Misskelley v. Home Life Insurance Co.

171 S.E. 862, 205 N.C. 496, 1933 N.C. LEXIS 602
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 13, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 171 S.E. 862 (Misskelley v. Home Life Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Misskelley v. Home Life Insurance Co., 171 S.E. 862, 205 N.C. 496, 1933 N.C. LEXIS 602 (N.C. 1933).

Opinion

ClakksoN, J.

At tbe close of plaintiff’s evidence and at tbe close of all tbe evidence defendant made motions for judgment as in case of *500 nonsuit. O. S., 567. The court below overruled these motions, and in this we can see no error.

Plaintiff testified, in part: “I made application to the Home Life Insurance Company of New York for a policy of insurance on 31 July, 1929. After making application for the policy, on 4 August, 1929, the company sent me to Dr. James E. Eogers to be exainined. I visited Dr. Eogers’ office for this examination. He stripped me to my waist and tested my heart and lungs and my blood pressure. He took a specimen of my blood and urine; examined my eyes, head, nose, ears, and throat. In examining my eyes, he had some kind of a little light. He looked into my eyes with it. He made me close one eye and look at a calendar on the wall about fifteen feet back, I reckon. He covered my eye with a card and told me to read certain things on the calendar, which I did. He would cover the other eye and told me to read that on another calendar, and I read that. I did not do anything to prevent Dr. Eogers from examining me, or any part of my body, in connection with the policy of insurance. After the examination a policy was issued to me. These attachments were all connected with it. At the time this policy ivas issued to me I was not suffering from awy condition of my eyes or other part of my body. At the time this policy of insurance was issued to me I was engaged in work as a carpenter foreman on the Ealeigh High School on St. Mary’s Street. At that time I did not experience any trouble in doing my work. I was able at that time to drive my own automobile. I was able at that time to walk across the streets and street intersections alone. From the time this policy was issued to me and up to the first of September, 1930, I did not have awy trouble with' my eyesight. I did not ever make any complaint about my eyesight.” Q. “I will ask you to look at these gentlemen of the jury, and as I walk down before them tell me if you can see them. Can you see Mr. Kennedy, juror No. 1 ?” A. “I can’t see none of them. All I can see is a blackness. I can’t tell who nobody is. I can see only a black form. I am not able to tell whether Mr. Kennedy is wearing glasses or not. Since the first of September, 1980,1 have not been able to engage in any occupation for gain or profit. I attempted to do work after the first of September, 1930. I tried to cover a little shed and fell off. I have not been able to work at all since then. At this time I am not able to drive my own automobile. I am not able to walk across street intersections alone, not safely. I get someone to come with me when I come to town. The last work I engaged in was in September, 1930, at the Catholic Orphanage for Southeastern Construction Company of Charlotte. At that time I was carpenter foreman.” Q. “Now, what were you doing at the Catholic Orphanage at the time this accident occurred?” A. “Well, they had a wide span there in the *501 floor on the third floor and it was swaggering. We went into the basement and was putting in steel cross-beams under the floor to hold the floor up, which was going to fall. "We put steel beams in to hold it up. We worked there and were putting in the last beam when it slipped in some way. I was standing to the side and it hit me side of the head and knocked me unconscious about an hour or more. I have a scar on my head now from it.. It is still here (indicating). I have suffered with my eyes since then. My right eye is plumb out and my left is practically out. I can only tell a light, is all. My eyesight is getting worse.”

The defendant contended, in part: “That since 1923, six years before the policy was issued, that Mr. Misskelley, the plaintiff, was suffering with choroiditis, a disease of the eye, and that when he was examined by Dr. Hicks in 1931 that the tissues and membranes of the eyes, or the membranes composing the eye, were found to be scarred, or some of them were, showing that the disease had continued for some length of time. That he is not permanently and totally disabled.”

On these disputed facts, which were corroborated by evidence on both sides of the controversy, the court below, at the request of defendant, gave the following instructions: “Now, the defendant has requested the court to give you certain instructions, which I will now proceed to do. I instruct you that if you find from the evidence, and by its greater weight, that the plaintiff has become and is totally and permanently presumably disabled from bodily injury or disease, such disease affecting his eyesight and thereby rendering him totally and permanently disabled, and if you further find that he was suffering from a disease which affected his eyesight, known as choroiditis, in the year 1923, and that the effect of this disease upon his eyesight continued until after 19 August, 1929, you will answer the first issue No.’ If you find from the evidence that the plaintiff had the disease known as choroiditis in the year 1923, and that his permanent and total disability, if you find that he is now totally and permanently disabled, is the result of such disease, you will answer the first issue No.’ ” The court further instructed the jury: “Now, as I have stated to you, the burden is upon the plaintiff to satisfy you by the greater weight of the evidence, and I have explained what that phrase means. If he has so satisfied you, that is to say, by the greater weight of the evidence, that he has been totally and presumably permanently disabled from bodily injury occurring or disease originating after the issuance of the policy, it will be your duty to answer the first issue ‘Yes.’ If you do not so find, it will be your duty to answer the first issue No.’ ”

The first issue was: “Has plaintiff, since 1 September, 1930, been totally and presumably permanently disabled from bodily injury occur *502 ring or disease originating after tbe issuance of tbe policy, as alleged in tbe complaint?” Tbe jury answered tbis disputed fact “Yes,” in favor of tbe plaintiff.

Under Article IV, sec. 8, of tbe Constitution of North Carolina, tbis Court bas “jurisdiction to review, upon appeal, any decision of tbe courts below, upon any matter of law or legal inference,” etc. Taking tbe evidence in tím light most favorable to plaintiff, it was ample to have been submitted to tbe jury.

Tbe second issue was: “Was due proof submitted to tbe company at its borne office in tbe city of New York that tbis insured bad become and was totally and permanently presumably disabled by bodily injury occurring or disease originating after date on which tbe policy agreement became effective?” Tbe jury answered tbis issue “Yes.” Tbe third issue was: “If so, on what date was such proof submitted ?” The jury answered: “4 January, 1932.” On tbe second issue tbe defendant requested tbe court below to charge tbe jury: “Tbe court instructs you that upon all of tbe evidence in tbis case you will answer tbe second issue No/ ” Tbe court below refused to give tbis prayer for instruction, and in tbis we can see no error.

On 21 September, 1931, tbe following letter was written from bead-quarters of tbe American Red Cross at Raleigh, N. C., signed by Hal. W. Young and Mrs. Hubert Young, executive secretary: “Re: Misskelley, Charlton E.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.E. 862, 205 N.C. 496, 1933 N.C. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/misskelley-v-home-life-insurance-co-nc-1933.