Order of United Commercial Travelers v. Simpson

177 S.W. 169, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 645
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 1, 1915
DocketNo. 7254. [fn†]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 177 S.W. 169 (Order of United Commercial Travelers v. Simpson) 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
Order of United Commercial Travelers v. Simpson, 177 S.W. 169, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 645 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

The appellee, Mrs. Bessie Simpson, brought this suit as the beneficiary in an accident policy issued by the appellant to her deceased husband, John H. Simpson, to recover the sum of $5,000, the face value of said policy, together with statutory penalty of 12 per cent, legal interest, and attorney’s fees. The pleadings setting forth the appellee’s alleged cause of action and the appellant’s defenses are full, and their sufficiency not questioned on this appeal. The case was submitted to a jury on special issues, and upon their findings the court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $6,583, the principal and interest of the policy, and in favor of the appellant on the claim for penalty and attorney’s fees. From the judgment so rendered in favor of the appellee, the appellant prosecutes this appeal.

The appellant, under the contract sued on, was liable only in the event the insured, “through external, violent and accidental means,” received an injury, “which alone and independent of all other causes” occasioned his “death immediately or within six months from the happening thereof,” and the central question presented for our determination by appellant’s assignments of error is whether the facts and circumstances in evidence, no one having witnessed his death, were sufficient to take the case to the jury and justify their findings, and the judgment based thereon, to the effect that the death of the deceased, John H. Simpson, was the result solely of an accident as contemplated by the terms of the policy. The theory of the ap-pellee is “that the deceased slipped and fell, dislocating his neck and rupturing a blood vessel in some part of his head, causing him to bleed from a pint to a quart of blood, thereby producing his death,” whilst that of appellant is “that the deceased came to his death from heart failure brought about by alcoholic poison,” and, further, “that the evidence is sufficient to show how the deceased came to his death, and that it is but a conjecture, a guess, a supposition unsupported by evidence, to say that he slipped and fell and received injuries resulting in his death.-”

[1,2] The evidence upon which a decision of the question turns is conflicting in some material particulars, but sufficient to warrant the following conclusions, of fact: The deceased, for several days prior to his death, had been staying at the St. George Hotel in the city of Dallas. In connection with the room he occupied there was a bath and toilet room. This bath and toilet room was about three feet wide and about four or five feet long, and in it was located a commode and shower bath. The back of the commode was practically against, or very near, the rear wall of the room; its right side was a little distance from one of the side walls; its front was about three feet, or probably a little more, from the front wall, and the shower bath was to the left of the commode, and between the commode and the other side wall of the room. Above the commode and attached to the side wall of the room was a toilet paper rack. The floor of the room was composed of what is called terazza, a substance smoother and slicker than tile. The deceased was in the bathroom at the time of his death, and had just prior thereto been using the commode. The shower bath in the room at the time was defective, and water leaking or thrown therefrom caused the floor to be wet and very slick. The deceased sometimes drank intoxicating liquors to excess, and had on more than one occasion been treated at sanatoriums for acute alcoholism. He had been at the St. George Hotel in Dallas 10 or 12 days immediately preceding his death, and for several days during this time he was under the care of a physician and nurse, sobering up from a drunk. While being so cared for his nurse became alarmed at the weak condition of his pulse and telephoned to the physician treating him his condition, and asked him what he should do. The physician advised the giving of heart stimulants, which was done, and the practically normal action of the heart and pulse was thereby restored. On the eighth day of the treatment of the deceased the attending physician discharged him as being sober and well, and for four days immediately preceding his death the deceased had been sober. The deceased was about 5 feet and 8 inches tall and weighed about 140 pounds. On the morning of the 12th day of December, 1912, the body of the deceased was found in the bath and toilet room. He had evidently died some time during the previous night. He was in his underclothes and barefooted. He was lying on his face and head, with the palm of one hand upon the floor, as it would probably have been had he attempted to catch himself to prevent falling. His body was in an arched or oval position. His head was against the front wall of the bathroom and in the corner formed by that wall and the wall on the right side. One foot was back against the rear wall between the commode and the wall of the room, as it probably would have been had he. slipped and fallen in attempting to rise from the commode. His other foot was against the bottom of the front of the commode, but no other part of his body touched it. His face was bruised and mashed, and he had bled through his nose from a pint to a quart of blood. The bleeding indicated that his heart was beating after his fall, and the heart of a man dying from a dislocated neck would probably beat about one minute after receiving such an injury. The deceased’s neck was broken at the point where the atlas and axis *171 join. Snell a break or dislocation eonld be produced only by a “sudden bard fall.” If tbe deceased bad died of heart failure, be would probably have sank gradually down, and would not, in all probability, have attempted to catch himself with his hands. There would not, in all probability, be sufficient violence from a fall occasioned by heart failure to have produced and brought about the dislocation of the deceased’s neck. An autopsy, performed on the body of the deceased five or six months after his death and burial by several physicians, revealed, according to their testimony, “some diseased elements” in the heart, lungs, and brain, which, in their opinion, was the result of alcoholic poison and caused his death. There was other substantial testimony, however, which justifies the conclusion that the condition of the deceased’s heart, lungs, and brain, as disclosed by the autopsy, could have been produced by a violent fall which dislocated his neck and caused him to bleed from a pint to a quart of blood; that the condition found in the lungs of the deceased was just such a condition as might be expected to be found in the case of a man who had died as a result of a dislocated neck; that disease of the arterial system usually accompanies death from heart trouble, and that the arterial system of the deceased was not diseased; that there were no adhesions between the heart and the membranes around the pericardium, and that this indicated there was nothing wrong with that part of the heart.

The jury found, in response to issues submitted to them, that the death of the deceased was not due to heart failure produced by disease, nor to a diseased condition surrounding the heart; that on or about the 12th day of December, 1912, the deceased suffered a bodily injury which left visible marks of said injury upon his body; that he accidentally slipped and fell and dislocated his neck, and that his death was caused by such fall, and the injuries sustained thereby, independently of all other causes. These findings of the jury are to the effect that John H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 S.W. 169, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/order-of-united-commercial-travelers-v-simpson-texapp-1915.