Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. McKim

6 N.E.2d 9, 6 N.E. 9, 22 Ohio Law. Abs. 618, 7 Ohio Op. 390, 1935 Ohio App. LEXIS 352, 54 Ohio C.A. 66, 54 Ohio App. 66
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 11, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 N.E.2d 9 (Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. McKim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. McKim, 6 N.E.2d 9, 6 N.E. 9, 22 Ohio Law. Abs. 618, 7 Ohio Op. 390, 1935 Ohio App. LEXIS 352, 54 Ohio C.A. 66, 54 Ohio App. 66 (Ohio Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

OPINION

By SHERICK, J.

This action is one at law upon a policy of insurance issued by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, plaintiff in error, The policy in part provides for compensation to be paid by the company to the insured upon total permanent disability. The cause terminated in the trial court in favor of the insured, upon a motion for a directed verdict made by the insured at the conclusion of all the evidence, upon which judgment was entered for him. From this judgment error is prosecuted, and three grounds of error are urged in this court. The first of these may be easily disposed of, and of necessity must cause a reversal of this cause.

At the conclusion of all the evidence, and in the absence of the jury, the defendant insurer moved for a directed verdict. Thereupon the insured interposed a like motion. Thereafter, as is shown by the record, the jury was recalled and advised in the following words:

“Members of the jury, at the close of the testimony, both parties made a motion to the court for a directed verdict, and, according to the decision of the courts, the court is compelled to direct you to return a verdict for the sum of $3,736.36 and the costs, which will be figured by the Clerk of Courts. So you will retire to the jury room and you will find the form of verdict here for the plaintiff, and the court instructs you to return a verdict for $3,736.36. The motion of the defendant is overruled.”

It will be perceived that the court did not first rule upon the motion of the in *619 surer, which was first interposed. Had he done so its counsel would have been afforded opportunity to protect their client-, as against the court’s adverse ruling, by a withdrawal of the motion, coupled with a request for the submission of the cause to the jury, which it would have had a perfect right to do. Had this request been followed, and the insured made no such subsequent request, as herein indicated, it could not now be heard to assert its claimed error. The court, however, proceeded to say to the jurors that it became his duty to sustain the insured’s motion, and instructed the jury to return a verdict in plaintiff’s favor. He concluded this instruction by the remark that the insurance company’s motion was overruled. It is thereby apparent that it would have been futile thereafter- for the insurer to have withdrawn its motion and to have asked for the submission of the controversy to the jury, for it had already been apprised of the court’s notion that the evidence preponderated in favor of the plaintiff. Had the defendant then made such a request, and had the court’s attention been directed to the authority which we shall hereinafter comment upon, the request would, without - question, have been acceded to and the case would have gone to the jury with the highly probable consequence that the jury would have adopted the court’s view of the facts and would have returned a verdict against the insurer, of which it could not thereafter have complained.

The case of Pittsburgh, C., C. & St. L. Ry. Co. v Luthy, Admr., 112 Oh St, 321, 147 NE, 336, must be, and is, decisive of this claimed error. It is therein held:

“Where, at the close of all the evidence submitted in the trial of a case which presents a jury issue, a motion is made by the defendant for a directed verdict, and thereupon a like motion is made by the plaintiff, and the court without passing upon the defendant’s motion announces that the plaintiff’s motion is sustained, and immediately, without affording the defendant any opportunity whatever to request a withdrawal of his motion and a submission of the case to the jury, directs the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff, it appearing that there were disputed questions of fact, such action constitutes error prejudicial to the defendant, warranting a reversal of the judgment based upon a verdict so returned.”

A perusal of the court’s reasoning, as found on pages 326 and 327, may be indulged in with profit. We shall hereinafter revert to that portion of the syllabus ’of the Luthy case, supra, which reads, “it appearing that there were disputed questions of fact.”

There are two phases of the second claimed error. It is maintained that the trial court erred in its refusal to direct a verdict in the insurer’s favor. This is coupled with, or predicated upon, the assertion that the burden was upon the insured to prove that his disability was not a progressive, incurable ailment with which' he was not afflicted prior to the' date of the issuance of the policy. The contract of insurance named such as an exception to the risk underwritten. We have been directed to the case of John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co. v Hicks, 43 Oh Ap, 242, 183 NE, 93, (13 Abs 157). We may, however, in the present instance, see no need to pursue the reasoning and rule of that authority, for we note from the plaintiff’s petition that it was averred and proved by plaintiff’s testimony that his disability be-1' gan as of a date subsequent to the delivery of the policy of insurance. Inasmuch as the plaintiff accepted and sustained this burden, the company’s claim of error i'n this respect is not well taken. The third paragraph of the syllabus of the Hicks case, supra, is pertinent to the third claim of error. It is there held that the “insurer must plead and prove exceptions to risk covered by policy,” and in conformity to t-his understanding the defendant in part answered that the insured's blindness was the result of the progress of an incurable ailment, which he contracted several years prior to the execution of the insurance contract, and that it was therein provided that such a resulting disability was an exception to the risk undertaken by the defendant company, which the policy of insurance did not cover.

The plaintiff, to maintain the issues by him created, voluntarily took the'stand and testified as to the nature of his disability. Upon cross-examination he was asked if he had not consulted certain doctors about his eyes. • His answer to these questions was in the affirmative, and he said that they examined his eyes and fitted him with glasses. Thereafter, the insurer, in seeking to' make proof of its defense, offered and sought to prove by the testimony of these doctors that the insured was afflicted with the disease from which he now claims total disability long prior to the date of the con *620 tract of insurance. This condition, the doctors would have said, had they been permitted to testify, was manifest to them from their examination of the plaintiff’s eyes. This testimony was excluded upon the theory of a privileged communication. The plaintiff in error asserts that this might have been so, but that when the insured voluntarily took the stand in his own behalf, well knowing that he would likely be interrogated upon cross-examination, and testified, in part, as hereinafter noted, any such communication ceased to be privileged, as it had been voluntarily waived by the insured.

In Ausdenmoore et, Exrs.

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Bluebook (online)
6 N.E.2d 9, 6 N.E. 9, 22 Ohio Law. Abs. 618, 7 Ohio Op. 390, 1935 Ohio App. LEXIS 352, 54 Ohio C.A. 66, 54 Ohio App. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-life-ins-co-v-mckim-ohioctapp-1935.