Key Life Insurance Co. of South Carolina v. Murray

502 S.W.2d 833, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2599
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 1973
DocketNo. 7503
StatusPublished

This text of 502 S.W.2d 833 (Key Life Insurance Co. of South Carolina v. Murray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Key Life Insurance Co. of South Carolina v. Murray, 502 S.W.2d 833, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2599 (Tex. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinions

KEITH, Justice.

Defendant below appeals from a judgment entered following a trial by jury and we will designate the parties as they appeared in the trial court.

At all times material to this suit, there was in full force and effect a policy of in[834]*834surance issued by defendant wherein it agreed to pay to the named beneficiary therein the principal sum of fifteen thousand dollars upon death of the assured. One of the provisions in the policy, pleaded by defendant, read:

“This policy pays benefits for losses resulting directly and independently of all other causes from accidental bodily injuries sustained solely through external, violent and accidental means . . . .”

C. C. Murray, the insured, was a logging contractor whose work was physical in nature and done in the woods of East Texas. He had a heart attack in 1966, and was treated by a specialist in Beaumont, Dr. Thomas A. Lombardo. He was also examined by other specialists in the Methodist Hospital in Houston who confirmed the diseased condition of his heart.

On March 8, 1972, the assured arose at his usual early hour, ate a normal breakfast, and went with some members of the crew to a place in the southern part of Newton County where he was to engage in logging operations. In addition to assured, there were four other men engaged in the operation, two were cutting the logs, one operating the skidder, another was hauling the logs to the mill. The assured ordinarily operated the loader but, upon the day in question, he was trimming knots off the logs.

The assured made no complaint during the day of feeling ill or tired; but, around two in the afternoon, he walked off the job. As the witness Nathan Myers, Jr., one of the men in the crew, put it: “He just walked the line. I mean that wasn’t nothing out of the ordinary. He did that all the time anyway.” When assured failed to appear, Myers became worried and began hunting for him about three o’clock and continued for an hour and a half, but was unable to find him.

He met a game warden in the woods and they drove to a grocery store some five or six miles from where he had been working and sought outside help in finding Mr. Murray. Around ten o’clock that night the searching party, including Myers, found Mr. Murray on an old dirt logging road. His eyes were open, he was lying upon his back. There were no marks on him nor did he look as if he had been hit with anything. His clothes were not torn, but his cap was lying near his head.

Myers was firm in his testimony that Mr. Murray had had a normal day, and had made no complaints of being ill or feeling bad. Carroll Myers, Nathan’s brother, was summoned by Nathan to help in the search for Mr. Murray and was in the party that found the body of the deceased. He corroborated Nathan Myers as to the deceased lying on his back, his cap about a foot from his head, his eyes open, and no indications that anything had fallen on or hit him. His clothes were not torn and there was no blood noticeable. He was asked: “Was there anything in the physical condition of either Curtis [deceased] or the ground to indicate what happened to him?” and answered, “No, Sir.” He said that he did not “have any way of knowing what killed him.”

No autopsy was performed upon the body of the deceased and the trial court properly excluded the death certificate tendered by the defendant.1 No witness having actual knowledge of the facts testified as to the cause of Mr. Murray’s death. Dr. Lombardo, whose deposition was taken by defendant, testified:

“Q. Knowing what you did about the previous medical history of Curtis [835]*835Coleman Murray, if he were found lying on his back in the woods, no sign of violence about his body, his eyes open, could you give us a probability as to the cause of his death that you would deduce from those facts ?

“A. I would have assumed that Mr. Murray died a cardiac death.”2

Thus, it will be seen from this resume of the evidence viewed in a standpoint most favorable to the plaintiff, there was no competent evidence in the record that Mr. Murray’s death was caused by a heart attack, much less that it was caused by overexertion. With the record in this condition, plaintiff offered Dr. Lee T. Popejoy, Jr., a general practitioner who had never seen the deceased or his medical records.

Counsel then propounded a lengthy hypothetical question, including therein findings from the medical records of the Methodist Hospital showing a damaged heart; that on the day of his death Mr. Murray “operated a loader and he had been trimming knots off logs; that about two o’clock that afternoon he walked off to check lines and roads for cutting; and a search for him began about three o’clock, about an hour thereafter; that Mr. Murray exerted himself by operating the loader and by operating a chain saw, which is strenuous physical exertion, over-all being the type of exertion which he ordinarily would not encounter.” The doctor was asked:

“[N]ow based on that set of facts do you have an opinion based on reasonable medical probability as to whether or not this fatal heart attack of Mr. Murray’s resulted directly in and independently from all other causes from the exertion?”

To which Dr. Popejoy responded: “I think the question was was the exertion

the cause of the heart attack?” Being assured that was the question, Dr. Popejoy continued:

“I think this is the question, and I think there’s no question here that the man had a condition of a heart that was suc-ceptible [sic] to some problems. However, apparently he’d been doing all right with his normal routine with his heart as the condition existed and was involved in some extra exertion, apparently from what you said, that morning, so it would be the most medical probable thing that the exertion tended to cause the — to .cause the heart attack, considering the condition that was working upon him.”

This testimony, which was the only evidence in the record on the point, constituted no evidence that the death of Mr. Murray resulted “directly and independently of all other causes from accidental bodily injuries sustained solely through external, violent and accidental means”, as set out in the policy. We have previously mentioned the condition of the deceased when found many hours after he left the job, the complete absence of any marks upon the body, and the lack of competent testimony showing the cause of his death.

The jury found that: (1) the deceased sustained an accidental bodily injury; (2) that the fatal heart attack “resulted directly and independently of all other causes from such accidental bodily injury”; (3) that deceased had a diseased heart at the time of his death but (4) failed to find that the diseased condition of his heart was a proximate cause of his death.

Defendant challenges the jury’s finding to special issue number two, that the death of Mr. Murray “resulted directly and independently of all other causes from such accidental bodily injury” with a no evidence point. We are required to con[836]*836sider only the evidence supporting the finding in passing upon such point and that has been set out in a manner most favorable to the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
502 S.W.2d 833, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/key-life-insurance-co-of-south-carolina-v-murray-texapp-1973.