Klinke v. Great Northern Life Insurance

47 N.E.2d 506, 318 Ill. App. 43, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 836
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 2, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 47 N.E.2d 506 (Klinke v. Great Northern Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klinke v. Great Northern Life Insurance, 47 N.E.2d 506, 318 Ill. App. 43, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 836 (Ill. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bristow

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff Anna M. Klinke brought suit against the defendant, the Great Northern Life Insurance Company, a corporation, in an action at law, to recover as beneficiary the amount of insurance benefits claimed .under a written contract of accident and health insurance' issued to Lawrence A. Klinke, plaintiff's deceased husband. From a judgment for $3,370 entered by the circuit court of Madison county on May 8,1942, on" a verdict for the plaintiff, after overruling a motion by the defendant for judgment non obstante veredicto and a motion for a new trial, the defendant prosecutes this appeal. For the sake of simplicity, we will refer to the appellant as the defendant and the appellee as the plaintiff.

The complaint in this case consisted of two counts. The first alleges the issuance of an insurance contract by the Mutual Health and Accident Association of America on December 26, 1907; that under the contract the insurer promised to pay the plaintiff the sum of two thousand dollars ($2,000) for loss of life of the insured resulting directly and independently of all other causes and solely through external, violent and accidental means; that the death benefit by reason of the policy, having been continued in force for more than 11 years was increased by 50 per cent; that the defendant, the Great Northern Life Insurance Company, on June 1, 1933, assumed the insurer’s obligations under said contract; and that while the said contract was in full force and effect, insured sustained bodily injuries through accidental means by falling-six to eight feet over a banister railing of a stairway, and as a result thereof died on August 10, 1939; and that plaintiff thereafter had performed all conditions necessary to be performed to justify recovery on that section of the insurance contract.

The second count of the complaint sets forth the issuance of the same contract and claims liability of the insurer on the basis of a promise to pay to the plaintiff a funeral benefit of one hundred dollars ($100); and that defendant had refused to pay said sum except that on August 30,1939 the defendant company did issue to the plaintiff its check in the sum of one hundred dollars ($100), and later on August 29, 1940 did issue and deliver to the plaintiff another check for' fifty dollars ($50); and that both checks were delivered to the plaintiff in payment and in full discharge of all rights under said contract of insuranee; that plaintiff did receive said checks, but did not acquiesce in the conditions imposed upon her by the company, and did not cash said checks.

The defendant contends that the judgment of the court below should be reversed for the following reasons :

. First; that the evidence showed that the death of the insured resulted from disease and riot solely through external, violent, and accidental means.

Second; that the plaintiff did not institute her suit within the time limit expressed in the policy.

Third; that checks in the sum of one hundred dollars ($100) and fifty dollars ($50) were received by mail by the plaintiff; and. such constituted an accord and satisfaction of all liability.

Fourth; that the court committed reversible error in not permitting the defendant to amend the answer on the day when the trial began.

Fifth; that the court erred in improperly adiriitting ■evidence over the objection of the defendant concerning the happening of the accident in question.

It appears in the evidence that Lawrence A. Klinke, the insured, was a man almost 65 years of age, six feet tall, and weighing approximately two hundred twenty-five pounds. Throughout his lifetime, he had worked as a butcher and at other occupations involving considerable labor. During the last two years of his life, he was engaged by the mayor of the city of Alton as a license inspector. He did not own an automobile, and he did an endless amount of walking to perform the duties of this office. He went up and down stairs and never showed any evidence of exhaustion. Only once in his lifetime was he required to have the services of a doctor, and that was to treat him for a cold. His appearance of excellent health and his activity in life continued without any change right up until the night of his fatal accident.

On the night of July 31,1939, the insured’s wife was awakened from her sleep by a heavy thud occurring on the floor below. She immediately went to the foot of the stairs in the hallway and found her husband, Lawrence A. Klinke, lying parallel to the stairs, his head near the post at the foot of the stairs. Over defendant’s objection, plaintiff was allowed to tell what her husband said at that time with reference to the accident, namely; that he had tripped on the sixth or seventh step, and had tried to catch himself on the banister rail but his hand slipped off and he lost his balance and went over the rail to the floor below. As the result of this accident, the insured suffered two broken ribs and a large swollen place on his head, and complained of pain in his side. He was assisted to his bedroom by his wife and daughter that night, and taken to the doctor’s office the next morning. He returned with his left side taped above the waist line, and went to bed. From then, he grew steadily worse. On the following Monday he was taken to the hospital where he remained until Thursday, August 10, when he died.

Doctor W. W. Billings was called to testify on behalf of the plaintiff, wherein, he said he had known the insured for nine years, but that he had never treated him. He testified that he was present when an autopsy was performed on the insured’s body at the hospital immediately following his death; that this autopsy revealed that the insured was suffering from a dilatation of the heart, and that in his opinion that dilatation of the heart in this particular instance was the immediate cause of the death; that he had died a cardiac death. He further testified in answer to an hypothetiqal question that the fall herein before described might or could be the cause of the dilatation of the heart.

It further1 appeared from the evidence, both from the testimony of Dr. Billings and Dr. Hagerbusch, who was the pathologist called by Dr. Billings to perform the autopsy, that the insured was suffering from leukemia; and that leukemia is constitutionally a disease of the blood forming organs of the body; that some leukemia runs a short course of a few weeks or a few months or it may run for a number of years; that there was" a definite finding of lympho-sarcoma, it being impossible to say as to the exact duration of this disease except that it would of necessity be for a period of greater than two years; and that such disease is practically incurable. Both doctors agreed that there was no causal connection between the disease and the dilatation of the heart.

In other words the facts very plainly resolve themselves into these propositions, namely that the insured did suffer an accident that assumed violent and severe proportions. For a two hundred and twenty-five pound man to fall six to eight feet and land on a hard surface, cannot be viewed too lightly; next, that such a fall might or could cause a dilatation of the heart; and next, that this man did die a cardiac death; lastly, that the insured was suffering from a cancer which had no connection with the dilated heart.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.E.2d 506, 318 Ill. App. 43, 1943 Ill. App. LEXIS 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klinke-v-great-northern-life-insurance-illappct-1943.