Hagadorn v. Masonic Equitable Accident Ass'n of the World

59 A.D. 321, 69 N.Y.S. 831
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 59 A.D. 321 (Hagadorn v. Masonic Equitable Accident Ass'n of the World) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hagadorn v. Masonic Equitable Accident Ass'n of the World, 59 A.D. 321, 69 N.Y.S. 831 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Kellogg, J.:

The appeal in this case presents several questions for our determination, and the principal questions "may be stated as follows, viz.: Was there sufficient evidence of total disability of the assured, resulting from the accident, within thirty days from the date of the accident, to warrant the submission of the case to the jury ? Was there any evidence of waiver of notice of the accident which authorized the submission to the jury of that question ?

The policy held by the assured, William Hagadorn, at the time of the accident contained a promise to pay in these words: “ The sum of twenty-five1 dollars per week for a period not exceeding fifty-two consecutive weeks, as indemnity for loss of time resulting from bodily injury so affected during the life of this certificate through [323]*323external, violent and accidental means which shall independently of all other causes immediately and wholly disable him from transacting any and every kind of business pertaining to his occupation above stated.”

It will be observed that the benefit to be paid is to be paid only in case the assured is “ wholly disabled.” No partial disability is contemplated. The assured was a physician in general practice. In attending one of his patients, a lunatic, he was kicked by the patient on the left side of the face and over the eye. This was on March 4, 1896. It produced immediately some hemorrhage at the nose, some pain and discoloration, but was not of sufficient severity to immediately interrupt the usual routine of his business or profession. He continued to transact the “business pertaining to his occupation,” as theretofore, and gave no notice of the accident to defendant until April twenty-third following, fifty days after the occurrence. On April ninth the assured suffered a stroke of paralysis of the right side and thereupon became for the time being wholly disabled; the cause of the paralysis is traced to the accident of March fourth. On the ninth of April, before the assured became paralyzed, he transacted as usual the “business pertaining to his occupation” and made two visits to his patient, the lunatic,'at a distance from his office of some forty rods. It is obvious that if the assured did not become “ wholly disabled from transacting any and every kind of business pertaining to his occupation ” until April ninth; the total disability did not result within the thirty days from the date of the accident and plaintiff has no cause of action under the policy. It is claimed by respondent, however, that there is evidence in the case from which the jury had a right to find that the assured was wholly disabled before April ninth, before he became paralyzed, and it is of importance to consider what the assured himself believed and stated on this point.

On April twenty-sixth the assured sent in his proofs to establish his right to the promised benefits. He answered the following questions in the following manner: “ Describe nature and extent of injury. Nasal abscess producing total paralysis of the right side of the body. * * * How long had you been confined to your bed ? * * * For twenty days from the 9th of April to 29th of April, 1896. * * * Tour house % 4 days [324]*324from March 28th to April 1st, previous to last attack. * * * Wholly disabled? For 20 days. From April 9th to April 29th, 1896.”

The complaint in the action is verified by the assured, William Hagadorn, on October 13, 1896, and alleges “ that the said William Hagadorn * * * on or about the 9th day of April, 1896, * * * sustained severe bodily injuries and received a shock of paralysis. * * * That said William Hagadorn has been wholly disabled from transacting any and every kind of business pertaining to his occupation aforesaid from the ninth day of April, 1896, to the second day of October, 1896.” There is no suggestion in the complaint of being at any time wholly disabled prior to April ninth.

The testimony of the assured was taken and read upon the trial. He says: “ From the 4th of March until April 9th, 1896, I felt apprehensive and told my wife that I was going to have trouble from that pain in my head during that period. I 'noticed my legs were numb on the 28th of March, my left leg was numb for about two hours, it was clumsy, but I could walk by walking with a cane, and it lasted about two hours and then disappeared and wore off. It was the left leg. It was numb from the foot up to the thigh. The numbness, came on quickly at the time, on March 28th, I think, I rode up to see Eugene Richtmyer on that day, just in the edge of the • village, about forty rods from my office, and during the next two or three days I felt no numbness. * * * On the 30 th of March, 1896, when Dr. Persons was present, I had a numb spell. * * * I got up and walked across the floor and dropped a book, as my left hand could not hold it. That, spell lasted three or four hours and no part of the arm was numb except the left hand up to the wrist. I did not experience any numbness after that for three or four days, and not until 1 had the pcsrabysis on April 9th, 1896. * * * On the 28th of March, when I had the numbness, I laid down a little while; can’t tell how long. .* * * I attended Eugene Richtmyer from March 4th, 1896, every day up to April 9, 1896. On some of these days I made more than one visit. He lived about forty rods from iny house and I rode most every time.” He further testifies to many other professional visits continuing daily from March fourth to April ninth, inclusive. On March twenty-seventh and twenty-eighth he visited a patient, Mrs. [325]*325Brown, a mile from his house; on March thirty-first he visited, a patient, M. B. Sternberg at North Blenheim, eight miles away. Visited a patient, wife of Elmer Lewis, four times on April first.

The claim of the plaintiff on the trial was that there was some evidence from which the jury might find that the assured was wholly disabled on the twenty-eighth of March, so continuing to April second, but no claim is made of such disability between April first and April ninth. The evidence of the assured given above is nowhere in the case contradicted, nor is there other evidence which makes the facts relating to his disability prior to April ninth more favorable to plaintiff’s contention. Some evidence is given by Dr. Persons, and some by the wife of the assured, but it is all consistent with what the assured testified to and does not add anything except in corroboration. We must, therefore, concede from the evidence of the assured 'that when proof of claim was made on April 26, 1896, and when the complaint was verified October 13, 1896, there was no idea in the mind of the assured that he was wholly disabled ” at any time prior to April ninth. We must further conclude from his testimony that .at no time before April ninth was he so affected by the accident of March fourth as to be.

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Bluebook (online)
59 A.D. 321, 69 N.Y.S. 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hagadorn-v-masonic-equitable-accident-assn-of-the-world-nyappdiv-1901.