Jett v. Life Casualty Ins. Co.

109 S.W.2d 104, 21 Tenn. App. 266, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 71
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 19, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 109 S.W.2d 104 (Jett v. Life Casualty Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jett v. Life Casualty Ins. Co., 109 S.W.2d 104, 21 Tenn. App. 266, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 71 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

The verdict in this case was directed by the trial judge upon the sole ground that the insured was not in sound ¡health at the time of the application for the policy and when the policy was issued and delivered. This was the issue raised in the motion for a directed verdict, and sustained by the court. This issue is determinative of the lawsuit if the trial judge correctly sustained the motion, but, if he erred, there must be a new trial, regardless of other issues raised by the plaintiff in error, and it follows that this is the sole question presented to this court for determination.

On May 28, 1929, the defendant company issued a life insurance policy on the life of Oscar Jett, Jr., age seven years, upon the application of his parents, with the plaintiff, Leatha Jett, named as beneficiary, payable upon the death of the insured while the policy was in effect. The amount of the policy was $890, and the consideration was the payment in advance of weekly premiums on each and every Monday, et cetera.

*268 "While this policy was in force, and on January 15, 1932, the witness Dr. Robert C. Robertson called to see the insured professionally and diagnosed his case as tuberculosis of the left hip joint; he treated this boy until December.14, 1932, when he operated upon him by taking a portion of the bone of his pelvis and grafted it across the hip joint with the purpose of making the joint rigid and to arrest the tubercular condition. Prior to the operation he had built up the general health of the patient and given him such treatment as was advisable in preparation for the operation. Following the operation, the patient remained in a plaster east until April, 1933, and in May, 1933, a brace was, applied and the brace gradually removed and completely discarded January, 1934. The doctor continued to visit him through January and up until September 29, 1934, which is the date he last saw him professionally. Upon this date he examined the patient and he testifies that the tubercular condition was arrested. He explains the technical difference between an arrested case and a cured case as follows:

“From a technical viewpoint, doctors differentiate between a cure and an arrest. By a cure we mean that a part is restored to its absolute normal, the same as it was before the injury or disease. Ftom that viewpoint a cure is rarely obtained in anything. In other words, an injury will heal, will leave a scare, therefore it is not in anatomical sense a cure. On the other hand, a wound will heal, leaving a scar, you have a perfect function, and in that sense it is a cure, a cure in that sense of differentiation. In tuberculosis it is felt that tuberculosis is never cured in any part of the body in the sense that the part is the same as it was before the disease; in other words, a scare is left, or certain after-effects left, so that it is never as perfect as it was before the disease occurred. On the other hand, tuberculosis in different parts of the body always heals by the production of a scare, and in the cases of joints by the production of bone, so there is no motion in that joint. And we can see by various methods of examination in cases of joint tuberculosis there is no motion; and by other tests we can see no sign of disease within the joint. In other words, the disease has been replaced by bone, and that it has been present over a period of time. We then consider the case arrested.”

The doctor states that in September, 1934, in his opinion the case was arrested, and that his opinion was borne out by X-ray plates, as well as physical examinations, and the patient’s general appearance of good health. The doctor was cross-examined upon this point, being asked:

“I mean by an average, normal, healthy child, he was not in good health at that time ?
“A. In a general way he appeared to be, yes, he did.
“Q. He was in good condition, considering the serious condition he had had ? A. I made that statement on the fact that he was gain *269 ing weight, in fact be bad gained, in fact be was eating well, and I would state that his general condition was excellent and compared very well with any child of his age, insofar as we could tell. »
‘ ‘ Q. So far as you could tell ? A. That, of course, is omtting the stiff hip and stiff leg, his general condition was splendid so far as I could tell.
“Q. But you could not tell whether there was probably some little focal or infection in some bone? A. You must always be guarded when you say any case of tuberculosis is arrested. So far as we could tell it was- arrested.
“ Q. So far as you could see by the X-ray ? A. By repeated X-ray examinations, be repeated physical examinations, by a gain in weight, by a usual appetite, we thought it was arrested. There is no way in which you can say a patient has active tuberculosis today, and tomorrow it is arrested — no one knows.
“Q. But, so far as you can tell in a case of tuberculosis of the bone, it looks like it might be arrested, then in a year or so the trouble might commence again? A. That is correct, it is a great problem in the treatment of tuberculosis.
“Q. What happens in a good percentage of cases, that is, there would be a recurrence of the old infection? A. Well, very often in bone cases if you have secured a solid bone union, so that motion is obviated in that particular joint, the thing you dread is not so much a recurrence in that joint, but a lighting up in some other part of the body.
“Q. Yes, some other joint? A. Not as a rule as a joint, some other part of the body.
“Q. When it comes into some other part of the body, it is directly or indirectly coming from the old arrested case, in the majority of cases? A. You are getting into a rather debatable, technical point there. Some feel that is the ease; others feel that the original focus in the joint case comes from some other part of the body, so you are getting into a question to which no dogmatic answer can be given.
‘ ‘ Q. That is the reason you said you would keep him under observation for several years ? A. I like to follow all cases of tuberculosis over a period of five years, possibly longer.
“Q. Why was it in September, 1934, when you state his case was arrested you said you wanted to keep him under observation for five years ? A. That is routine in all my cases. '
“Q. Why is that? A. I like to cheek their condition to see whether they continue satisfactorily, whether they continue to gain weight, or whether that disease comes out in some other part; whether the extremity holds where we grafted that bone or some deformity shows up; whether there is a relighting in the joint upon which the operation was performed. ...
*270 ‘ ‘ Q. By that you recognize the infection might recur or some other infection might break out up to the period of four or five years? A. Or even longer, much longer.”

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Related

Interstate Life & Accident Insurance Co. v. Gammons
408 S.W.2d 397 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1966)
Reserve Life Ins. v. Boss
264 S.W.2d 587 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1953)
Life Casualty Ins. Co. v. Jett
133 S.W.2d 997 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 104, 21 Tenn. App. 266, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jett-v-life-casualty-ins-co-tennctapp-1936.