National Life & Accident Ins. v. Clark

93 S.W.2d 847, 263 Ky. 779, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 246
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 24, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 93 S.W.2d 847 (National Life & Accident Ins. v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) 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. v. Clark, 93 S.W.2d 847, 263 Ky. 779, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 246 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion ok the Court by

Judge Perry

— Reversing.

This action was brought in the Knox circuit court by tbe appellee, Maude Clark, on a bealtb and accident policy issued by the appellant to John Henry Clark.

Plaintiff sued as the beneficiary named in the policy to recover, for the alleged accidental death of the insured, the face amount of the policy of $400.

Upon trial, the jury upon the evidence and under the, instruction of the court returned a verdict finding the insured had suffered an accidental death, and that plaintiff was entitled to recover $400, the amount of the policy.

Challenging the propriety of this verdict and judgment thereon as unsupported by the evidence, and complaining that the instructions given by tbe court were erroneous, tbe insurance company has appealed.

It is disclosed by the record that ion the night of November 7, 1934, the insured, John Henry Clark, died while on a spree and so greatly sufféring as to indicate that his death was the result of having drunk some form of poison.

It was the contention of plaintiff that the insured’s death was caused by drinking had moonshine whiskey, which, unknown to him, contained some deleterious or poisonous substance. On the other hand, defendant contended that his death was the result, not of poison, hut of overdrinking or acute alcoholism.

It is admitted that the policy upon which suit was here brought for recovery of its face amount was in force and effect at the time of insured’s death and, .among others, contained the following provision:

1 "If death is due directly and independently of all other causes from bodily injury, sustained while *781 the policy is in force and which, is effected accidentally and through external and violent means, and the insured shall, within ninety days of the-date of such injury * * * die, the company will pay * * * $400.00.”

The insured’s wife, the appellee Maude Clark, was; named as sole beneficiary under the policy, and this action was brought by her, seeking recovery of the insurance upon the theory that the insured, John Henry Clark, suffered an accidental death within the meaning of the policy.

The proof introduced in behalf of plaintiff, as tending to show that the insured suffered an accidental death, was to the effect that he was at the time a strong, healthy man, 34 years of age, regularly employed as a porter at the Arden Hotel in Corbin, Ky.;; that on the night of his death, November 7, 1934, he-went to the hotel about midnight, under the influence of' drink, but was still in good spirits and laughed and talked with the night clerk and porter for about one-half hour.

They testify that he was drinking at this time, though was not drunk; that within three to five minutes after he left the hotel, they heard him scream out- and at once went to his aid, when they found him collapsed on the pavement, writhing with pain; that they removed him to the hotel, where they tried to relieve, his pain; and called Dr. Corum to treat him.

Dr. Corum, testifying upon the trial for the plaintiff as an expert, stated that when he was called upon, the occasion in evidence to administer to the insured, he was told “they had a drunk over there and wanted to see if he could quiet him”; that when he reached the. insured about one-half hour later, he found him there at the hotel, “rolling and hollering and taking on,”' which indicated to him that “he had a poison of some' sort, which caused him to give him an injection of apomorphine to unload it”; that his suffering condition at the time was such as to indicate that he was both drunk and suffering from drink; that from his diagnosis of' the insured’s symptoms, he concluded that he was suffering with acute alcoholism; that the contents of insured’s stomach or of the bottle from which he had *782 "been drinking’ could have been analyzed, and that such an analysis would have positively dis'closfed whether or not the whisky of which he- had been drinking’ contained deleterious or poisonous substance other than alcohol; that he was called again about two hours later to- see Clark, when he “found him still laying there breathing” and gave him some more apo-morphine, which ■caused him to again vomit, and that he did so because Clark had, the symptoms of then suffering with an '“overdose of alcoholism”; that his opinion was that Clark “died from an acute poison of some sort”; that it “could have been alcohol — or could have been something in the alcohol”; that from this diagnosis made he had stated to the coroner that Clark had died from •acute alcoholism, “that is, from drinking too much alcohol”; that “all alcohols are poisonous if taken in excessive doses”; and that it was his opinion that he had gotten some “bad bootleg.” However, he stated that in his opinion, if there had been nothing wrong at the time -with John Clark except drinking liquor, he would not have died from the treatment he gave him, from which he concluded there was something other than the liquor that caused his death.

At the conclusion of this evidence, defendant moved for a peremptory instruction, which was refused.

Thereupon, it introduced in evidence a copy of the insured’s death certificate, reciting that Clark died from acute alcoholism.

Defendant’s, proof was, as testified by a colored neighbor of the deceased, that Clark was in the habit of going on frequent or periodic sprees, some of which were attended with bad attacks of indigestion; that the insured had told witness that his doctor had said that, “If he didn’t quit drinking, it would kill him and told him to let it alone.”

Dr. Tye was then called as an expert witness for the defendant, who in answer to the hypothetical questions, based upon the facts in evidence; stated that the apo-morphine given Clark would cause him to vomit .and that the exertion put forth in so' doing might cause a cerebral hemorrhage, or acute heart failure. Further, in answer to the hypothetical questions submitted, by *783 the plaintiff’s attorney, as to what the symptoms shown by Clark indicated upon this occasion, he stated that it seemed to him like there was- some acute poisoning. Further he was asked if anything had been stated in answer to the hypothetical questions that could lead him, with any degree of certainty, to tell whether Clark died from acute alcoholism of other poison, to which he answered: “No, I could not say what caused his death from what I know about the ease.”

At the conclusion of the evidence, defendant renewed its motion for a directed verdict, which was again refused, and an instruction, offered by plaintiff, was given the jury. By that instruction they were told that if they believed from the evidence that John Clark drank or imbibed a liquid or drink containing poison and at the time he drank or swallowed same was ignorant of the fact that it contained poison, if it did, and as the direct and proximate result of swallowing such poison he died, then his death resulted accidentally and the law was for the plaintiff, and they should so find.

Upon this evidence and the given instruction of the court, the jury returned a verdict finding for plaintiff in the amount sued for.

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Bluebook (online)
93 S.W.2d 847, 263 Ky. 779, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-life-accident-ins-v-clark-kyctapphigh-1936.