Mangol v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.

103 F.2d 14, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3492
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 27, 1939
Docket6754
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 103 F.2d 14 (Mangol v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mangol v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 103 F.2d 14, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3492 (7th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

TREANOR, Circuit Judge.

Defendant Metropolitan Life Insurance Company prosecuted this appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff in an action brought to recover the face amount of an accident policy issued by the defendant company. There was a trial to the court without a jury upon an agreed statement of facts. The sole question on appeal relating to the merits of plaintiff’s claim is whether it falls within the following narrow exception to a general disclaimer of coverage i 1

“ * * * (excepting only septic infection of and through a visible wound caused directly and independently of all other causes by violent and accidental means).”

The evidence discloses that the insured extracted a hair, or hairs, from the inside of his nose with a pair of tweezers. There was some bleeding from the nostril and the insured applied iodine thereto and put some cotton in his nose. On the following day the insured’s nose and face, in the region of his nose, were swollen; and two days later a physician was called who diagnosed the case as erysipelas. Later the insured was taken to a hospital where he died the following morning.

The agreed statement of facts includes the following:

“Based upon reasonable medical certainty, the following facts are known concerning erysipelas. It is a septic infection and it is believed in medical circles that infection takes place always because of some break in the skin or mucous membranes, such as a wound, an abrasion, or a scratch. The period of incubation varies between several hours and a few days •depending on the virility of the germ and manner in which it entered the system. A pulling of the hair or hairs out of the nostril accompanied by a slight hemorrhage would produce an opening in the skin or mucous membrane which would be visible. Based upon the facts heretofore stated and baséd on reasonable medical certainty, the erysipelas of which the insured died might or could have been caused by the germ entering the system through the opening of the skin or other lesion caused by the act of the insured by the pulling of the hair or hairs out of his nose as stated above.
“That the terminal broncho-pneumonia is a condition known medically as an end result and usually follows a disease of the character of erysipelas due to the lowered resistance of the patient suffering from erysipelas and in this case did follow the erysipelas.”

The trial court entered the following finding of fact: “The court finds that the insured, Nick Mangol, died, on April 25, 1936, from a septic infection of and through a visible wound caused directly and independently of all other causes by violent and accidental means on April 21, 1936.”

The evidence was sufficient to support a finding that insured died from a septic infection of and through a visible wound caused directly and independently of all other means by the deceased’s pluck- • ing a hair, or hairs, from his nose with the tweezers. But appellant contends that the wound was not caused by accidental means within the meaning of the exception of clause 9. In the words of defendant “the facts show conclusively that the wound was not caused by accidental means, but was voluntarily caused by the insured.” Defendant’s position is clearly indicated by its seventh finding of fact which it submitted to the court and which is as follows: “The Court finds that the opening in the skin through which the infection entered the body of Nick Mangol was the result of an intentional act by said Nick Mangol.”

In support of its contention that the visible wound was the result of “an intentional act” by the deceased, defendant cites and relies upon cases which purport to distinguish between accidental means and accidental result and which assert that there can be an accidental result effected by non-accidental means. The substance of the reasoning of these cases seems to be that a wholly unforeseen and unexpected *16 result, which hy common understanding is an accidental result, properly can be said to be effected by non-accidental means if the “means” takes the form of a voluntary act, even though the actor had no intention of causing the result which is admittedly accidental in the sense that it was not anticipated and was not the usual and probable result of the intended act.

On the other hand,, in support of the proposition that “the facts show conclusively that, the accident was not caused by accidental means but was voluntarily caused by the insured,” defendant argues that deceased, knew that “extracting a hair from the nose or any place always may cause a wound”; and that he “certainly knew or should have known that such wound may be a serious one”; and that “he therefore extracted a hair from his nose with full knowledge of the possible consequences.” The foregoing argument is in essence an application of the well known rule that a person is presumed to intend the natural and probable consequences of his acts. If a visible wound had been the natural and probable consequence of deceased’s act of plucking a hair, or hairs, from .his nose, then .there would have been at least a presumption that he intended to produce such wound. The agreed statement of facts recites that “a pulling of the hair or hairs out of a nostril accompanied .by a slight hemorrhage would produce an opening in the skin or mucous membrane which would be visible.” The foregoing does not, and is ■ not intended to, state as a fact that a hemorrhage or visible wound would naturally and probably accompany, or result from, the plucking of a hair, or hairs, from the nostril. The agreed statement of facts furnishes no basis either for an inference of fact or a. presumption that the deceased intended to produce the visible wound which the District Court was clearly justified in finding did result from the 'deceased’s act of plucking the hair, or hairs, from his hose.

In view of the foregoing our question reduces to this: If an act is performed with the intention, of accomplishing a certain result, and if in the attempt to accomplish that result, another result, unintended and unexpected and not the natural and probable consequence of the intended act, in fact occurs, must it be said, as a matter of law, that the unintended result was not effected by “accidental means” within the meaning of the policy exception?

This Court had occasion to consider the foregoing question in New York Life Ins. Co. v. Kassly. 2 The facts of that case are hot distinguishable from the facts of the instant case. Tt is true that the wording of the pertinent provisions of the policy of the Kassly case and of the policy in the instant case is not the same, but in the course of the opinion in the Kassly case this Court demonstrated the impossibility of rationally distinguishing between “accidental means” and “accidental results,” and approved the doctrine “that an effect which cannot be reasonably anticipated from use of means producing it by one not intending to produce such effect is caused by accidental means within the terms of an accident policy which limits liability to death from accidental means.”

Our question is whether the visible wound was caused by accidental means, and its answer involves the factual analysis and reasoning of the Kassly opinion. Under the doctrine of Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 3

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Bluebook (online)
103 F.2d 14, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mangol-v-metropolitan-life-ins-co-ca7-1939.