Hanrahan v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance

18 A.2d 512, 143 Pa. Super. 557, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 78
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 11, 1940
DocketAppeal, 148
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 18 A.2d 512 (Hanrahan v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanrahan v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance, 18 A.2d 512, 143 Pa. Super. 557, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 78 (Pa. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

Appellant has appealed from a judgment entered in the court below upon a verdict in favor of the appellee in the principal sum of $876, with interest, or a total of $1,099.40, following the denial of its motions for judgment in its favor, n. o. v., or a new trial. She sued as beneficiary of the Accidental Death Benefit Provisions of two policies of insurance — one for $416 and the other $460 — issued upon the life of her husband, John Han-rahan, which policies were in full force on the date of his death, October 25, 1935. Appellant promptly paid appellee the face amount, due under the main provisions of the policies and the controversy out of which this litigation arose relates exclusively to its liability for ad *560 ditional sums “equal to the face amount of insurance,” under provisions incorporated in each policy and reading: , ¡ J

“Accidental Death Benefit Provisions. Upon receipt of due proof that the Insured after attainment of age 15 and pri,or to the attainment of age 70, has sustainejd bodily injury, solely through external, violent and accidental means, occurring after the date of this Ptolicjy and resulting in the death of the Insured within ninety days......the Company will pay in addition to any other sums due under this Policy......an Accidental Death Benefit equal to the face amount of insurance stated in this Policy .......”

As counsel for appellant press, upon this appeal, their motion for judgment upon the whole record, a somewhat detailed review of the evidence is required for its proper disposition.

It was not, controverted] at the trial that the insured, fifty-three years of age, whose regular employment was that of stevedore, but who had been temporarily engaged on a W. P. A. job, started to work from his home, 45 McKean Street, Philadelphia, before seven o’clock on the morning of October 24th, in good health; that shortly after eight o’clock he was admitted to the Episcopalian Hospital with a severe abrasion and bruise upon his left temple, his upper lip “bleeding and swollen,” and with one of his upper front teeth “pushed in”; or that he had suffered a cerebral hemorrhage which was the immediate cause of his death on the evening of the following day.

There is also uncontradicted testimony upon this record that he sustained, on the morning of the 24!th, certain bodily injuries, “solely through external, violent and accidental means.” Mrs. Florence Walmsley, residing at 3506 N. Lawrence Street, near the point at which certain railroad tracks run under Fifth Street, testified she was standing at her kitchen winditow shortly after seven o’clock that morning and saw de *561 cedent slip and fall down a steep and stony embankment extending from the level ground a distance of some eighteen feet to the tracks below. Her testimony continued: “I started over, and, just got half-way over and two men tvere waiting for the train on the other side of the tracks, and had crossed the tracks and picked Mr. Hanrahan up, and put him on the bank, and I asked him, ‘Hid you hurt yourself?’ and he said, ‘Oh, lady, I just fell down the bank and struck my head,’ and I said, ‘Well, I seen you,’ and he said, ‘Well, please get me to a hospital,’ which I did.”

The material allegations of the affidavit of defense were that decedent died “as a result of natural causes, to wit, heart disease and cerebral hemorrhage,” and that the defendant company had “never been furnished with ‘due proof’ or with any proof whatsoever, that the insured sustained bodily injury, solely through external, violent and accidental means, resulting in [his] death.”

To the averment relative to her alleged failure to furnish “due proof” appellee replied, in substance, that she had offered to submit, and in fact did submit, to appellant’s representative due proof that her husband’s death had resulted from the injuries sustained when he fell down the embankment in the manner above described.

Upon the question of a causal connection between the injuries sustained in the fall and decedent’s death, it appeared from the proofs of death, produced at the trial by appellant and concerning which appellee was examined by her counsel (a part of which consisted of a certificate of death certified by the State Bureau of Vital Statistics); that the “Medical Certificate of Death,” included therein, had been signed by the coroner of Philadelphia County and that the cause of death, therein stated, was “Hypertensive Cardio Vascular disease Cerebral hemorrhage.” There was also evidence, hereinafter detailed, that the manager’s office of the dis *562 trict in which the policies had been issued and premiums collected had been informed in writing by appellee, a few days after the death of the insured, that the diagnosis made at the hospital was “Cerebral hemorrhage into ventricle.”

To Dr. Leopold Yaccaro, called by appellee, a hypothetical question was propounded, which contained the material facts appearing from the testimony and concluded as follows: “Assuming those facts to be true, doctor, do you have an opinion as to whether or not the fall down the embankment which John Hanrahan suffered, and the blows to his head as evidenced by the bruise on the temple and the lip were the direct cause of the cerebral hemorrhage of which he died?” To this question the witness replied, “My professional opinion is, on the facts given, on the assumption given, rather, is that the death was directly and solely due to the accidental injury.” In elaboration of his reply the -witness explained: “Q. Do'ctor, just for the jury’s sake, what is hypertensive, cardiovascular disease?' A. Hypertensive cardiovascular disease is part of a normal physiological process that takes place in all men or women of middle age. In other words, when we lose resiliency of muscles or agility or need to put spectacles on, that indicates there are certain processes taking place in our body which are normal at middle age, but abnormal at a previous age. Those constitute cardiovascular disease and any changes they [there?] would be absolutely normal, but would be abnormal in a younger age. In a man of twenty-three, it would constitute pathology, and in a man of fifty-three it would! not.......Q. A hypertensive cardiac condition often induces cerebral hemorrhage, doesn’t it? A. Not necessarily.......It is a perfectly normal condition. In this case we have a very distinct history of a faljl,j and if I am correct from reading that first exhibit, this man had an intraventricular hemorrhage, which can *563 only be due and solely due to external violence which this man shoioed on his left face.” (Italics supplied)

None of this expert evidence was controverted, and there is no competent evidence upon this record that the insured had any actual disease of the heart, ajs! averred in the affidavit of defense. The evidence to which we have referred, if believed by a jury, would support a finding that the death of the insured resulted from bodily injuries sustained “solely through external, violent and accidental means,” within the meaning of the insurance contracts.

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Bluebook (online)
18 A.2d 512, 143 Pa. Super. 557, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanrahan-v-john-hancock-mutual-life-insurance-pasuperct-1940.