Krug v. Mutual Ben. Health & Accident Ass'n

120 F.2d 296, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3473
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 9, 1941
Docket11876, 11877
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 120 F.2d 296 (Krug v. Mutual Ben. Health & Accident Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krug v. Mutual Ben. Health & Accident Ass'n, 120 F.2d 296, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3473 (8th Cir. 1941).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

These appeals are from a judgment for the defendants (appellees) entered upon verdicts of a jury in two actions brought to recover accidental death benefits under two policies of insurance issued to Fred H. Krug, who died January 1, 1938. The cases were tried together and come here upon a single record.

The insured at the time of his death was a resident of Russell, Kansas. He was fifty-two years of age, and until his last illness had been in apparent good health. Fie died at a hospital in Ellsworth, Kansas, and the testimony indicates that his death was due to hemorrhage caused by a blood condition which resulted either from a ruptured spleen or from a disease known as “leukemia”. The plaintiff is the insured’s daughter and the assignee of her mother, the beneficiary named in the policies. It was the plaintiff’s claim that the insured in the evening of December 21, 1937, had a fall caused by the breaking of a stepladder which he was using in removing electric light bulbs from Christmas decorations in front of his home; that the fall caused a rupture of his spleen; and that that, in turn, caused the blood condition which produced the hemorrhage which resulted in his death. Plaintiff’s testimony tended to support her claim. No one saw the insured fall, and the evidence that he fell was circumstantial. The claim of the defendants was that the insured did not die as the result of a fall, and that he died of a cerebral hemorrhage due to “leukemia”. The death certificate was to that effect, and the evidence of the defendants upon the trial supported that theory. The jury, by its verdicts and answers to written interrogatories, determined that the insured did not fall from a ladder on December 21, 1937, and accidentally injure himself; that he did not die as the result of such an injury; that he had “leukemia” and that it was the cause of his death.

The plaintiff challenges certain of the court’s rulings upon evidence and parts of its instructions to the jury.

The rulings upon evidence of which the plaintiff complains relate mainly to the exclusion, as hearsay, of statements made by the insured to others as to having sustained a fall. The evidence showed that after December 21, 1937, the insured had discolorations upon his body, which looked like bruises and abrasions. The plaintiff offered to prove by Lydia King, the widow of the insured, that when he went to the hospital on December 27, 1937, and was being examined by his doctor, the doctor asked the insured what caused these discolorations, and was told by him that, a few days before, he had been on a ladder working on Christmas lights, that the ladder broke, and that he fell. The objection of the defendants to this testimony, as hearsay, was sustained. The court’s ruling was in accord with the rule announced by the Supreme Court of the United States, and' by this court and other federal courts, and by the courts of Missouri. 1

*299 It is, of course, apparent that if the court below did not err in excluding the testimony of Mrs. Krug as to statements made by the insured to his doctor relative to the alleged fall from the stepladder, it did not err in excluding testimony as to statements made by the insured to his wife and brother on December 22, and to his daughter on December 23, 1937, and the statement which was incorporated in the Ellsworth Hospital records, to the effect that “while decorating a Christmas tree Xmas week was up on ladder which gave way with him, bruised.” The plaintiff urges that the rule followed by the trial court in excluding these statements is unduly harsh, and that such statements should be regarded as exceptions to the hearsay rule. She calls attention to the report of the “Committee on Improvements in the Law of Evidence” of the American Bar Association, found in the 1938 Proceedings of that Association, at pages 584, 585, and to the comments of Professor Wigmore found in Sections 1427 and 1576 of Wigmore on Evidence, Third Edition. It is conceivable that the hearsay rule may in the future be so relaxed that statements of a deceased person made under circumstances negativing any intent to fabricate evidence will be received as proof of the facts recited, but the present rule that such statements are (with certain exceptions not pertinent here) inadmissible has been so long and firmly established that it would seem that any change should be brought about by legislation, as it has been in some states, rather than by the courts. We would not be justified in reversing the court below for following our rulings.

The plaintiff argues that the court erred in sustaining an objection to the following question asked the plaintiff, in rebuttal: “Q. Now, I want to ask, Miss Krug, again, at the time your father showed you (he discolorations on his body at noon of the day you returned home for the Christmas holidays, 1937, did he tell you how he got those discolorations oil his body?”

The plaintiff contends that she was entitled to show that the insured did not remain silent with respect to the discolorations on his body, and argues that, because she was not permitted to show that he said anything with respect to them, the jury was justified in assuming that he had said nothing about them. In other words, the plaintiff claims that it was important that she prove that the insured said something about the origin of these discolorations, to prevent the jury from drawing unwarranted inferences. We think there is no merit in this contention. No testimony was introduced by the defendants to the effect that the insured had remained silent about the alleged fall from the stepladder, and it is not conceivable that the jury received any false impression with respect to the reason that there was no testimony explaining the insured’s version of the origin of the discolorations. Throughout the entire trial the plaintiff was endeavoring to introduce statements made by the insured as to a fall, which were objected to as hearsay and ruled out by the court, and it was obvious to everyone why such evidence could not be received. While it is probably true that it would not have been error to have permitted the plaintiff and the other witnesses who were asked whether the insured explained how he received the discolorations on his body, to answer the question “yes” or “no”, it is clear that their answers would not have had any tendency to prove or disprove any issue in the case. The court was fully advised that the purpose of these questions was to lay the foundation for the offer of hearsay testimony, and we think it did not err in sustaining objections to such questions.

The plaintiff also complains because John Sirosky, who furnished the ladder which is alleged to have broken while the insured was using it, was not permitted to testify that on December 23, 1937, tile insured told Sirosky that “he guessed he would have to buy us a new stepladder, because he broke that one”. What the insured said to Sirosky about breaking the ladder was hearsay evidence of the fact that the insured did break the ladder, and was incompetent to prove that fact and tended to prove or disprove no other issue in .the case.

The next contention of the plaintiff arises out of this situation: Dr. O’Donnell was the insured’s attending physician. As required by the laws of Kansas, he made our that part of the “Standard Certificate of Death” denominated “Medical Certificate of Death”. The certificate was filed with the State Registrar of Kansas on January 4, 1938.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. John Louis Iron Shell, Jr.
633 F.2d 77 (Eighth Circuit, 1980)
United States Security Warehouse, Inc. v. Tasty Sandwich Co.
156 S.E.2d 392 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1967)
Skogen v. The Dow Chemical Company
375 F.2d 692 (Eighth Circuit, 1967)
Skogen v. Dow Chemical Co.
375 F.2d 692 (Eighth Circuit, 1967)
Brown v. General Insurance Company of America
369 P.2d 968 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1962)
Lloyd Honebein and Glen Hoxworth v. Earl McDonald
299 F.2d 493 (Eighth Circuit, 1962)
Dortch v. New York Life Insurance
268 F.2d 149 (Eighth Circuit, 1959)
Holliday v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.
256 F.2d 297 (Eighth Circuit, 1958)
Hansen v. St. Joseph Fuel Oil & Manufacturing Co.
181 F.2d 880 (Eighth Circuit, 1950)
Wohlfarth v. Spencer Kellogg & Sons, Inc.
73 A.2d 268 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1950)
O'Donnell v. Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Ry. Co.
171 F.2d 973 (Seventh Circuit, 1948)
Comparet v. United States
164 F.2d 452 (Tenth Circuit, 1947)
Hower v. Roberts
153 F.2d 726 (Eighth Circuit, 1946)
Terminal R. Ass'n of St. Louis v. Schorb
151 F.2d 361 (Eighth Circuit, 1945)
Gadsden v. United States
54 F. Supp. 151 (D. Maryland, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 F.2d 296, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 3473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krug-v-mutual-ben-health-accident-assn-ca8-1941.