Huff v. Vulcan Life and Accident Insurance Co.

206 So. 2d 861, 281 Ala. 615, 39 A.L.R. 3d 1303, 1968 Ala. LEXIS 1246
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 11, 1968
Docket5 Div. 847
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 206 So. 2d 861 (Huff v. Vulcan Life and Accident Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huff v. Vulcan Life and Accident Insurance Co., 206 So. 2d 861, 281 Ala. 615, 39 A.L.R. 3d 1303, 1968 Ala. LEXIS 1246 (Ala. 1968).

Opinion

MERRILL, Justice.

Appellant sued on an insurance policy for the loss of a hand. At the conclusion of appellant’s evidence, the trial court gave the general affirmative charge with hypothesis for the defendant. A motion for a new trial was overruled and plaintiff appealed.

The appellant borrowed some money from the Bank of Dadeville in September, 1964. In connection with the loan, he and the bank took out $5,000 of insurance from the appellee. Among the risks covered was the “ * * * Permanent and irrecoverable loss * * * of one or both entire hands by severance or amputation at or above the wrist, provided such loss results from, and within 90 days after, injury caused solely by external, violent and accidental means. * * *

On March 1, 1965, while the insurance was in force, appellant was working in the woods with a power saw and a falling tree kicked back driving the saw into his forearm. The saw tore and cut the muscles and bones of the arm, leaving only a little portion of skin remaining on the under part of the arm to connect the two portions of the arm. He carried the dangling portion of the arm in his right hand to the hospital in Dadeville, where he was seen by Dr. Jack Brock, who sent him immediately to an eminently qualified orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Jack Hughston, at Columbus, Georgia. Dr. Hughston tried to save the dangling portion of the arm by threading the bones on some steel rods, taking out all the muscles because they were dead, closing the skin as well as he could and putting the arm in a cast. The blood supply to the hand portion of the arm was restored, but appellant could not move any fingers of his left hand and had no feeling in any of the fingers except a slight sensation in the little finger. Dr. Hughston said that he did not hope to retain for appellant “a functional hand” but was hoping to obtain a flesh hook, with some sensation to it *617 rather than a metal hook. However, the portions did not unite and the lower forearm and hand were amputated in October, 1965, more than ninety days from the date of the accident.

The case was tried on a single count, claiming damages for the loss of the left hand under the policy because “on to-wit: March 1, 1965 plaintiff, Robert C. Huff, lost his hand by severance at or above the wrist.” Plea 1 was the general issue, and the next six pleas raised the point that the injury occurred on March 1 and it was not until October 5 that Huff’s hand was severed (Pleas 2, 3, 4) or amputated (Pleas 5, 6, 7).

When the plaintiff rested the defendant rested and the defendant requested the general affirmative charge with hypothesis. The trial court heard arguments out of the presence of the jury. When the jury was recalled, he read a few rules for construing insurance contracts from Alabama Farm Bureau Mut. Cas. Ins. Co. v. Goodman 279 Ala. 538, 188 So.2d 268 [5-9] [10], and then charged as follows:

“ * * * The Court construes the word ‘severance’ as meaning a separation, an entire separation, gentlemen of the jury; because Webster’s dictionary says that ‘severance means a separation by violence.’ You heard the evidence in this case. It is elementary that when an insurance company writes an exclusion in a liability policy it intends to limit or exclude a risk. So, as the Court understands the law, Gentlemen of the jury, there was a contract here not based on the loss of the use of the hand, but based on a severance; which means, as the Court understands the law, a complete severance of the limb from the body, from the arm. Therefore, the Court cannot, according to the decision of the Supreme Court, add to or take from. The Court would like very much to see this Plaintiff recover, I will say that much. As a matter of right, if he is entitled to do so under the law. But since I have to construe it, that is my construction, as I understand the law, in the face of this recent decision of the Supreme Court. So I am giving you the affirmative charge requested by the Defendant. * . * * ”

It will be noted that the only reason given by the learned trial judge for giving the charge was his construction of the word “severance” as “an entire separation” or a complete severance from the body or the upper arm. We agree that Web-1 ster’s New International Dictionary defines “sever,” inter alia, as meaning “disunite,” “dissociate,” “to open,” “to cut or break open or apart.” But there is not the finality in every definition of the word severance as there is to the word “amputation.” And if the two words —“severance” and “amputation” mean the same, there was no need for the insurance policy to use the phrase “loss of one or both entire hands by severance or amputation at or above the wrist.”

Dr. Hughston testified as to his understanding of the meaning of the word “severance,” and the difference between “severance” and “amputation.” On cross examination by defendant, he was asked if, in bone surgery, there was a difference in the words or were they synonymous:

“A I don’t know how to answer you specifically. One way, you can interpret the word ‘severance’, and it could mean that the bone was broken or severed or cut across; that would be a severance of the bone, and that would not be an amputation. An amputation would mean cutting it off and that there was no bone distal to that point. Do you follow me? You could say that the whole forearm was severed, still that doesn’t mean anything except that it was cut, is the way that I interpret it. i
“Q Severance to you doesn’t mean that it is separated from?
“A No, it doesn’t. It means if you severed the skin, cut the skin, the two *618 skin edges . were separated from one another. If you severed the bone, it would mean that you had cut the bone, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t have some possibility of the bone growing'back together, It is not the same thing as an amputation to me.
“Q You can have a loss of bone without an amputation?
“A You can have a loss of bone without an amputation.”

The attitude of this court in dealing with the word “severance” in policies similar to the one here was set in Life & Casualty Ins. Co. v. Leacock, 220 Ala. 104, 124 So. 229, where the policy afforded coverage if “the insured shall lose by severance both hands, or both feet, * * *.” The insured lost her left foot by amputation and the toes of her right foot. The insured was awarded compensation for the loss of both feet and the insurer contended that there was a variance because only one foot was lost. This court said that “the insured is not limited to a recovery by showing that both feet have been entirely severed and lost. The provision for indemnity for ‘loss by severance’ of feet or hands was intended to refer to the manner rather than to the exact physical extent of the injury.” After citing cases from other jurisdictions, the court further stated:

“These cases establish the proposition that, where the policy insures against the loss of a member, .or the loss of an entire member, the word ‘loss’ should be construed to mean the destruction of the usefulness of that member, or the entire member, for the purpose to which, in its normal condition, it is susceptible to application, in the absence of more specific definition in the policy.”

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Bluebook (online)
206 So. 2d 861, 281 Ala. 615, 39 A.L.R. 3d 1303, 1968 Ala. LEXIS 1246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huff-v-vulcan-life-and-accident-insurance-co-ala-1968.