Patterson v. Aetna Life Insurance

149 S.E.2d 915, 248 S.C. 374, 1966 S.C. LEXIS 195
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 29, 1966
Docket18556
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 149 S.E.2d 915 (Patterson v. Aetna Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. Aetna Life Insurance, 149 S.E.2d 915, 248 S.C. 374, 1966 S.C. LEXIS 195 (S.C. 1966).

Opinion

Brailsford, Justice.

Plaintiff’s ten year old son, a cerebral palsy victim as the result of natal injuries to his brain, was a patient in The Asheville Orthopedic Hospital, Inc., Asheville, North Carolina, receiving physical therapy, occupational therapy and speech therapy, from February 21, 1964 to March 31, 1964. As plaintiff’s dependent, the son was an insured under a group health and accident insurance policy issued by the defendant, Aetna Life Insurance Company, on April 5, 1962, covering the members and employees of the firm of Cormell-Streett and Patterson, of which plaintiff is a member. This action on the insurance policy was brought to recover expenses incurred by plaintiff for his son’s care and treatment as a patient at Asheville. At the conclusion of the evidence, the circuit judge withdrew the case from the jury and granted judgment for the defendant upon the ground that the Asheville institution did not qualify as a hospital within the meaning of the relevant section of the policy; hence the expenses sued for were not covered thereby. The plaintiff has appealed on exceptions which raise a single issue, to wit: Whether The Asheville Orthopedic Hospital qualifies as a hospital as that term is defined in the insurance policy? If so, the plaintiff is entitled to recover. If not, judgment for the defendant must be affirmed. We quote the pertinent policy provision:

*376 “The term ‘hospital’ means only an institution which meets fully every one of the following tests, namely, (a) it is primarily engaged in providing — for compensation from its patients and on an inpatient basis — diagnostic and therapeutic facilities for the surgical and medical diagnosis, treatment, and care of injured and sick persons by or under the supervision of a staff of physicians, and (b) it continuously provides twenty-four hour a day nursing service by registered graduate nurses, and (c) it is not, other than incidentally, a place for rest, a place for the aged, a place for drug addicts, a place for alcoholics, or a nursing home.”

W. H. Byrd, the executive officer in charge of The Asheville Orthopedic Hospital, was called as a witness for plaintiff. We learn from his testimony that the institution is a children’s hospital which specializes in orthopedic, speech and hearing problems. It has a nursing staff with registered nurses on duty at all times. It is under the supervision of a staff of physicians, all of whom are in private practice. These physicians maintain their offices in the City of Asheville, and are also on the staffs of other hospitals in the area. The hospital is equipped to administer physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy and hearing therapy, and to provide nursing and medical care. It also has a craft program and special educational classes. The latter are conducted by the public school system of the county for both elementary and high school students.

All patients are “admitted” by their doctors and each doctor is responsible for prescribing for the care and treatment of his patient. No surgery is performed in the hospital which does not have an operating room or provide any other facilities for surgical treatment. Prospective surgery patients are not admitted as such. If the need for surgery arises or becomes apparent while a child is a patient at Asheville Orthopedic, his doctor has him transferred to nearby Memorial Mission Hospital, or infrequently, to some other hospital where surgical facilities are available and where the doctor is qualified to have patients admitted. *377 There is no contractual arrangement between The Asheville Orthopedic Hospital and any other hospital for providing surgical facilities for its patients. On transfer to another hospital for surgery, a child’s parent or guardian assumes a direct contractual relationship with that institution, and is directly responsible to it for all charges incurred, to the same extent as though the child had never been admitted to Asheville Orthopedic. In short, so far as the record discloses, a patient of The Asheville Orthopedic Hospital requiring surgery is admitted to Memorial Mission Hospital, or any other hospital of the area, by the same means and on the sáme terms as any member of the public, and not through any contract or arrangement between such hospital and Asheville Orthopedic.

We have not undertaken to state in detail all of the testimony of this witness as to the facilities and services provided by Asheville Orthopedic because the challenge to its qualification as a hospital, within the terms of the policy, rests solely upon its failure to provide surgical facilities.

The policy provides that an institution may qualify as a hospital only if it meets fully every one of the tests specified in the definition quoted above. The terms fully and every one are words of common usage with well understood meanings which require no elucidation. The hard core of test (a) is that in order to qualify, an institution must be primarily engaged in providing facilities for surgical and medical treatment of injured and sick persons under the supervision of a staff of physicians. To provide facilities for medical .treatment, but none for surgery, is to meet the test only in part, which is insufficient for qualification as a hospital under the explicit language of the contract. Therefore, the issue on appeal must be resolved in favor of the defendant under ordinary principles of contract law as applied to insurance policies. We quote from Inman et al. v. Life Ins. Co. of Virginia, 223 S. C. 98, 74 S. E. (2d) 423:

“* * * in cases where there is no ambiguity, contracts of insurance, like other contracts, must be construed according *378 to the terms which the parties have used, to be taken and understood in their plain, ordinary, and popular sense. Bolen v. Capital Life & Health Insurance Company, 208 S. C. 345, 38 S. E. (2d) 79. And it is said in Newell & Company v. American Mutual Liability Company, 199 S. C. 325, 19 S. E. (2d) 463, 466, that ‘If the intention of the parties is clear, the courts have no authority to change the contract in any particular. * * * The rule of strict construction against the insurer does not apply where the language used in the policy is so plain and unambiguous as to leave no room for construction. * * * Nor does the rule of strict construction authorize a perversion of language or the exercise of inventive powers for the purpose of creating an ambiguity where none exists. The judicial function of a court of laws is to enforce an insurance contract as made by the parties, and not to re-write or to distort, under the guise of judicial construction, contracts, the terms of which are plain and unambiguous. * * *’ ” 223 S. C. 101, 102, 74 S. E. (2d) 424.

These apt principles have frequently been applied by this court to a variety of policy provisions. West’s South Carolina Digest, Insurance, —146, revised topic, 146.-146.8. We have no decision involving a contract restricting coverage to expenses incurred while confined in a “hospital” as that term is defined in the policy. Appellant cites and relies upon two cases from other jurisdictions, in both of which recovery was allowed on the ground that the institutions in question substantially qualified as hospitals under the policy definitions of that term.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 S.E.2d 915, 248 S.C. 374, 1966 S.C. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-aetna-life-insurance-sc-1966.