Gohlke v. Hawkeye Commercial Men's Ass'n

198 Iowa 144
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 1, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 198 Iowa 144 (Gohlke v. Hawkeye Commercial Men's Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gohlke v. Hawkeye Commercial Men's Ass'n, 198 Iowa 144 (iowa 1924).

Opinion

Vermilion, J.

—The plaintiff is the beneficiary named in a certificate of membership issued by the defendant association to Oscar Gohlke, deceased, some years prior to his death. The bylaws of the association provide in part as follows:

“That, whenever a member in good standing, shall, through external, violent or accidental means, receive bodily injuries which shall, independently of all other causes, result in death within- ninety days from said accident, the beneficiary named in his application for membership, or his heirs, if no beneficiary is named therein, shall be paid within ninety days after the receipt by the association, of proof satisfactory to the board of directors of said injuries and the accidental cause thereof the proceeds of one assessment of two dollars upon each member in good standing, but in no case shall such payment exceed the sum of five thousand dollars.”

Oscar Gohlke died under circumstances to be hereafter stated, and plaintiff brings this action in equity to require the association to make an assessment, as provided for in the bylaws, to meet the obligation alleged to have arisen under and by virtue of the certificate of membership and the by-laws, by reason of his accidental death. The lower court denied the relief, and plaintiff appeals.

Two questions are- presented; (1) Whether the death of [146]*146Oscar Gohlke resulted from injuries received through accidental means; and (2), if his death resulted from-accident, whether it was one for which the beneficiary is, under the by-laws, entitled to recover.

Many of the principal facts are not in serious dispute. Oscar Gohlke died in his room at a hotel in Oklahoma City, on the morning of February 24, 1919. He retired to his room in apparent good health, at about midnight. Shortly thereafter, he was found strangling, and died in a few minutes.

Dr. Eoss testified that he was called by a bell boy, and found Gohlke sitting on a chair by the telephone in his night clothes, with his head dropped forward; that he lifted his head and asked him what was the matter; that Gohlke tried to talk, but could only mumble, and not speak a word plainly, and there was froth coming from his mouth and nostrils; that he, the doctor, obtained help and put him on the bed, and in two minutes he was dead; that he was strangling, and could not talk or get his breath; that he (the doctor) gave him a strychnine hypodermic;' but that he was then dying, and did not live to exceed five minutes after the doctor was called. He further testified that there was an open bottle of sal hepática, a teaspoon with some of the dry powder on it, and a glass with a couple of ounces of water in it, on the table, and that no other medicine was found.

McCarthy, a 'guest at the hotel, occupying an adjoining room, testified that he heard the doctor call for help, and rushed to his assistance; that he found Gohlke in a chair in his night clothes, strangling and choking, with foam coming from his mouth and nostrils, and the doctor trying to get him to talk; that Gohlke never spoke, and was in a dying condition; that they lifted him on the bed, the doctor gave him a hypodermic, and he died immediately; that, on a table where Gohlke was sitting at the time of the entrance of the witness, there was a bottle partially filled with sal hepática, a spoon with dry powder on it, and a glass with about two haches of water iaa it.

Torbert, a witness for the defeoadant, occupied a room across the hall from Gohlke’s. He testified that, about 12 o ’clock at night, he heard Gohlke joking with the bell boy; that all at once he heard him say, “Get me a doctor quick,” and then he [147]*147said, “Doctor, you had better hurry, I am going;” that there was no one in the room, because he heard the bell boy leave; that in a couple of minutes he heard footsteps, looked out, and went into the room; that Gohlke, dressed in his nightgown, was lying on the bed dead; that McCarthy and another man were there, but not the doctor; that the latter came in, felt of Gohlke’s pulse, and said, “It is too late, he is dead;” that the doctor may have been in the room before, and come back. This is all of the testimony as to the occurrence of Gohlke’s death.

. On May 1st following, the body was exhumed, and an autopsy held. The brain and other organs of the body were found to be normal, and with no evidence of disease except some slight kidney trouble, the presence of gallstones, an enlarged heart, some hardening of the arteries, and a complete closure of the glottis, or opening from the pharynx into the larynx, or windpipe.

There is no claim that the condition of the kidneys or the gallstones caused the death. No immediate cause of death was found except the closing of the glottis, resulting in strangulation. The question of fact thus presented is: What caused the closing of the glottis and resulting strangulation and death?

The evidence shows that sal hepática is a well known and commonly used remedy, and is not poisonous. It is an effervescent salt, and gives off a gas when it comes in contact with fluid.

Gohlke was 49 years old at the time of his death, was 5 feet, 6 or 8 inches tall, with a girth measure of about 57 inches, and weighed' some 250 pounds. Notwithstanding his obesity, he is shown to have been active, to have bowled and walked with no apparent shortness of breath. In the seven years preceding his death, he required the services of a physician but once, for a few days, on account of digestive trouble. He was accustomed to take sal hepática, and had once strangled when taking it.

It is the claim of plaintiff that, immediately before his deathj deceased had taken a dose of sal hepática, and that it, or the gas thrown off by its- coming in contact with the mucous membranes of the throat, produced such irritation that the glottis closed, and he died of strangulation. . On behalf of the [148]*148defendant, it is contended that the closing of the glottis was the result of an oedema, or swelling, caused by high blood pressure and disease of the heart.

As is not infrequently the case, there was considerable difference of opinion among the medical experts who testified as to the cause of death. Dr. Ross, who was present when Gohlke died, testified that in his opinion death was caused by strangling from taking a dose of effervescent salts. Dr. Hall, a medical graduate, engaged in laboratory work, who had specialized in post-mortem examinations for twenty years, was present at the autopsy.

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198 Iowa 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gohlke-v-hawkeye-commercial-mens-assn-iowa-1924.