Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Daniel

13 S.E.2d 741, 64 Ga. App. 620
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 27, 1941
Docket28633, 28658.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 S.E.2d 741 (Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Daniel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Daniel, 13 S.E.2d 741, 64 Ga. App. 620 (Ga. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Felton, J.

This is the second appearance of this ease in this court. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Daniel, 61 Ga. App. 90 (5 S. E. 2d, 681). Under the terms of the policy sued on, the liability of the company attached if the insured became “totally and permanently disabled as a result of bodily injury or disease, so as to be prevented thereby from engaging in any occupation and performing any work for compensation or profit.” This provision means the same thing as the provisions in the cases of Cato v. Ætna Life Insurance Co., 164 Ga. 392 (138 S. E. 787) and Prudential Life Insurance Co. v. South,, 179 Ga. 653 (177 S. E. 499, 98 A. L. R. 781), as they are construed by the Supreme Court. No reason appears why a different construction should *621 be adopted simply because tbe policy in tbe instant case is primarily a life-insurance policy and certificate with a provision that the disability payments might be elected in lieu of payment of the certificate upon the death of the insured.

The jury was authorized to find that Thomas Daniel, the insured, was permanently disabled under the terms of the policy. He testified substantially as follows: “I am forty-five years old. I started working for the Southeastern Compress Company in June, 1939. I got hurt while working at the compress. The kind of work 1 was doing when I got hurt was sewing bagging together. When cotton comes to the compress, long bagging is on each side; when it gets in the press we have a needle and a piece of twine to fold the bagging and stitch it up and sew it so it will not come apart, sewing with the right hand. With the left hand I hold it together to help pull the needle through; it requires two hands. My left hand was cut ofl: two inches above the wrist by Dr. Holton in March, 1937, as a result of my injury. Before I lost my hand I did other work besides sewing. I did general work, trucking, pulling cotton out of the pile, helped loading cars. By trucking I mean hand trucks — two hands. I have no education to talk about. I can read very little. I can not write at all. To the time I lost my left hand I never did any kind of work besides manual labor. Since the time I got hurt I have not been able to do manual labor. It takes a man with two hands to load and handle things. Since I got hurt I have not been able to pursue the customary duties of my employment. I could not sew heads in the compress with one hand. In trucking cotton it takes a man with two hands. You have to have two hands to balance the truck. I could not pull cotton down off the pile with one hand. It was too dangerous. Since my injury I have not been able to do any substantial part of my former work at all. Before I lost my hand I earned on an average from $13 to $14 a week. After I got hurt I went back to the compress company to see about getting some work to do. I would see Mr. Walker or Mr. Ward. They said when I was able' to come back they would give me something. They let me go back. They said they would give me something to do, to help me along. Since I was hurt I have been dragging bands from the press and taking them to the machine to be straightened out. I can do that work with one hand. Besides dragging *622 bands I cnt some grass in between, but not very much. My average wages after my injury would go around $4.50 or $5 a week, but I did not malee that every week. There is no other work at the compress that I could do with one hand, besides those I have mentioned. I tried to get work elsewhere. I tried two or three times, transfer trucks, unloading boxes. They did not hire me. I could not do the work. I tried W. P. A. The lady said she would not consider my case. I was classed as unemployable. I had no trade or occupation or work that I could do, or any training that I could do without two hands. Before I was hurt I trucked cotton and got twenty-five cents an hour for trucking. Some of the time I sewed bales for which I got twenty-seven and a half cents per hour. The amount of money I made depended on the hours I made. The hours I made depended on the bales pressed. Since my injury I have received twenty-five cents an hour. After the wage-and-hour increase I have received forty-five cents an hour for overtime. I know Joe Mack. He worked at the compress company. He works pulling cotton on trucks. He cuts grass. He pulls the cotton down. That was not the same kind of work I was doing before I lost my hand. Sometimes I would pull cotton on trucks, sometimes tearing down the pile. After I got hurt I could not do that. Joe Mack has been doing that. Joe Mack has only one hand.”

T. A. Ward, superintendent of the compress company, testified, for the defendant, to the same facts to which Daniel testified with reference to the kind of labor Daniel performed before and after his injury, the rate of pay, etc. He testified further: “The government changed the rate per hour from twenty-five cents to thirty cents. Daniel did some overtime, not a great deal. I have two other one-armed men at the plant. Joe Mack, one of them, pulled cotton down with one hand. He catches hold on the side and twists around to get buckles right, so they can take the bands off, before going to the press. He seems to be a man m practically the same physical condition as Tom Daniel. We have one-handed-men at compresses at Savannah, at Dothan, Alabama, and Atlanta, Georgia. One of the men at Dothan trucked cotton, and other work. He did not have an artificial arm. The man in Atlanta did various jobs, like pulling down cotton; everything we wanted him to do. They got the same rate of pay that Daniel got for the *623 same class of work. The number of laborers I have out there is dependent entirely on the amount of cotton that comes in at the press. The amount coming in affects the hours that laborers work. It affects the amount of pay he gets a week, but not the rate. Daniel received about two and a half cents less per hour’s work after his injury than before. The compress company has a very liberal policy towards its employees who have been injured on the job. I have instructions to never discriminate in any way against an employee who has suffered disability while in our employment, as long as he can do his regular work. I have no such instructions irrespective of whether he can do his regular work or not. That is left with me. I also have instructions that whenever work is available our first consideration must be given to such employees, and I carried out that charitable policy towards Daniel in the last two years. Daniel was physically able, and does the work we employ him to do. If he is not physically able, I would probably not employ him. I regard Daniel as physically able to do the work. Since he came back his work has always been satisfactory. Our policy does not mean that when an injured employee is not physically able to work we employ him. I recognize that even if disabled our company still has a charitable view, that we want him employed.”

Certain statistics were introduced for the purpose of showing that the reduction in the number of hours Daniel worked and in his average weekly wage was due to a decrease in the number ■of bales handled by the compress.

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13 S.E.2d 741, 64 Ga. App. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-life-insurance-v-daniel-gactapp-1941.