Hornby v. State Life Insurance

184 N.W. 84, 106 Neb. 575, 18 A.L.R. 106, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 223
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1921
DocketNo. 21512
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 184 N.W. 84 (Hornby v. State Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hornby v. State Life Insurance, 184 N.W. 84, 106 Neb. 575, 18 A.L.R. 106, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 223 (Neb. 1921).

Opinions

Flansburg, J.

This is an action to recover on an insurance policy under a provision allowing double indemnity in case of the death of the insured, resulting from bodily injury, sustained and effected directly through external, violent and accidental means, exclusively and independently of all other causes. The company had paid the face of the policy, but denied liability for double indemnity, under the provision mentioned. Trial was had to a jury and judgment resulted in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant insurance company appeals.

The testimony upon which plaintiff’s case is based stands practically without contradiction, and the defendant contends, under the facts so shown, that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, and argues that there is no evidence that the insured sustained a bodily injury through external, violent and accidental means, and that there is no evidence sufficient to show that death was the result of the accidental injury alleged, since death is shown to have been caused by blood poisoning, and since it does not appear that the poisonous infection was introduced into the wound at the time of the initial injury.

The testimony in behalf of the plaintiff shows that insured and his son, in the latter part of October, 1918, were engaged on the farm of the insured near Valentine, Nebraska, in harvesting a crop of beans, and that the field was badly infested with sand burs. While the harvesting was going on, as insured’s wife says, or shortly after it concluded, as insured’s son puts it, the insured was noticed by them to be pressing and picking at his thumb. The son testifies that he looked at insured’s [577]*577thumb and there appeared to be a small hole, a place like a thorn leaves after it has gone in, and that just about the little red spot in the center the skin had turned red and that a sort of callous had formed about the place. The widow’s testimony was that she noticed the insured pressing his thumb and picking at it, as if to remove a sliver.

Insured ivas engaged in the undertaking business, to which he devoted part of his time each week. Shortly after the time the above observations were made, the insured left for Valentine, and was gone a week, engaged in his Undertaking business. The testimony shows that he did not directly handle bodies, as he had a helper to do that, but that he did do embalming and inject embalming fluids. When he returned to the farm he was still pressing and working with his thumb. At that time it had become slightly swollen, and from then on the testimony fully shoAvs the progress of an infection, resulting in the swelling of his entire arm and finally in his death, which occurred bn November 17 following. The testimony of physicians in behalf of the plaintiff was to the effect that any such infection, originating underneath the skin, is always due to entrance of germs by means of some injury which has resulted in an opening of the skin, although the opening may be ever so slight, and,that in this particular instance the infection must have entered through the opening in the skin of insured’s thumb. That death resulted from blood poisoning, so introduced into the physical system of the insured, would seem to be beyond reasonable question.

The testimony, however, in behalf of the defendant, which stands undisputed, is that whenever an infection enters a wound it will manifest itself in a few hours, almost always Avithin 24 to 36 hours, and never more than 3 days afterwards. It would seem, then, from the testimony as it stands, that the infection of which the insured died, though perhaps not received at the time of the original injury to his thumb, was at least received later [578]*578through that injury and before it had become entirely cured.

It is one of defendant’s contentions that the evidence is insufficient to show that the insured met with an injury through external, violent and accidental means, and that, though there is evidence to show that there was a small abrasion or slight hole in the defendant’s thumb, there is nothing to show how it was produced,- and that its cause must rest entirely in conjecture; and in argument defendant suggests that the insured may have had a pimple or a growth in his thumb resulting from some internal cause, and may have picked at it so as to, himself, have opened the skin and caused a wound through which the poi'sondus infection entered, and that, since one 'inference is as likely to be drawn as the other, the plaintiff has not' carried the burden of proof, and that the plaintiff's action should, therefore, be dismissed.

• The testimony of plaintiff’s physicians shows that insured’s thumb had been examined, in an endeavor to find some foreign substance that had pierced the skin, but that no thorn, or other foreign substance, was discovered- and that the place when* any such foreign matter might have lodged was cut away. One of these physicians testifies that when the skin is pierced by a thorn, or other foreign substance, and the foreign matter, or a part thereof, is left in the skin, a callous will form immediately about, thus walling off the foreign substance from the physical system; that nature thus provides a protective remedy.

•The testimony of insured’s son, describing-the wound as a place like a thorn leaves after it has gone in,- with a little red opening where'the skin had' been pierced, and with a callous about it, in connection with the circumstance of'the'insured’s being "employed at that time, or immediately before, in a field infested with sand burs,'and in the light of the actions of the insured in pressing his thumb and picking at it, as if-to remove a sliver, would; to' the ordinary mind, it seems to us, reasonably resultan the conviction that a thorn, or some such foreign matter, had [579]*579pierced insured's thumb.

This evidence, furthermore, is aided by the presumption that insured did not voluntarily inflict an injury upon himself, It is plain that the insured’s thumb was pierced by som.e foreign substance. The wound and the nature, of the wound are proved. Such an injury could only be the result of violent and external means, and, when the proof goes so far, the presumption is in favor of an accident. Under this condition of the evidence, aided by such ..presumption, we are unable to agree with the. defendant’s argument that the cause of the injury must be left, .entirely to conjecture, or that the jury was called upon to guess, without evidence or reasonable inference to guide it, between the theory that the wound was (mused through accidental means and the theory that the insured .had, himself, with some instrument, voluntarily produced. it. Caldwell v. Iowa State Traveling Men’s Ass’n, 156 Ia. 327; Omberg v. United States Mutual Accident Ass'n, 101 Ky. 303; Peck v. Equitable Accident, Ass’n, 52 Hun (N. Y.) 255; 1 C. J. 495, sec. 278.

Though we do not deem it necessary to go into that question, some of the decisions are to the effect that eyen where the insured, through a voluntary act, pricks at a pimple and opens the skin, and in doing so unknowingly uses an instrument carrying infection, the resulting blood poisoning will be held to be the result of accident, rather .than due to the voluntary act of the insured. Nax v. Travelers Ins. Co., 130 Fed. 985; Lewis v. Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corp., 224 N. Y. 18; Interstate Business Men’s Accident Ass’n v. Lewis, 257 Fed. 241. And. see, National Surety Co. v. Love, 102 Neb. 633.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 N.W. 84, 106 Neb. 575, 18 A.L.R. 106, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hornby-v-state-life-insurance-neb-1921.