Loesch v. Union Casualty & Surety Co.

75 S.W. 621, 176 Mo. 654, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 124
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 2, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 75 S.W. 621 (Loesch v. Union Casualty & Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loesch v. Union Casualty & Surety Co., 75 S.W. 621, 176 Mo. 654, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 124 (Mo. 1903).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

Suit on an accident policy insuring Frederick Loesch against loss by bodily injury sustained through externa], violent and accidental means; [659]*659in case of Ms death by that means the defendant agree-ing to pay the plaintiff, Ms mother, $5,000. The petition alleged that the insured in Ms lifetime performed all the conditions of the policy and that while it was in full force on September 26, 1900, he died by reason of bodily injuries received through external, violent and accidental means; that due proof of loss was made to defendant, yet defendant refused to pay, etc.

The following summary of the affirmative matter pleaded in the answer is copied from Mr. Werner’s brief:

“The answer admitted the issuance of the policy in suit, but denied the fact of death through accidental means, as stated. It then set up as a special defense the violation of the following condition of the policy, to-wit: ‘If the company’s representatives are denied the right to make examination of the insured’s person or body, in respect to alleged injury or cause of death, or if post-mortem be held without notifying the company in time to have its medical adviser- present, then all claims under this policy shall be forfeited, alleging that a post-mortem examination was held over the body of Frederick Loesch, on or about September 27, 1900, without the knowledge of the defendant, and without notifying the defendant in time to have its medical adviser present, and without any notice to it of any intention to hold such post-mortem examination, though the defendant had at the time a medical adviser whom it would have had present had it been advised of the intention of holding such examination.
“For further defense the following condition of the policy was pleaded, viz: ‘19. I agree that, for any injury, fatal or otherwise, received by me while exposed temporarily or otherwise to a hazard classed by the company in its manual last issued prior to this date, as more hazardous than that given as my occupation in this application, the company’s liability shall be limited to the amount that the premium paid by me [660]*660would purchase in such more hazardous class. I agree that the classifications in said manual shall be and are a part of this contract.’
‘ ‘ The answer then set out that the deceased, Frederick Loesch, was insured as a ‘stock-dealer,’ whose occupation and duties were in the policy described as ‘visiting yards, not working, or tending in transit,’ and that the hazard of such occupation was therein classed as ‘preferred,’ and that the premium of $25 charged for said policy was the usual and customary charge for such risk; and that part of the consideration of the policy sued on were the representations of the deceased made by the deceased in his written application, relative to the occupation in which he was engaged; and that at the time deceased received the alleged accidental injuries he was engaged in working and tending stock in transit, and that the injuries alleged to have been received were so sustained whilst defendant was untying a bull in a car; and that said occupation was more hazardous than that stated by deceased in his application and in the policy, and that the said occupation of working and tending stock in transit was classified by defendant in its manual issued and in force last prior to the issuance of the said policy as an ‘extra hazardous’ risk, and that the premium of $25 paid by deceased if he had been described as a ‘stock-dealer and tender in transit’ to which hazard he was exposed at the time he received the alleged accidental injuries, would have purchased for defendant the sum of $1,250 insurance and no more, and that if liable at all under the policy to plaintiff, defendant was not liable for more than $1,250; the manual in question being filed with the answers as an exhibit thereto.”

The reply joined issue on the matters pleaded, in the answer.

The policy was filed as an exhibit to the petition and showed that its terms and conditions, and also those [661]*661of the application which was a part of it, were correctly stated in the,pleadings.

The testimony on the part of the plaintiff tended to show as follows:

About 3:20 o’clock in the morning of September 13, 1900, the insured, Frederick Loesch, was in the stock yards in St. Louis, and called some men who were the regular e- iployees there to assist him in uni loading a car of cattle that had just arrived. ' He went with the men to the switch on which the car was standing and with their assistance unloaded it. When all the loose cattle had come out there remained two bulls in the car which were tied with ropes. Loesch went in with one of the men and untied the bulls. While he was doing this one of the bulls tossed his head around and struck him in the abdomen. One of the men, seeing the motion of the bull, asked Loesch if it caught him, to which he replied, “Yes, but he did not hurt me.” After the cattle were unloaded and delivered where ■they were destined, Loesch went home. After he got home he began to suffer pain in the abdomen which increased as the time went on. On the 15th a physician attended him and found him suffering with inflammation of the abdomen, apparently' caused by a bruise. He grew worse and died on September 25th.

On the next day the physician in attendance told the plaintiff that he desired to hold a. post-mortem examination, to which she assented, or at least made no objection. He called in some other phyisicians to assist him and they made a post-mortem examination. After it was done and the body was sewed up, the physicians ■came out of the room, and then the plaintiff handed the attending physician the policy in suit, and asked him what she should do in regard to it. He examined it ■and discovered the clause declaring that if a post-mortem be held without notice to the company in time to have its medical adviser present, all claims under the policy should be forfeited. He went immediately to the [662]*662office of the company and notified them of what had occurred and on behalf of the plaintiff offered to hold another post-mortem with their medical adviser if they so desired. But they expressed no such desire and the plaintiff after holding the body until the next day caused it to be buried. Plaintiff testified that when the physician told her that he desired to make a postmortem examination, she did not know what he meant; that she neither assented nor dissented and did not know what was done until after it was done.

Plaintiff sent an agent, with the policy, to the office of the company to obtain the prescribed blank form on which to make out the proof of loss. Defendant gave this agent the blank requested, first stamping on its face the words, “In furnishing this blank the company reserves all its rights under its policy contract and waives none of the conditions thereof.”

On the part of the defendaht the testimony tended to show as follows: .

The assured Loesch went with one Gerst to Peveley, Missouri; there he assisted Gerst, whn was the owner of the cattle referred to, in loading them on the car and left him with the car in charge of it.

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Bluebook (online)
75 S.W. 621, 176 Mo. 654, 1903 Mo. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loesch-v-union-casualty-surety-co-mo-1903.