McNaught v. New York Life Insurance

18 N.W.2d 56, 145 Neb. 694, 1945 Neb. LEXIS 34
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1945
DocketNo. 31846
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 18 N.W.2d 56 (McNaught v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNaught v. New York Life Insurance, 18 N.W.2d 56, 145 Neb. 694, 1945 Neb. LEXIS 34 (Neb. 1945).

Opinion

Paine, J.

This action was instituted by the widow and beneficiary of the deceased upon a double indemnity agreement attached to a life insurance policy, which provided that, upon the payment of an additional premium, the company would pay $1,000 for the accidental death of her husband. The jury returned a verdict for $1,208.84. Motion for a new trial being overruled, a judgment was entered for the plaintiff in the amount of the verdict, together with attorney’s fees in the sum of $400, from which judgment the defendant insurance company appealed.

In the first trial of this same case, the trial court sustained a motion for a directed verdict for the defendant at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, and dismissed the action, which ruling, upon appeal to this court, was reversed in an opinion appearing in 143 Neb. 220, 12 N. W. 2d 108. The present appeal is from the second trial in the district court.

The action was based upon a policy of insurance, which reads in part as follows: “NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY agrees to pay to the Beneficiary under said Policy, in addition to and together with the amount payable under the terms of said Policy upon the death of the Insured, ONE THOUSAND Dollars upon receipt of due proof that the death of the Insured resulted directly and independently of all other causes from bodily injury effected solely through external, violent and accidental means and occurred within ninety days after such injury * * * ; provided, however, that such Double Indemnity shall not be payable if the Insured’s death resulted, directly or indirect[696]*696ly, from * * * (h) illness or disease; or, (i) any bacterial infection other than that occurring in consequence of accidental and external bodily injury.”

The plaintiff’s evidence may be summarized as follows: Homer R. Pease, a clerk who had been employed for 20 years at the Palace Hotel in North Platte, testified by deposition that the deceased had been an occasional guest at the hotel over a period of four or five years, sometimes staying one day, up to as high as seven or eight days in a month; that in August of 1940 he registered at the hotel and remained there for a few days; that at 9:30 one morning deceased came down from his room and limped, and he had not limped the day before, and that witness went up to his room with him, where the deceased removed his trousers and rolled up his shirt sleeves and disclosed black-and-blue bruises; that one near the elbow was about the size of a dollar; that his leg was hurt and his head was also injured some, and that the deceased had some lotion which the witness rubbed upon the arm and the leg; that he did not see any of these injuries the afternoon before.

On cross-examination he said that he could not remember which arm or leg it was that he rubbed the lotion on. He said the injury to the head was some kind of a break in the skin on the forehead and above the eye. He testified that Mrs. McNaught came down on the train that night, but did not register because they compliment the wife of a traveling man, and so she just went up to his room. He said that after he had rubbed the lotion on the injuries of the deceased he did not see him again that day, but saw him the morning he checked out, and his wife was with him.

The plaintiff testified that they had been married about ten years; that her husband, as representative of the Mankato Brewing Company, traveled the whole state of Nebraska ; that they were living in Omaha, but he had driven her out to Scottsbluff to visit her folks while he worked around in western Nebraska; that he was in good health when he left her the middle of July; that she went to North Platte to ride to Omaha with him; that he came up to their room in [697]*697the hotel about 10:30 to 11:00 p. m., after she had gone to bed; that she noticed bruises on his arm, chest and ankle, consisting of a dark discoloration on the left forearm, just below the elbow, as big as the palm of her hand, on the right chest just below the collarbone, and a severe bruise on the ankle. She was not allowed to give the conversation with her husband as to how these bruises occurred. She testified that on the following Saturday morning, August 17, they drove to Omaha, arriving there late at night; that the discoloration on his arm remained for two weeks after they reached Omaha. She further testified that on the night of September 7 her husband became ill. Dr. McGee was called, who had him taken to the Lutheran Hospital, where his death occurred.

Dr. John W. McGee testified by deposition that he had been practicing in Omaha since 1925, and was called to see deceased at his home because of severe chest pains on September 8, 1940, and stayed several hours. “When I first saw him he was very seriously ill, and I thought he was going to die. He looked like it. He was still able to stand up, but he was in terrific pain. * * * I diagnosed his condition as an emboli, probably of the chest.”

He returned early the next morning and stayed until about noon, then saw him again about 4 p. m., and had him removed to the hospital. “This thing started as a tremendous thing right off the bat.”

Dr. McGee said he continued to treat him until his death September 17. In answer to the question as to the cause of death, Dr. McGee testified: “I feel that he died of an emboli for the reason that he had been feeling quite well except for an occasional sharp pain in his left chest. He had been temperature free. He just had a little bit of temperature the first day he was in the hospital. Third day temperature' down to normal, occasionally got the chest pains no raise of temperature. I think it was undoubtedly an embolic condition. * * * There is no question about that. He may have had besides pulmonary emboli, coronary emboli — emboli of -the heart, but I felt the main cause of death [698]*698was the pulmonary emboli. * * * Q. What other action can occur from the blood clots? A. If it h'its a vital area you die. Q. What do you mean by a vital area? A. If it hits coronary artery it disturbs the action of the heart enough to stop it. If it would hit an end artery like the brain, like a respiratory center, it would stop it right there. In my death certificate I said the primary cause of death was pulmonary emboli but this man had coronary emboli too. Q. Coronary emboli? A. Coronary emboli — it is a small clot that will hit an end artery of the coronary artery supplying the heart itself. Q. Would that cause death? A. That could cause death, surely. Q. What generally are the causes of an emboli? A.Usually there is a history of an injury. Q. What kind of an injury? A. Where a vessel has been bruised hard enough that it has stagnated enough to form a clot. * * * Q. And the fact is, Doctor, that when you made out this death statement you did not feel"that it was the result of the accident — you aren’t certain now ? * * * A. I wasn’t entirely .certain that it was the result of the accident. I know of no other known cause for the emboli. Yet, there is no question but that it was an embolic death.”

Dr. Ralph J. Malott, a graduate of Northwestern University Medical School, had practiced medicine at Scottsbluff since 1929, and testified that he treated deceased for influenza in February, 1940, that he fully recovered, and after his recovery he examined his heart and the condition of his heart was normal. He was asked this hypothetical question : “Q.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Hood
301 Neb. 207 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2018)
Martin v. Frear
167 N.W.2d 69 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1969)
Campbell v. City of North Platte
132 N.W.2d 876 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1965)
Molstead v. Reliance National Life Insurance Co.
364 P.2d 883 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1961)
Brown v. Globe Laboratories, Inc.
84 N.W.2d 151 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1957)
Fries v. Goldsby
80 N.W.2d 171 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1956)
O'NEIL v. Union National Life Insurance Company
75 N.W.2d 739 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1956)
Vanderheiden v. State
57 N.W.2d 761 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1953)
Hassmann v. City of Bloomfield
20 N.W.2d 592 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.W.2d 56, 145 Neb. 694, 1945 Neb. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnaught-v-new-york-life-insurance-neb-1945.