O'Connor v. Columbian National Life Insurance

232 S.W. 218, 208 Mo. App. 46, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 82
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 232 S.W. 218 (O'Connor v. Columbian National Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Connor v. Columbian National Life Insurance, 232 S.W. 218, 208 Mo. App. 46, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 82 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinions

This is a suit to recover on an accident insurance policy. Plaintiff recovered and defendant appeals.

The petition is in the usual form. The answer, after a general denial, alleges that deceased came to his death as a result of disease, namely uræmia secondary to acute nephritis.

The deceased, Charles F. O'Connor, died August 28, 1916, and was twenty-three years of age. A sister was named as beneficiary in the policy, which was afterwards assigned to deceased's mother, Ellen O'Connor. Charles F. O'Connor was single, and lived with his parents in St. Louis. His general health had been good up to the time of his death, with the exception of being operated upon for appendicitis in March, 1916, but he was able to go about his work in the office of the Meyer Milling Company, where he was employed on April 12th following the date of the operation. He was also sick during the month of August prior to his death, with an attack of what was termed in the evidence as "Summer Grippe." He had gone back to work on August 21, 1916. On the evening of August 24th, or in the early morning of August 25th, he was taken seriously ill, and died four days later.

His mother stated that on the evening he was taken ill, he ate dinner at their home with other members of the family; that the meal consisted of vegetable soup, crackers, beefsteak, creamed potatoes, canned green peas, a salad of tomatoes and lettuce, graham biscuits, and some coffee. He left home about ten minutes to eight that evening, and started to the Knights of Columbus Building to meet his friend, a Mr. Hannan. Some time near the hour of midnight she was aroused by the screams of the deceased, who was rigid and sitting upright *Page 52 in his bed. He was in a convulsion, and perspiration was pouring off his face and hands. He was foaming at the mouth. This convulsion lasted seven or eight minutes. His mother gave him some hot water and baking soda, which produced vomiting.

Dr. Lonsway was called and arrived about half past twelve. When the doctor arrived deceased was neither vomiting nor in convulsions, but was complaining of pains in the upper part of the abdomen. The doctor remained about three quarters of an hour, and about twenty minutes after he left, deceased had another convulsion. Dr. Lonsway came again and stayed about two hours. During the second visit the deceased was conscious, and would speak when he was spoken to. About seven o'clock the next morning Dr. Munsch arrived. About ten o'clock he was taken to the hospital, where he remained until his death.

It was shown by the deposition of Peter W. Hannan, who was twenty-eight years of age, and stationed at Jefferson Barracks at the time the deposition was taken, that he had known the deceased about a year and a half prior to his death, and attended night school with him at St. Louis University; that he saw the deceased during the summer of 1916 on an average of two nights a week. They very frequently spent their evenings together. When asked to describe in general or specific terms his appearance. he said, "I would pick him out as a pretty healthy, good-looking, young man." This answer was objected to as being a conclusion. The objection was overruled, and defendant's counsel excepted. Witness stated that he frequently played handball and went in swimming with deceased; that on the evening of Thursday, August 24, 1916, he and O'Connor were together. They went to a show, and afterwards went to an ice cream parlor at about 10:45 and ate some ice cream; that deceased stated to him at the time they were eating the ice cream that he did not think it was good — that it did not taste good. They left the ice cream parlor soon afterwards, and separated. *Page 53

It appears from the testimony of defendant's witnesses who conducted the ice cream establishment where the deceased ate on the evening he was taken ill, that the ice cream was made in the usual way, and that there was no complaint from any one else who ate ice cream at this place on that evening.

Dr. Munsch testified that he had practiced medicine in St. Louis for ten years; that he knew deceased as a physician and as a friend, and had at times treated him for minor ailments. He testified that at the time he visited O'Connor's home on the first visit mentioned heretofore, he found that the deceased answered intelligently when spoken to, but did not volunteer information; he was not inclined to move, and resisted handling. He stated he was guided in his treatment by the information given him by the patient, whom he described at that time as being nauseated, pulse eighty to eighty-four, nothing abnormal in respiration nor as to heart, and his temperature about ninety-eight. The skin of his face was pinched, and his extremities showed cyanosis; tongue dry, no odor to his breath; no abnormal odor of any kind coming from his body. He said that he concluded at the time that he had taken in ptomaine, producing the poisoning from which he was suffering. Witness went with the deceased to St. John's Hospital, and treated him there up to the time of his death. He called in consultation Drs. Engelbach and Tierney to assist him. He further described in detail how he treated him, and his condition at various times prior to his death. On cross-examination, when asked the question, "What is ptomaine poisoning?" he answered, "Ptomaine poisoning is a condition brought about by the taking in, with food, of a substance produced by the decomposition in the food before it is taken into the body." Defendant's counsel, on cross-examination, asked him if he was certain as to what caused the death of Charles F. O'Connor, to which he answered, "Well, it is certain as a person could be."

Dr. Lonsway also testified as to the condition in which he found the deceased on his visits to him the night *Page 54 he was taken ill. He stated that he was a friend of the deceased, and knew him well; that they were frequently together. This doctor was permitted to state, over the objections and exceptions of defendant's counsel, that from the general appearance of deceased during the time he knew him, he took him to be in good physical condition; that he formed the opinion at that time that deceased had taken in ptomaine poison, and upon that basis he treated him. He gave further evidence in detail as to deceased's condition at that time. On cross-examination he said that ptomaine poisoning, as he understood it, is usually produced by the action of bacteria upon protein, and by taking the food into the system the bacteria produced the toxic condition in the system known as ptomaine poisoning.

Dr. John H. Simon, who had been active in the general practice of medicine in St. Louis for about twenty-six years prior to the date of deceased's death, testified that he was in court and heard the testimony of Dr. Lonsway read; also the testimony of Dr. Munsch and of Mrs. O'Connor. He stated that during the course of twenty-eight years of practice he had possibly seen three hundred cases of ptomaine poisoning, and that he had also seen perhaps one thousand cases of acute nephritis and uræmia. He says there is such a thing as ptomaine poison; that ptomaine is a word which has been applied to a group of poisonous and some non-poisonous substances which are the product of bacterial action; that there is such a poison "whether you call it ptomaine or toxic food poison." In giving his opinion as to the cause of the death of deceased, he stated that he believed he came to his death by the accidental taking into his stomach of ptomaine poison, on the night of the 24th of August, 1916. In distinguishing between a case of ptomaine poisoning and uræmic poisoning, he went into the matter in detail, showing a vast and marked difference in the two cases.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W. 218, 208 Mo. App. 46, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnor-v-columbian-national-life-insurance-moctapp-1921.