Joslin v. Aetna Life Insurance Co.

21 A.2d 550, 67 R.I. 261, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 91
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 23, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 21 A.2d 550 (Joslin v. Aetna Life Insurance Co.) 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
Joslin v. Aetna Life Insurance Co., 21 A.2d 550, 67 R.I. 261, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 91 (R.I. 1941).

Opinions

Flynn, C. J.

This is an action in assumpsit to recover upon a policy of accident insurance issued by the defendant corporation to the plaintiff. In the district court of the sixth judicial district the parties filed an agreed statement of facts and thereupon the cause was certified to this court in accordance with general laws 1938, chapter 545, § 4.

*262 It is agreed that the plaintiff suffered, through accident, “a comminuted fracture of the greater tuberosity of the left humerus”. From all the facts, including the terms of the policy, the sole question at issue is whether or not such a fracture is covered by part III of the policy. The pertinent portion thereof reads as follows: “The Insured, if he so elect . . . may take . . . indemnity in one sum according to the following Schedule if the injury is one set forth in said Schedule . . . For complete Fracture of Bones: . . . Arm, between elbow and shoulder (shaft).”

The plaintiff contends substantially that the policy should be interpreted as any ordinary contract and that any ambiguous language therein should be construed, according to the general rule, in favor of the insured and against the insurer; that the clause of part III in question is ambiguous and should therefore be construed to include any complete fracture of the bone in the insured’s left arm between the elbow and shoulder.

The defendant concedes the law and general rule, as stated by the plaintiff, but denies its application to the policy and clause in question. It contends that the clause “Arm, between elbow and shoulder (shaft)”, appearing in part III of the policy, is open to only one construction and is not ambiguous; that the word “shaft” in the parenthesis is used in its medical sense and is necessarily a limiting and restricting word upon the principal clause; and that this requires a construction that would except from the complete coverage of that clause a fracture of any part of the humerus other than the part known technically to the medical profession as the “shaft” of that bone.

We have examined the whole of part III of the policy and we are unable to agree with the defendant’s contention that the clause in question is free of ambiguity. Without the expression “(shaft)”, the pertinent provision of part III would not be ambiguous and could not reasonably be misunderstood. So written, it unquestionably would have insured the plaintiff against a complete fracture of any part *263 of the bone in his “Arm, between elbow and shoulder”. However, by adding to that clause “(shaft)” without using any other words within the parenthesis to explain the intended purpose of the word “shaft” therein, the insurer made doubtful that which was otherwise a clear and complete statement of coverage. In such circumstances the insurer, by its own act, made the meaning of this clause uncertain and ambiguous; and therefore a proper case in which to apply the general rule of construing the policy against the insurer. See Newberger v. New York Life Ins. Co., 56 R. I. 442, and cases cited.

Nor can we agree with the suggestion apparently made by the defendant in argument that a parenthesis must be used for only one purpose, namely, limiting and restricting the clause to which it is attached. A parenthesis is in the nature of punctuation and is defined in Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d ed.), page 1776, to be: “A word, phrase, or sentence, by way of comment or explanation, inserted in, or attached to, a sentence which would be grammatically complete without it.”

Words of comment or explanation within a parenthesis, relating to the principal clause as a whole, are not necessarily limiting or restricting words, in the sense that they except from the whole clause certain of its component parts. A parenthesis may be used for different purposes depending upon the context and upon the explanatory words used within it. We think that a parenthesis is frequently used to clarify some ambiguity which arises from the principal clause itself; or to identify the principal clause as a whole, where such clause might be applicable equally to two different things. In the instant case, however, the doubt arises not from any lack of clarity in the principal clause but from the addition of the parenthesis, which contains no other word to explain the intended effect of the single word “shaft” within that parenthesis. Nor is the description of coverage in the principal clause applicable to any other bone because, according to the agreed facts, “The humerus is the bone *264 that extends from the shoulder to the elbow” — Maloy on Legal Anatomy and Surgery, 166. (italics ours)

In the instant case the insurer wrote the policy.' It apparently adopted in part III thereof a definite form of parenthetical expression, wherever it plainly desired to except from the coverage of ‘the principal clause as. a whole any part thereof. It used such parentheses not once but several times in part III of the policy. For example, under the same schedule of part III — before the clause in question— we find parentheses used in relation to dislocations, as follows: “Knee (patella excepted), Bone or Bones of Foot (other than toes)”; and also in relation to complete fracture of bones- — after the clause in question — we find: “Foot (other than toes), Hand (other than fingers), Lower Jaw (alveolar process excepted).”

Apparently from these the insurer knew how to use a parenthesis, with adequate explanatory words therein, when it intended to except from the whole coverage of a principal clause any part or parts which clearly would otherwise be included therein. In all these instances, as above quoted, the insurer did not attempt to except any part by merely mentioning in the parenthesis the name of some other part that was not to be excluded; but it did so by specifically naming within the parenthesis the part to be excepted, and by also using other language within the parenthesis to expressly except that part. 'The repeated use in this same schedule of such form of adequate parenthetical expression, both before and after the clause in question, whenever the insurer clearly intended to except a part from the whole coverage of a pertinent principal clause, would reasonably lead an ordinary reader to conclude that the policy covered a fracture of any bone coming within the description of any principal, clause, unless some part of that bone was specifically mentioned and excepted by suitable words within the parenthesis.

An ordinary purchaser of such a policy would not necessarily be interested in what the word “shaft” meant in the *265 technical sense to members of the medical profession, so long as there was no accompanying language to convey to him the meaning that the “shaft” was being excepted from the principal coverage. For example, an ordinary purchaser might not know the medical meaning of “alveolar process”, in the clause covering “Lower Jaw (alveolar process excepted)”, appearing in the same schedule o'f part III of this policy; but he could not misunderstand that such process, whatever its meaning medically, was excepted from the coverage because of the words within the parenthesis.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 A.2d 550, 67 R.I. 261, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joslin-v-aetna-life-insurance-co-ri-1941.