McCarthy v. Travelers' Ins. Co.

15 F. Cas. 1254, 8 Biss. 362
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin
DecidedDecember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 15 F. Cas. 1254 (McCarthy v. Travelers' Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCarthy v. Travelers' Ins. Co., 15 F. Cas. 1254, 8 Biss. 362 (circtedwi 1878).

Opinion

DYER, District Judge

(charging jury). The policy of insurance in this case is of the form and character known as an accident policy. To entitle the plaintiff to recover, it must be shown by the evidence that the deceased sustained a bodily injury, which was effected through means which were external, violent and accidental, and that such injury was the proximate and sole cause of the death, as I shall hereafter more fully explain to you. If a bodily injury was sustained, and it happened directly or indirectly in consequence of disease, or if the death was caused wholly or in part by bodily infirmities or disease, existing either prior or subsequent to the date of the policy of insurance, then the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.

2 [Taking up the questions involved in this issue you will naturally first inquire whether the insured sustained an injury as alleged by the plaintiff. It is claimed that in the evening of May 25, 1877, the deceased was exercising his arms and chest by the use of so-called Indian clubs, and that while so exercising, and without fault on his part, lie ruptured a blood vessel in his lungs, and that his subsequent death was the result of such injury. Testimony has been given by the witness Young, which, it is claimed by the plaintiff, shows that on the occasion in question the insured sustained an internal injury, and it is urged that further evidence of such injury is found in the alleged fact that the deceased expectorated blood in considerable quantities, and in the fact ■ that thenceforth he became disabled, and so continued until the time of his death in August,- 1877. You have heard the testimony of the witness Young bearing upon the occurrence when it is claimed the injury was received, and the circumstances attending and following it, together with testimony touching the subsequent physical condition of the deceased, and you will determine from the evidence whether he did sustain a bodily injury at the time, and as claimed. If you find such to be the fact, the question then is, was such injury effected through the means contemplated by the policy? Such means must have been external, and they must have been violent, and they must have been accidental. In other words, gentlemen, the injury, if one was sustained, must have been the result of accidental means. It is trae, the provisions of the policy are to be taken most strongly against the party that issued and delivered it; but when its terms are unmistakable and clear, we must deal with them in their obvious sense and meaning.] 2

A question of considerable nicety has been presented, arising in connection with the evidence under the clause in the policy, which describes the means through which the injury must be effected in order to create a liability. It is a question concerning which my mind has not been free from doubt; but in view of the language of this policy, which requires that the means through which the injury is effected must be accidental, I instruct you that if the deceased voluntarily took in his hands the clubs for exercise, and used them for such exercise in the way and precisely as he intended to do, and without anything occurring to interfere with his intended and usual movements in such exercise; that is, if he voluntarily used them in the ordinary way for taking such exercise, without the occurrence of any unusual circumstance interrupting or interfering with such use, or causing any unforeseen, accidental or involuntary movement of the body, and in such use of the clubs there occurred the rupture of a blood vessel and consequent injury as claimed, I do not think it could then be said that the means through which the injury was effected were accidental. But, if while engaged in such exercise there occurred any unforeseen, accidental or involuntary movement of the body of the deceased, which, in connection with the use of the clubs, brought about the injury; or, if there occurred any unforeseen or any unexpected circumstance which interfered with or obstructed the usual course of such exercise, and there was thereby produced an involuntary movement, strain or wrenching,' by means of which the injury was occasioned, that would be an accident within the spirit of this policy; that is, the means by which the injury was effected would in such case be accidental.

[Now, keeping in mind the distinction thus stated between accidental. means and those not accidental, you will look into the testimony, and consider whether, if at the time in question a bodily injury was sustained, it was effected through means that were accidental, external and violent. The plaintiff claims, and has given evidence tending to show, that while the deceased was using these clubs in muscular exercise, one of the [1256]*1256clubs struck the stove in the room where he was exercising, and that thereby there was occasioned a sudden and violent movement of his body from its ordinary position in such exercise, and that in consequence there resulted the alleged injury. If this be so, gentlemen, then you would be justified in finding that the injury was effected by accidental means, and upon the evidence you will ■ determine what the fact is upon this branch of the case.

[Though it should be your conclusion that the deceased sustained bodily injury at the time claimed, and while exercising with the clubs, if you should nevertheless find that it was not effected through external, violent, and accidental means, within the meaning of the terms as I have endeavored to state it, then your verdict should be for the defendant.] 2

If you find that an injury was sustained, and through the operation of such means, you will then proceed to inquire whether the injury happened directly or indirectly in consequence of disease then existing in the lungs of the deceased.

This brings us to the affirmative matter set up as a defense to the action. And first, I call your attention to this clause in the policy, namely, that the insurance shall not extend to any injury happening directly or indirectly in consequence of disease. Here is presented to you the question whether, at the time the alleged injury was sustained, the lungs of the deceased, or either of them, were or was diseased.

[On the eontraiy, it is claimed that disease of the lungs was then in progress, and if there was a rupture of a blood vessel as alleged, it happened in consequence of a then weak and actually diseased condition of the lung or lungs, so that indirectly, if not directly, the injury happened because and as a consequence of such condition, and, if there had been no unsoundness or disease, there wotud have been no rupture of a blood vessel.

[Now you should look into the claims thus argued by the respective parties upon this point, and determine which is sustained by the evidence. And in doing so you will keep in mind that testimony has been given tending to show that such a condition of the lungs as is claimed to have existed at the time of the autopsy could have begun and proceeded to its culmination after the alleged injury, and as a consequence of it, and that there were no indications of disease apparent before the injury; while, on the other hand, testimony has been given tending to show that such a state of the case was improbable, and that the condition of the lungs, as it is claimed such condition was developed by examinations both before and after death, indicated presence of disease for a long time previous, and that such disease might exist and be in progress without external symptoms and without the knowledge of the deceased.] 2

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 1254, 8 Biss. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarthy-v-travelers-ins-co-circtedwi-1878.