Kundiger v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.

15 N.W.2d 487, 218 Minn. 273, 1944 Minn. LEXIS 484
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 4, 1944
DocketNos. 33,785, 33,803.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 15 N.W.2d 487 (Kundiger v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kundiger v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 15 N.W.2d 487, 218 Minn. 273, 1944 Minn. LEXIS 484 (Mich. 1944).

Opinion

Streissguth, Justice.

Defendant issued to plaintiff’s husband, Reinhold B. Kundiger, two weekly-premium or industrial life, insurance policies, providing *276 for double indemnity for death by accidental means, subject to certain limitations. Plaintiff brought suit on the policies after her husband’s death and recovered a verdict for both ordinary and accidental death benefits. The trial court, however, upon motion of defendant, ordered judgment for plaintiff notwithstanding the verdict for only the face amount of the policies. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment entered.

While plaintiff assigns as error certain instructions given by the court and its refusal to give others requested by her, these assignments of error must be disregarded, as the verdict was in plaintiff’s favor and she made no motion for a new trial. She cannot complain of errors which did not operate to her disadvantage. 1 Dunnell, Dig. & Supp. § 418.

The double indemnity under the policies involved could accrue only if death “resulted, independently of all other causes, from bodily injuries caused solely by external, violent, and accidental means.” An additional clause excepted death “caused or contributed to by disease or infirmity.”

Whether the trial court erred in ordering judgment for only the principal amounts of the policies, without accidental death benefits, involves an inquiry as to whether the evidence, construed most favorably to plaintiff, is sufficient in law to support the verdict, and, if not, whether there is a reasonable probability that plaintiff can supply any deficiency in proof. 3 Dunnell, Dig. & Supp. § 5082; Eklund v. Kapetas, 216 Minn. 79, 11 N. W. (2d) 805; Mardorf v. Duluth-Superior Transit Co. 194 Minn. 537, 261 N. W. 177. For that purpose, the evidence of the plaintiff must be accepted as true and given the benefit of all reasonable inferences. Olson v. Byam, 176 Minn. 619, 224 N. W. 256; McGivern v. N. P. Ry. Co. (8 Cir.) 132 F. (2d) 213; 3 Dunnell, Dig. & Supp. § 5082. Neither the court below nor this court on appeal may assume the role of a jury, but must accept the verdict as final if it has reasonable support in the evidence.

Some of these principles were only recently invoked against the plaintiff here in a proceeding wherein she sought review of an order *277 of the industrial commission holding that an alleged accidental injury sustained by her husband neither caused nor accelerated her husband’s death. See, Kundiger v. Waldorf Paper Products Co. 218 Minn. 168, 15 N. W. (2d) 486. She is now here with the jury’s verdict in her favor on a similar though not identical issue, and consistency on our part, as well as continued recognition of the respective functions of court and jury, require that she be given the benefit of the same principles.

Viewed through a favorable lens, the record discloses:

Insured was 51 years of age at the time of his death on February 2,1943. He had been employed for several years as a laborer at the Waldorf Paper Products Company, trucking heavy bales of paper and loading and unloading boxcars. In November 1941, a medical examination revealed that he had active and chronic leukemia in an advanced stage. Leukemia is described as an incurable and invariably fatal disease, ordinarily symptomized by an increase in the Avhite blood corpuscles, enlargement of the spleen, and enlargement of the various lymphatic glands, subcutaneous and subserous hemorrhages, and a Avasting, weals condition. While the disease is rare and its successful treatment apparently still an enigma to the medical profession, yet in these particulars leukemia differs only in degree from cancer, diabetes, and other diseases the names of which the medical profession can supply. Notwithstanding his affliction, insured continued in his employment until a Aveek before his death. During 1942 he Avas regularly at work except for an absence of four Aveeks during which period he received X-ray treatments, and one week during which he was under observation and care of his physician.

On the evening of January 26, 1943, insured arrived home from work shortly before midnight. He was “hunched up” and had a painful expression on his face; he did not eat any lunch, as Avas his custom, but went to bed immediately. At 3:00 a. m. he awakened his Avife, Avho then observed that his neck was swollen and that its left side was black and blue. She administered hot applications. At 7:00 a. m. she observed that his neck had swollen *278 considerably more, that the black-and-blue mark was larger, that his neck was stiff, that he was unable to move his head, and that he had quite a bit of trouble with his speech. On the following day, another witness observed not only the black-and-blue mark and swelling, but also two fresh scratches on insured’s left shouldér.

On January 28, insured was examined by his physician, Dr. Shelby E. Stinnette, who observed the black-and-blue discoloration, the stiffness of the neck, the difficulty in speech, and that insured was suffering from intense pain. Hot applications and sedatives were prescribed by his physician, who continued to treat him at his home for an injury rather than for leukemia. Insured’s condition became progressively worse, and on February 1 he was taken to a hospital, where he died on February 2. Dr. Stinnette, on direct examination, expressed his unqualified opinion that the cause of insured’s death was “hemorrhage, due to trauma or injury.” The doctor stated that the hemorrhage “was quite extensive all about the neck and over the shoulder and into the lungs and into the pleural cavities of the chest,” and that insured’s death “was due to the pressure above the throat causing his breathing to become more and more difficult, his speech almost impossible.”

Dr. Roy C. Heron,- deputy coroner for Ramsey county, in performing a post mortem on February 2, found that insured’s neck was swollen, and that he had a blue ecchymotic condition from the chin down to the level of the clavicle on both sides. In exposing the lungs, Dr. Heron found the entire region around the lungs infiltrated with blood. He testified that he did not believe leukemia could have caused the condition, and that in his opinion the cause of death was anoxemia due to hemorrhage, anoxemia being an absence of oxygen, which in turn produces strangulation. In his opinion, the hemorrhage was due to injury, although he admitted leukemia contributed to the death to the extent “that a man with a leukemia is much more liable to suffer from hemorrhage if he has a trauma than one that has not a leukemia.” By way of impeachment, defendant introduced the coroner’s certificate, based *279 upon information given by Dr. Heron, reciting leukemia as the “immediate cause of death.”

Dr. Robert M. Burns, an expert witness, testified hypothetically that, in his opinion, insured “died as a result of an injury which caused a hemorrhage and swelling and congestion into the tissues of the neck and down into the lungs.”

Plaintiff was unable to prove when or where her husband sustained the injuries causing his swollen neck, the black-and-blue mark, or the scratches observed on his body, but such proof was not indispensable. The accidental origin of his injuries will be presumed without proof of a mishap.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.W.2d 487, 218 Minn. 273, 1944 Minn. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kundiger-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-co-minn-1944.