North American Accident Insurance v. Hill's Administratrix

206 S.W. 170, 182 Ky. 125, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 327
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 19, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 206 S.W. 170 (North American Accident Insurance v. Hill's Administratrix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North American Accident Insurance v. Hill's Administratrix, 206 S.W. 170, 182 Ky. 125, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 327 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

[126]*126Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.,

The appellant and defendant below, North American Accident Insurance Company, issued to Charles H. Hill] an accident policy by which it agreed to pay him certain] named amounts for the accidental loss of designated members of his body, and to pay his estate for the loss' of his life the sum of $2,500.00, “provided such loss shall result from bodily injuries inflicted through external,; Violent and accidental means, and solely and independently of all other causes, within thirty (30) days- of the! event causing such injuries,” and only if such injuries shall occur “while actually riding as a passenger in a place regularly provided for the transportation of passengers only, within a railroad car, elevated, subway or interurban railroad car, street car or steamboat, pro-* yided by a common carrier for passenger service. ’ ’ .

The insured was a traveling salesman for a whole-] sale hardware establishment, and on January 28, 1916, while the policy was in force, he returned to his home m Dayton, Kentucky, from a trip through the south which] he'had made for his employer. He was very much af-i flioted, and Dr. Spitzlberger, his family physician, who was called in, says that his patient was ‘ ‘ suffering from a condition of troubled respiration and a marked swell-J ing in the abdomen. ’’ He further says that ‘ ‘ there was a] rapid pulsation with an increased respiration and misery]' in his abdominal cavity, and he also complained of his right side.” The patient was suffering a great deal of] pain and the physician diagnosed his condition as beng one where “he was affected with the condition of] ascites.” Being asked what ascites is, he answered: “Uj is an effusion of the serum into the abdominal cavity,, which is of a watery nature.” -

Dr. Creiwe, shown by the record to be an eminent diagnostician of Cincinnati, testified in the case, and said: “Ascites is a term which is used to signify the accumulation of fluid in the abdomen.” It is explained.by Dr/ Spitzlberger that the accumulation of fluid in the abdominal cavity producing the ascites condition obstructs, the portal circulation and causes a dropsical condition, one of the symptoms of which is a distention of the abdomen such as the insured had when first seen by the physician.

[127]*127On February 2nd, 1916, the insured was taken to a) hospital in Cincinnati and was there operated on by Hr.; C. A. L. Eeed, but the operation progressed no further!, than to discover the ailment with which the patient was afflicted, which was a large tumor on his liver, the size of a man’s head, and which the physicians say was either sarcoma or carcinoma, both of which are malignant growths.

On February 9 the insured died. This suit was filed by the appellee, his widow, who qualified as his personal] representative, to recover $2,500.00 for his death, alleging that it was produced by an accident which the de-J ceased sustained on January 12, 1916, and which was inflicted through external, violent and accidental means! and, it solely and independently of all other causes, produced her decedent’s death, and which he received while he was “actually riding as a passenger in a place regularly provided for the transportation of passengers only,1 within a railroad car provided by a common carrier for1, passenger service.”

The answer traversed the allegations of the petition, and upon trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of! plaintiff for the amount claimed in the petition, upon] which judgment was rendered, and to reverse it the defendant prosecutes this appeal.

Many alleged -errors are relied upon as grounds for, a reversal, and we think at least two of them are well, taken. They are (1) incompetent evidence introduced by plaintiff. over the objections of the -defendant, and (2) insufficiency of the testimony to authorize a recovery.; Considering these in the order named: (1) Dr. Spitzlberger, who was introduced as a witness for plaintiff, in testifying concerning what the deceased said in giving a history of his case after returning from his trip, was asked: “What did he give you as the history of hi& case?” He was permitted to answer over the objections- and exceptions of defendant and said: “That while he was boarding' a train the train started off suddenly, throwing him violently, and as to him falling on the grip! or the grip falling on him I don’t exactly recollect; I know the grip he was carrying was the cause of his in-, jury indirectly.”. By this answer the deceased himself was made to testify not only as to the way and manner' of receiving his injuries, but also that they were received [128]*128while deceased was traveling upon a passenger train in! a coach provided for that purpose; thus bringing theaccident directly within the terms of the policy; for, am) cording to those terms, if the accident had not been in-} flicted while the deceased was thus circumstanced, it} would not be covered by the policy. It is a rule quite! universally recognized that it is competent for a patient to give a history of his case to his physician so as to enable the latter to render a proper diagnosis and give such treatment as the affliction demands. This, however, in the instant case, required no more than that the patient should have said to the physician that he had sustained an accident wherein he fell upon his grip or the grip fell upon him, naming the part of the body,affected, together with the symptoms following. It is by no means essential for any purpose that the place where the accident oc-: curred should have been mentioned. Perhaps the statement as to the place where the accident was received might have been admissible, if made immediately there-! after so as to bring it within the familiar doctrine of thei res gestae rule, but having been made after the lapse of; sixteen days; it was clearly incompetent.

In the case of Shade’s Administrator v. Covington Cincinnati Elevated Railroad & Transfer & Bridge Company, this court had before it almost the precise question involved in the case now under consideration. In that case the administrator of Mrs. Shade brought suit against the defendant to recover for the death of his decedent, claiming that it was produced through the defendant’s negligence by permitting its bridge to become dangerous through the accumulation of ice and snow', upon the passenger footway, upon which the deceased) slipped and fell, sustaining the injuries from which she) died. Practically the entire testimony as to how she sustained her injuries was through a statement which she' made to her physician. In that case the physician was permitted to testify, inter alia, that the deceased toldi him that she fell upon defendant’s bridge because of ice thereon. The court in its opinion, after stating the reason for the rule permitting the introduction of this character of testimony, said:

“For that reason the law allows the proof of what she said to her physician at the time of his examination, as part of the res, gestae. ’\Ybat the injured party may [129]*129have said to any one at the time of the injury, or so immediately after it as to be regarded part of it, as being the verbal part of a continuing occurrence, would also be admitted, upon familiar grounds. What was said, after the lapse of some minutes — a half hour or so in this case — to the attending physician, to aid him in determining the nature of the injury and to prescribe a, remedy or treatment, is allowed as an extension of the same rule of evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
206 S.W. 170, 182 Ky. 125, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-american-accident-insurance-v-hills-administratrix-kyctapp-1918.