National Life & Accident Insurance v. Kendall

59 S.W.2d 1009, 248 Ky. 768, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 316
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 28, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 59 S.W.2d 1009 (National Life & Accident Insurance v. Kendall) 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 Insurance v. Kendall, 59 S.W.2d 1009, 248 Ky. 768, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 316 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner—

Reversing.

Mrs. Emma Kendall, plaintiff, recovered a judgment against the National Life & Accident Insurance Company (hereinafter called the National Company) for $1,000 and aaginst the Dixie Atlas Republic Insurance Company (hereinafter called the Dixie Company) for $2,000, and these companies have appealed. These cases were heard together in the trial court, were considered together in this court, and will be disposed of in one opinion.

Mrs. Kendall was the beneficiary named in two policies of insurance issued by these companies upon the life of her son William Tyler Kendall, whereby, in substance, each agreed to pay Mrs. Emma Kendall the sums named above in the event of the insured’s death resulting within ninety days, directly and independently of all other causes from bodily injury, etc., effected directly through external, violent, and' purely accidental means, and not caused by or contributed to directly or *769 indirectly, or -wholly or partially, by any disease or mental infirmity contracted either before or after the injury.

William Tyler Kendall died of cerebrospinal meningitis on February 8, 1931, and Mrs. Kendall sought to connect that ailment with an accident alleged to have befallen young Kendall on January 25, 1931. She had that burden to sustain; that is, she had to prove her son had received an injury through external, violent, and purely accidental means, and that his death was directly and entirely due to that injury, independently of all other causes.

The Facts.

William Tyler Kendall was born March 29, 1910, and died February 8, 1931. That previous to his last illness he had been a robust healthy boy, and had not needed the services of a physician since 1918, when he was treated for a light attack of influenza. The young man is supposed to have received an injury to his head on Sunday January 25, 1931, to have suffered from headache all that week but continued' to work, took to his bed on the evening of January 31st, grew rapidly worse, was attended by Dr. Walker, and was first visited by Dr. Baxter on February 5th and again when he was taken to a hospital in Louisville on February 6th, and he died there on February 8th.

Dr. A. A. Baxter testified he saw this boy on two successive days. This was probably on February 5th and 6th; certainly not later, for the young man was taken to Louisville on the 6th and died there on the 8th. The doctor testified he found a wound on the head of young Kendall at the juncture of the frontal and temporal bones, a deep lacerated wound with the bone exposed to an extent on the side of the head; it was a dented in wound, a severe one, probably half an inch square. By another witness it was described as a three-cornered dented in place, and by yet another witness,, as a moon-shaped wound that would have been an inch, long if it had been straight. This wound was eleven-days old when Dr. Baxter saw it, and he says the bone was exposed, but does not make it clear whether it was-then exposed or had been so. A sister of the young-man, who is a practical nurse and was nursing him, says; she saw the wound just before they took the young-man to the hospital, February 6th, that it was their *770 'healing nicely, and, when asked if you could see in and see the skull, answered, “Oh, no.” Still another witness and the only one who says which side of the head the wound was on (the left side) said the wound seemed to be healing. Probably the doctor had meant to say that, when the wound was fresh, the skull had been exposed. The doctor testified, “It was not a fracture of the skull, but probably a fracture of the frontinel, at the suture of the bones.” He testified that cerebrospinal meningitis is caused by a germ, the meningococcus, which by some means obtains access to and attacks the meninges, which is the covering of the brain and spinal cord.

All the doctors agree that the usual avenues by which the meningococcus germ reaches the meninges are the throat, the nose, and through the sinuses of the skull in the ethmoid region to the meninges. The plaintiff’s problem is to find some proof to connect this injury with the access of these meningococcus germs to the brain of this young man.

Ur. Baxter testified that he could not say there was a fracture of the skull, but that he found none. He said ■that, but for the cerebrospinal meningitis, the young ■man would not have died from the injury he had. Dr. Baxter seemed to have two theories as to how this might have happened, as shown by this from his evidence :

First. “Q. Was the injury which this boy had upon his head and shoulders — would that be sufficient to cause spinal meningitis to develop? A. It might be or might not be, according to the amount of inflammation that might take place from the wound.
“Q. In this particular case, was there inflammation set up in the wound in the injury to the skull? A. Yes, sir, in the inside as well.”
Second. “Q. Tell the jury just how spinal meningitis develops from an injury. A. When one is injured, the streptococci goes to work. That is the inflammation that heals the wound or aids in healing the wound. Of course, it keeps the wound open and sore, and you have to use an antiseptic or it goes beyond control, and they get blood poisoning, erysipelas. This does its work. The other *771 germ comes in for spinal meningitis; it kills this germ — in fact, it eats it np, destroys it, takes hold itself. From that, it penetrates to the covering of the brain— not only the brain, but the spinal cord as well.
“Q. Did this young man have spinal meningitis which would indicate that it developed from a wound, or did he have the epidemic form of spinal meningitis? A. Well, the symptoms we found, you know, were of that severe pain in the head and the nervous condition. Of course, that condition, pain in the head, had existed since the injury, in the beginning, and it was natural for us to take those two together, the pain from the injury and the general nervous condition with the spinal meningitis — connect them together as one thing.” Dr. Bogges in his evidence said:
“A. Recognizing the fact that such a condition as you outline, if true, and if this boy had an injury to the meninges from his fall and a slight meningeal hemorrhage sufficient to produce haziness for sometime after the accident, a rather persistent headache, I could conscientiously say there is a possibility that it would be, or might be a predisposing cause to the condition of which he died.”
“Q. In case there was not any other cases in the neighborhood, or the county, at the time that this cerebral spinal meningitis developed would you say then doctor that it was caused by an injury lowering his resistance? A. I would say that under those conditions the possible chances of the trauma being a factor are increased. That is true.
“Q. In other words, if there is no other cases from which this young man might have contracted the disease it is highly probable that the disease would develop from the germ already in his body, is that correct? A. Yes, sir.”

This is taken from the evidence of Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.W.2d 1009, 248 Ky. 768, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-life-accident-insurance-v-kendall-kyctapphigh-1933.