King v. Met. Life Ins. Co., Inc.

97 S.W.2d 651, 20 Tenn. App. 246, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 1, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 97 S.W.2d 651 (King v. Met. Life Ins. Co., Inc.) 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
King v. Met. Life Ins. Co., Inc., 97 S.W.2d 651, 20 Tenn. App. 246, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 19 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

On November 5, 1935, plaintiff sued the defendant for $2,500 and interest, including the statutory penalty of 25 per cent., for the alleged breach of contract of a certain accident policy issued by the defendant to the plaintiff, dated April 24, 1935. And it is alleged that said policy provided for indemnity “for loss of one hand by severance at or above the wrist joint . . . one-half of the.said principal sum,” or the sum of $2,500, the amount *247 sued for, and tbe policy containing tbe provision is made an exhibit to tbe declaration.

It is further averred that in August, 1935, tbe plaintiff; sustained tbe loss of bis left band by a severance at or above tbe wrist joint, which injury was caused directly, and independently of all other causes, by violence and accidentally, while the plaintiff was overseeing or superintending tbe installation of a certain machine in his line of work when bis band came in contact with a saw, causing tbe injury.

Tbe plea to tbe declaration was: (1) That tbe defendant was not indebted to tbe plaintiff in tbe amount sued for or any amount; (2) that it did not breach its contract in any respect; (3) that no demand was made by tbe plaintiff upon tbe defendant maturing tbe statutory penalty; (4) that, if plaintiff is entitled to recover any amount by reason of bis change in occupation tbe insurer would be entitled to reduce tbe indemnity as provided in tbe policy.

At tbe conclusion of the introduction of tbe plaintiff’s testimony a motion was made by tbe defendant for a directed verdict which was sustained by tbe court and the suit dismissed. From tbe order overruling tbe motion for a new trial an appeal in error was prayed and perfected to this court.

Tbe sole assignment of error is that tbe court erred in directing a verdict in favor of the defendant at tbe conclusion of the testimony of tbe plaintiff. Tbe terminative question is: Did tbe plaintiff under tbe terms of tbe policy sustain tbe loss of one hand, by severance, at or above tbe wrist joint? Tbe plaintiff King testified as follows:

“Q. What did tbe saw do to your band?

“A. It cut it completely off except tbe skin on the under side.

‘ ‘ Q. How did it cut through your band ?

“A. Completely through except tbe skin underneath it.

“Q. Mr. King, this was an accident down there?

“A. Purely an accident.

“Q. Did that cut completely sever every bone and ligament of 3our wrist?

“A. Yes sir.

“Q. "What did you do when your band was severed above tbe wrist joint?

“A. It fell down and I grabbed it and pulled it back up and Mr. Mallery bound my arm to keep me from bleeding to death. I bled two and one-half quarts of blood.

“Q. Mr. King, you say you completely lost your hand by severance at or above tbe wrist joint?

“A. Yes sir.

“Q. Mr. King, what use is that band to you?

*248 “A. Well, I haven’t found so far it is useful for anything-.

“Q. Can you move any of your fingers?

“A. -No sif.

“Q. Do you have any use whatever of this hand?

“A. No sir.

“Q. Is the hand now smaller than it was?

“A. Yes sir, you see this arm here is about as small ag'ain as it was when it was cut. ’ ’

Mr. Mallery gives a verbal description of the wound:

“When he (King) reached under same (table) his left hand came in contact with the rip-saw and was almost cut off near the wrist. The saw first' struck his left thumb about the middle, cut up-the thumb towards the wrist, and then across the wrist cutting both bones in two.”

This witness was asked to designate upon some photographs the course of the wound upon the hand, and these pictures were referred to as Exhibit A to his testimony, but the photographs in the record are all numbered exhibits to the testimony of the plaintiff; we assume they are the same pictures, but they are not very illu-minative, for the reason that the scar is dim. However, they do not contradict the testimony of the witnesses that the left hand was almost severed. The record shows that there was enough of the fleshy part of the wrist and skin on the inside of the wrist to serve as a blood supply to the severed portion, and because of this it was possible to reunite the severed portion and by surgical skill save the hand and from outward appearance the hand would appear to be an unsevered hand. But because of the injury the hand has atrophied and is only one-half the size of a normal hand, and the plaintiff has no use of the hand.

It is the defendant’s constitution of this contract that, before a recovery can be had, the hand must be' completely and wholly severed and detached from the arm at or above the wrist before liability accrues, that under the old forms' of accidental policies the coverage was for “the loss of a hand,” and that the court interpreted this provision to mean the loss of the use of the hand, but that the policies were" rewritten so as to read “for the loss of one hand by severance at or above the wrist joint,” and that the court in construing this provision holds that the severance must be entire and complete, leaving no semblance or vestige of the hand. There is authority supporting this contention of the defendant. In the case of Bowling v. Life Insurance Co., 39 Ohio App., 491, 177 N. E. 531, the court refers to the rewriting of these accidental policies, the court stating “After the rendition of decisions of this character, various insurance companies changed the phraseology of policies subsequently issued, so as to provide only for payment in the event of loss of a hand or foot by severance at or above the *249 ~wrist or ankle. This provision being specific in character, the ■courts have almost universally held that in these cases there could be no recovery unless there was amputation substantially as specified in the policy.”

It will be noted the court says “amputation substantially as specified in the policy.” In other words, there must be a loss of the use of the hand due to a substantial severance at or above the wrist. There are cases holding that, if a small finger of a hand .remains, or a mutilated thumb, and that these remnants are useless and a detriment, still there can be no recovery because there was not an entire and complete severance. See Jones v. Continental Cas. Co., 189 Iowa, 678, 179 N. W., 203, 18 A. L. R., 1329-1341. The ease of Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company v. Shelby, 116 Miss., 278, 76 So., 839, construes a similar provision, but in that case the court held that there was no severance at all, that the hand was paralyzed and atrophied, but there had been no severance. The court then, quoting from a law dictionary, defined severance as “removing anything from the realty, as trees,' crops,” etc. In the case under review the hand was practically severed at the wrist and was hanging only by the skin and a small amount ■of flesh, and it might be compared to a felling of a tree by a trespasser, when the falling trunk of the tree was attached to the stump by an unsevered fragment.

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Bluebook (online)
97 S.W.2d 651, 20 Tenn. App. 246, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-met-life-ins-co-inc-tennctapp-1936.