Phillips v. Travelers Insurance Co.

231 S.W. 947, 288 Mo. 175, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 197
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 3, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 231 S.W. 947 (Phillips v. Travelers Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Travelers Insurance Co., 231 S.W. 947, 288 Mo. 175, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 197 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

DAVID E. BLAIR, J.

This is a suit by the beneficiary on a policy of accident insurance. It is admitted that said policy insured Milton C. Phillips, therein and herein ref erred to as the “insured,” against bodily injuries effected directly and independently of all other causes, through external, violent and accidental means, and that in case of death the principal sum, with accrued accumulations, amounted to $7,500, was in full force and effect at insured’s death and was payable to plaintiff, the respondent here, if she is entitled to recover under the terms thereof. The death of said insured occurred at Chicago, Illinois, on August 2, 1916. The policy was issued to insured in 1904 while he was a resident'of the State of Wisconsin. He moved to Chicago about 1913, and consent of defendant to such removal was evidenced by a rider attached to said policy of insurance. Plain *181 tiff is the daughter of insured, and was a resident of Ohio at the time the case was tried.

Insured was a man about sixty years of age at the time of his death. He had been engaged in the practice of law in Wisconsin, and had moved to Chicago to engage in business with his sons in that city. For some reason, stated by some of the witnesses to be on account of failing health, insured had been talcing a vacation during the summer months of 1916, and had largely given up active office work and had taken up outdoor exercises, including golf.

There is some evidence that his blood pressure had become high. On the evening before his death he visited friends in Chicago, a Mr. and Mrs. Vaughan, had dined with them and afterwards remained an hour or two visiting and chatting with them. The Vaughans lived in a third-story apartment, and insured had climbed two flights of stairs to roach thoir apartment. About 8:30 he started to leave, and the Vaughans bade him goodnight at the top of the stairs leading to their apartment. Mrs. Vaughan suggested to her husband, after insured had started away, that he get his hat and go with him. She then went out on the porch and, failing to observe insured go out on the street below, became alarmed and followed her husband down the stairs leading up to their apartment. At the foot of the same and on a landing she found her husband bending over the insured, and sat down beside him on a step and directed her husband to summon assistance. The only words spoken by insured, as shown by the testimony, were, “My eye, my side; don’t you try to lift me.” He then lapsed into apparent unconsciousness. Mr. Vaughan testified that he found insured on his knees on the landing, holding the door knob and trying to raise himself in that way, with his hat and newspaper on the floor. He was carried up stairs to the apartment of the Vaughans and physicians attempted to treat him there. His sons were also summoned, and soon thereafter he was removed to the hospital, where he died about four hours after he *182 was stricken. Some of the witnesses testified to a slight bruise or abrasion on the forehead of the insured in the region of his right eye.

A ppst-mortem examination on the body of the insured was made by a T)r. Reinhardt, coroner’s physician for Cook County. This post-mortem extended only to opening the skull and examining the brain. It showed no injury to the skull or- to the brain, but did reveal a severe hemorrhage in the brain. The body was then shipped to Wisconsin for burial, where it was exhumed about twenty-six days later. An autopsy Avas performed thereon by Dr. Wells' of Chicago. The testimony of the doctors performing and attending this autopsy tended to show the presence of arterio-sclerosis in an advanced stage, enlargement of the muscles of the heart and chronic Bright’s disease, and that there was no evidence of injury to the skull or the membranes covering the surface of the brain or the brain itself. Dr. Wells testified that he looked for and observed no bruise on the forehead.

The trial below resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $8,568.75, that sum representing the face of the policy, with admitted accumulations and interest from September 30, 1916. After unsuccessful motion for a new trial, the defendant appealed.

The above constitutes only a general outline of the facts. Such further facts as are necessary to a complete understanding of the issues involved in the case avíII be outlined more extensively in their proper place in the opinion.

A number of assignments of error are made by appellant and urged as ground for reversal of the judgment beloAv. We Avill only consider the demurrer at the close of plaintiff’s evidence and at the close of all the evidence, since our conclusion thereon disposes of the case.

A careful study of the evidence offered by plaintiff in the light of the decisions of this State has convinced us that the plaintiff offered no substantial evidence authorizing submission of the case to the jury, and *183 that plaintiff’s evidence was not helped out by evidence offered by the defendant.

Many pages of the record are filled with testimony tending to show that insured appeared to be in ordinarily good health during the few weeks' preceding his death, as well as before that time, and that he was active and able to work, played golf and climbed two flights of stairs frequently without apparent difficulty or distress, and that there was nothing in his appearance or actions to indicate that he was not in good health for a man of his age. Evidence to the contrary appears by' defendant’s witnesses, and some of the plaintiff’s witnesses threw doubt about his good- health to a certain extent. There was ample evidence from these lay witnesses that he appeared reasonably vigorous and healthy.

However, the uncontradietcd testimony of the physicians who held or witnessed the two autopsies (part of whom were called as witnesses by plaintiff) is -to the effect that .insured was not a healthy or vigorous man. With one voice these physicians agreed to the presence in his body of seriously diseased conditions. It is certain he was suffering from chronic Bright’s disease and arterio-sclerosis in an advanced stage, with corresponding enlargement of the heart muscles. It is also -shown beyond question that death was caused by cerebral hemorrhage. In spite of the testimony touching the appearance of insured given by lay witnesses, there can be no doubt that he was a victim of at least two deadly maladies.

The vital question for decision by the jury was whether the insured’s death was caused by accident or was the result of disease. The burden was on plaintiff to show that insured received bodily injuries effected directly and independently of all other causes through external, violent and accidental means, which caused his death.- There can be little doubt in this case that if' an accidental fall of insured be conceded, it was not of such a nature as to cause his death independently of *184 the diseased condition. Appellant contends that under such a situation plaintiff cannot recover under the law of Illinois, which appellant claims is controlling. But we pass that issue without discussing or deciding it here, although it presents an interesting question for examination and determination.

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W. 947, 288 Mo. 175, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-travelers-insurance-co-mo-1921.