National Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Vann

11 S.W.2d 364
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 15, 1928
DocketNo. 2198. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 364 (National Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Vann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Vann, 11 S.W.2d 364 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

This is a suit by appellee upon a life insurance policy issued by appellant dated May 17, 1926, payable to ap-pellee; assured being Carrie S. Vann, wife of appellee. It was alleged the assured died February 7, 1927.

Among other defenses, defendant pleaded a provision of the policy that no obligation was assiimed by the defendant unless on the date of the policy the insured is alive and in sound health, and if the insured was not alive or in sound health on the date thereof, any amount paid to the company as premiums should be returned. It was alleged Mrs. Vann was not in sound health upon the date of the policy, but afflicted with cancer of the uterus, which later caused her death. Defendant tendered the amount of the premiums paid with interest.

The jury found Mrs. Vann was in sound health upon the date of the policy, and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff.

The only question necessary to be considered is the correctness of the court’s action in refusing the peremptory charge requested by defendant, instructing the jury to find only for plaintiff $10.50, that being the amount of the premiums paid with accrued interest.

A résumé of all the evidence as made by appellant is correct. Omitting nonpertinent matter, it shows:

Dr. O’Bannon, witness for defendant, testified: Mrs. Vann was brought to him for treatment at Harris Sanatarium, on March 28, 1926. He found she was afflicted with cancer of the cervix of the uterus, which is the mouth of the womb, a condition also known as carcinoma of. the uterus. He treated Mrs. Vann and observed her and made various examinations of her from that date to the time of her death. The cause of her death was the same as he had found on previous examinations. When Mrs. Vann first came to him for treatment, she and her husband told him that she had been suffering for about a year. He gave her treatment with radium and X-rays.

When she first came to him for treatment, the cancerous condition was well advanced. It was rather a large cancer, and extended out into the tissues about the site where it originated. It was what is called an inoperable cancer, or an advanced cancer.

He inserted radium in her on March 29, 1926. At that time she -was in the sanitarium for nine days. After that she was admitted to the hospital several times, her complaint being the same each time.

Based on his experience and knowledge of medicine, he would not say that a person afflicted with carcinoma of the uterus on May 3, 1926, would be a person of sound health. He gave her radium treatment on March 29th and again on September 18th. At the time she entered the hospital the first time he gave her only one radium treatment. He gave her several treatments with X-ray.

During her first stay in the hospital he *365 gave her X-ray treatment on April 2, April S, April 4, and April 5, 1926. He gave her other X-ray treatments September 22, September 23, September 24, and September 25, 1926. She was in the hospital from September 17, 1926, to September 26,1926.

From her treatments during the first stay she recovered sufficiently to go home. He examined her at intervals between that time and the following September. He asked her to come back for re-examination at various times. At those times he gave her no treatment. After the treatment during her first stay, her condition was much better. It was for that reason he gave her no more treatment. He watched her condition, and it was satisfactory during those times. She was able to be up and do her housework.

He stated it was possible for a cancer to be retarded, and sometimes they never feel the effects of it during the balance of their life. He doubted if a doctor could have told by observation, after she was discharged the first time, that she was suffering from cancer. On examining her, he could not see any evidence of disease.

Supposing that a cancer was treated with radium and X-ray and was retarded for sev-i eral months so that in his opinion no further treatment was necessary during the period of time of which he had spoken, and if the cancer was not increasing or requiring further treatement, the person having that cancer would be in ordinary health so far as that person himself knew. It would not be bothering him a bit in the world. While this cancer was dormant or retarded she knew nothing about it. She felt as good as she ever did during that time. Until the cancer would recur or start up again, the person would be in good health, from his own standpoint. Among doctors it is realized that there is a latent period, and they do not consider such patients in sound health for a period of five years. However, the patients themselves may consider that they are in sound health. He always regarded them with more or less suspicion and asked them to report back for observation.

He was sure that her death was caused by cancer.

So far as' Mrs. Vann felt, and so far as was noticeable after she left the hospital the first time, she was able to go about and do her work, and appeared to be in the same health as any other woman, for a period. In September he noticed that there was a recurrence of the cancer, and at that time he was unable to cheek it. It is the natural course of a cancer that the body has no resistance to it, unless it and all microscopical traces of it are completely eliminated. It is unusual for it not to recur.

On redirect examination he stated that when Mrs. Vann was discharged from the hospital, on or about April 5, 1926, he did not pronounce her cured. After she left the hospital there was a period during which he could find no trace of the disease whatever, and she had no symptoms of the disease. There was a period after she left the hospital when the tissues began to heal. He did not remember exactly for how long after she left the hospital he could not detect these traces. As a general rule it is from three to four weeks. The fact that she was able to resume her ordinary duties and gained back her ordinary weight and strength was one of the indications that she was in the process of recovery.

The fact that the trouble recurred in September to such an extent that it would not respond to treatment would indicate a continuance of the disease throughout the intervening period from the first discharge from the hospital up to that time. They never assumed a person who had a cancer to be cured for a period of some years later.

On recross-examination he stated that, supposing that the first treatment and all evidence of it had disappeared for a period of several months, it might not be improbable that a person could have another cancer in the same place, not having any connection with the previous cancer; that is, it might be the same situation there at that time caused the cancer that was there that caused the first cancer.' On further redirect examination he said: “We know of no such, an occurrence taking place that we can prove.”

Dr. S. A. Lundy, a witness for defendant, testified he was called to see Mrs. Vann on January 1, 1927, and he attended her on the day she died or on the day before she died. Her death was caused by carcinoma of the uterus. When he was called to see her on January, 1927, she and her husband gave him a history of the ailment with which she was suffering.

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Related

Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion
Texas Attorney General Reports, 1981
Vann v. National Life & Accident Ins. Co.
24 S.W.2d 347 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1930)

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11 S.W.2d 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-life-accident-ins-co-v-vann-texapp-1928.