McGrail v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States

55 N.E.2d 483, 292 N.Y. 419, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1356
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by117 cases

This text of 55 N.E.2d 483 (McGrail v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGrail v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, 55 N.E.2d 483, 292 N.Y. 419, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1356 (N.Y. 1944).

Opinion

Rippey, J.

On August 4, 1919, defendant issued its policy of insurance to plaintiff whereby it agreed to pay a weekly indemnity for total disability arising from bodily injury effected during tbe term of tbe policy solely through external, violent and accidental means, directly and independently of other causes, which injury should wholly and continuously disable the insured from the date of the accident and prevent him from performing “ any and every duty pertaining to his occupation,” for a period of two hundred consecutive weeks and thereafter so long as the insured should be wholly and continuously disabled by such injuries from engaging in any occupation or employment for wages or profit, or a weekly indemnity for partial disability for a period not exceeding twenty-six weeks following total disability or from the date of the accident if such injuries should continuously disable the insured from performing ‘ one or more important daily duties pertaining to his occupation,” except where such accident or disability should be caused directly or indirectly, wholly or partly, by bodily or mental infirmity or disease.

While the policy was still in force, the insured accidentally fell on the ice near his home on February 9, 1940, landing on the back of his head and shoulders. He claims, in this action, *423 to be entitled to recover indemnity for total disability from April 1, 1940, which disability resulted, from the date of the accident, from a dislocated shoulder, coronary thrombosis and neuritis brought about solely by the accident. Defendant concedes total disability arising from coronary thrombosis and neuritis from and after April 1,1940, but refused to pay indemnity therefor on the grounds (1) that such disability did not arise at the time of the accident and continue thereafter uninterruptedly, and (2) that the disability for which the insured. seeks indemnity was caused directly or indirectly, wholly or partly, by disease. After a trial, plaintiff recovered a verdict from a jury. Upon appeal, the judgment entered upon that verdict was set aside and the complaint dismissed as matter of law on the ground that plaintiff had failed to show that his loss fell within the coverage of the policy.

The plaintiff was a physician and surgeon, fifty-five years of age at the time of the accident, and had practiced his profession continuously in the city of Albany since 1915. The jury were authorized to find that the disabling thrombosis first manifested itself immediately upon the happening of the accident and thereafter continued with more or less severity, rendering it impossible for the plaintiff to perform any of the duties pertaining to his occupation in manner such as would bar him from recovery. He had no intimation of the existence of such a condition prior to the time of the accident and he was first informed that that condition disabled him after the taking of an electrocardiogram on April 16, 1940 by a heart specialist, and after a consultation in regard to his condition by a number of physicians. Previously, he had filed a written notice of disability with the defendant in which the nature of his illness was stated to be luxation of the right shoulder joint, traumatic neuritis, left ventricular preponderance and enlargement of the heart, the injury to the shoulder occurring on February 9th and the heart condition on February 26th. On April 6, 1940, the plaintiff filed two additional statements in which he asserted that he first became completely unable to perform the duties of his occupation on February 9, 1940, and that the date on which he was first able to resume any of his duties was February 23, 1940. In those notices, the plaintiff claimed forty-one days of total disability and sixteen days of partial *424 disability and defendant paid the claim on that basis for the period from February 9 to April 1, 1940.

Plaintiff was in bed most of the time from the date of the accident, at least until February 23rd. Between those dates he saw some three former patients upon whom he had operated and another patient whom he was turning over to another physician. Between February 23rd and April 1st, he went to his office on from six to ten different occasions to prepare reports for attorneys and insurance men concerning cases which he had prior to the accident. He saw three of his former patients at his office during that period and a former patient at the latter’s home. He treated none of those patients, received no fees and the extent of his attention to them consisted of preparation for turning them over to other physicians, or at least the jury could so find. Ninety per cent of the plaintiff’s work consisted of surgery. It was undisputed at the trial that he performed no surgery after the accident, that he kept no regular office hours, that he took on no new patients.

Buies for the construction of contracts of insurance do not differ from those to be applied to the construction of other contracts. When the terms used are clear and unambiguous, they are generally to be taken and understood in their plain, ordinary and proper sense (Johnson v. Travelers Insurance Co. 269 N. Y. 401, 408). But resort to a literal construction may not be had where the result would be to thwart the obvious and clearly expressed purpose which the parties intended to accomplish or where such a construction would lead to an obvious absurdity (Silverstein v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. 254 N. Y. 81) or place one party at the mercy of the other (Russell et al. v. Allerton, 108 N. Y. 288, 292). Such meaning must be given to the terms used as would be ascribed to them by the ¡average man in applying for insurance and reading the language iof the policy at the time it was written (Lewis v. Ocean Acc. & G. Corp., 224 N. Y. 18, 21; Silverstein v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., supra). Consistently followed in this State has been the rule that the policy must be construed reasonably and that it .must be given a practical construction, not thereby with the result that there is a revision of the policy or an increase of the risk and thus an extension of the resulting *425 liability, but for the purpose of determining what the parties must reasonably have intended by its terms when the policy was written by defendant and accepted by the plaintiff (Garms v. Travelers Insurance Co., 242 App. Div. 230; Williams v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co., 245 App. Div. 585; Goldstein v. Connecticut General Life Ins. Co., 273 N. Y. 578; Mintz v. Equitable Life Assurance Society, 276 N. Y. 546; Hartol Products Corp. v. Prudential Insurance Co., 290 N. Y. 44). The wording of the policy was that total disability ensued when the insured was prevented from performing *1 any and every duty pertaining to his occupation Plaintiff’s occupation was that of physician and surgeon when the policy was written. If unable to continue his profession, he is prevented from performing any and every ” duty pertaining to his occupation within the contemplation of the parties when the policy was issued (Silverstein v.

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.E.2d 483, 292 N.Y. 419, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgrail-v-equitable-life-assurance-society-of-the-united-states-ny-1944.