Iwanicki v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

199 A. 611, 60 R.I. 498, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 178
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 24, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 199 A. 611 (Iwanicki v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iwanicki v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 199 A. 611, 60 R.I. 498, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 178 (R.I. 1938).

Opinion

*499 Baker, J.

This is an action of the case in assumpsit on a policy of life insurance. The jury, after a trial of the case in the superior court, returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $1071.63. The defendant thereupon filed a motion for a new trial based on the usual grounds. The trial justice granted this motion unless the plaintiff should file, within a specified time, a remittitur of all of the verdict in excess of $535.82. The plaintiff did not file such remittitur but prosecuted her bill of exceptions to this court. The only exception contained in said bill of exceptions and now before us is to the above decision of the trial justice.

The policy sued on was upon the life of Stephen Iwanicki, now deceased, the husband of the plaintiff, who was designated in the policy as beneficiary. The amount of insurance named in the policy was $500. A rider, for which no extra premium was demanded or paid, was attached to the policy and contained in part the following provisions: “Industrial Policy Accidental Death Benefit. Upon receipt of due proof that the Insured, . . . has sustained, . . . bodily injuries, solely through external, violent and accidental means, resulting, directly and independently of all other causes, in the death of the Insured . . . the Company will pay in addition to any other sums due under this Policy and subject to the provisions of this Policy an Accidental Death Benefit equal to the face amount of insurance then payable at death, ... ”, except under certain circumstances not involved in this case. The rider in question also contained the following language: “No Accidental Death Benefit will be paid ... if death is caused or contributed to,'directly or indirectly, or wholly or partially, by disease, or by bodily or mental infirmity, . . . .”

The defendant admits that the plaintiff is entitled to recover from it the sum of $500 with interest. The only dispute between the parties relates to the right of the plaintiff to recover from the defendant an additional similar amount under the provisions of the Accidental Death *500 Benefit clause as set out in the above-mentioned rider attached to the policy. In substance, the question at issue between the parties is whether or not the insured died solely through external, violent and accidental means, directly and independently of all other causes. The plaintiff maintains that the^.eyjdence submitted shows that the death of her husband carne, about in such a manner that the above clause relating :tq, the Accidental Death Benefit applies. On the other handj-;.t]i.e defendant contends that from such evidence it appears-that the insured died from causes not solely connected with the. accident suffered by him, but from causes independent thereof.

We are not concerned here with the meaning and scope of the language appearing in the rider, because the plaintiff's bill of ■ exceptions contains no exception to the charge of the trial justice, and thus the charge as given becomes, for present purposes, the law of the case. The only question before us, in these circumstances, is whether or not the trial justice was clearly wrong in his judgment upon the weight of the evidence, in view of the legal construction given by him in his charge to the pertinent language of the rider.

The record shows that the insured, who was a carpenter in good health and approximately forty-five years of age, was working on a ladder repairing a house in Central Falls in the late afternoon of June 28j 1935. In some manner the ladder slipped and the insured, who was standing thereon four or five feet from the ground, fell backward. There is testimony that he called out and held his head with his hands, but unquestionably the chief injury suffered by him was to his left ankle which was severely fractured in three places and bled considerably, a portion of the bone protruding through the skin. He was at once taken to the office of a doctor, who ordered him removed to the hospital in Central Falls. There he received the usual treatment *501 for such an injury, and on the whole appeared to be progressing normally.

During the evening of June 30 he became very excited, got out of bed and tried to jump from a window, as a result of which conduct an attempt was made .to confine him in the hospital strait-jacket. As this treatment did not prove very successful, police of Central Falls were called in and the police department strait-jacket was applied to the insured. Thereafter, he received the attention apparently called for under these circumstances, but died rather suddenly and unexpectedly about 6:15 o'clock on the morning of July 1. No autopsy was performed to ascertain the cause of his death, which was given by his attending physician as cerebral empolism, acute cerebral edema, acute alcoholic mania.

The plaintiff takes the position that the evidence supports her contention that her husband died of a cerebral embolism, emanating from the injury to his ankle and that, therefore, she is entitled to receive from the defendant the accidental death benefit covered by the provisions of the before-mentioned rider attached to the policy sued on. The defendant, however, maintains, in substance, that the evidence shows that the insured died from acute cerebral edema and acute alcoholic mania brought on by the use of alcoholic liquor; that the injury to the ankle was at most a contributing cause of death; that he did not die from a cerebral embolism and hence, that the plaintiff is not entitled to any recovery under the terms of the rider in question.

Considerable evidence was submitted by both parties in relation to the alleged use of alcoholic liquor by the insured. Without going into details, the evidence for the plaintiff tended to show, among other things, that the insured was a steady worker and had a good reputation; that especially during the four or five years next prior to the accident and since he had been married to the plaintiff, *502 he drank only occasionally; that two men who worked with him on the job where he was hurt noticed no odor of alcohol from him; and that in the hospital on the night of June 30, while the insured was excited and the police officers were present, and it was suggested that he be given a small amount of alcoholic liquor, he refused it, stating that he had not taken any in three months.

On the other hand, evidence presented upon behalf of the defendant by police officers of Central- Falls tended to show that the insured was a more or less steady drinker; that they had seen him under the influence of liquor on the street on numerous occasions, but not in such a condition as to require his arrest; that about eight years before the accident he had been arrested and fined for drunken reveling; that on several other occasions it had been necessary to quiet him, more particularly, however, before he married the plaintiff. Other evidence for the defendant was to the effect that the doctor to whom the insured was taken immediately after the accident, and who ordered him to the hospital, smelled the odor of alcohol from his breath, and that the superintendent of the hospital noticed a similar slight odor of alcohol on the morning of June 29 when she was making her rounds in the hospital.

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Related

Anderson v. Johnson
195 A. 240 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
199 A. 611, 60 R.I. 498, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iwanicki-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-ri-1938.