”. Nat. Cas. Co. v. Hudson, 32 Ala.App. 69, 21 So.2d 568. In the following cases, sickness has been construed to include injury. Murray Hospital v. Angrove, 92 Mont. 101, 10 P.2d 577; Doody v. Davie, 77 Cal.App. 310, 246 P. 339. After a careful study of the entire record, we are constrained to hold in the light of the above definition that the plaintiff proved his alleged loss by evidence of the accidental injury which was admissible'under the facts of this case to prove the allegation of sickness.

Under assignment of error No. 6 appellant insists that the trial court erred in rendering judgment in favor of appellee in view of a provision in the policy that no coverage attaches for loss or disability resulting- from injury or sickness while confined 1ó any institution wherein the insured is entitled to services without cost- to him. This 'theory stems from appellant’s contention that appellee’s employment by Hanna Steel Company entitled him to free hospitalization under the organization’s group policy cóverage.' Thus, the resulting question is whether: the Hanna Steel Company, appellee’s.’employer, is an institution within the purview of the terms of the policy. We think not.

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 2d 853, 41 Ala. App. 621, 1962 Ala. App. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/globe-life-insurance-company-of-alabama-v-howard-alactapp-1962.