Provident Life Accident Ins. Co. v. Chapman

118 So. 437, 152 Miss. 747, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 215
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1928
DocketNo. 27104.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 118 So. 437 (Provident Life Accident Ins. Co. v. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Provident Life Accident Ins. Co. v. Chapman, 118 So. 437, 152 Miss. 747, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 215 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

*752 Ethridge,, P. J.

The appellee, plaintiff in the court below, brought suit on an insurance policy issued by the appellant, defendant in the court below. The policy provided for indemnity for disability because of personal bodily injury suffered during the life of the policy through external, violent, and accidental means, and for the-recovery of a specific indemnity for the loss of the sight of one eye, or the loss of the sight of both eyes. The policy provided for a, monthly accident indemnity of eighty dollars because of disability resulting from such personal bodily injury, the monthly indemnity to cease upon the happening of one of the specific losses named in the policy.

The principal sum of such policy was one thousand dollars, and the specific indemnity covering the loss of one eye because of such personal bodily injury is one-half the principal sum, and that covering the loss of both eyes is double the principal sum.

*753 The declaration alleged the contract of insurance; that it was in force on the 9th day of October, 1926, because the plaintiff on that date got a hot cinder in one eye, causing inflammation of that eye, and, through sympathy, inflammation of the other eye, thereby incapacitating him as a locomotive fireman, and finally resulting in the total loss of the sight of both eyes within the one-hundred-and twenty-day limit stipulated in the policy.

The defendant pleaded the general issue, and gave notice thereunder, to the effect that the policy provides for indemnity for the loss of plaintiff’s eyes only when the said loss is irrecoverable, and only when the said loss results solely from bodily injuries sustained through external, violent, and accidental means, and only when the loss results within the one hundred and twenty days of the happening of such injury; that plaintiff sustained no personal injury or injuries resulting solely from external, violent, and accidental means, within one hundred and twenty days from the loss of his eyesight, and that the said loss did not result from an injury sustained by him within one hundred and twenty days of such loss; that plaintiff did not lose his eyesight because of any personal bodily injury suffered by him, but that he lost his eyesight from disease, or from natural causes, and that he had been going blind for a long time; that on November 19, 1926, the defendant compromised and settled all claims with the plaintiff under said policy for the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, at the special instance and request of the plaintiff, and that plaintiff receipted the defendant in full, for all demands under said policy, and surrendered the same; that the said policy provides that claims for any loss must be filed within ninety days from the happening of such loss, together with affirmative proof thereof, and that no proof of loss was filed as contemplated by the policy, and that no suit may be brought within sixty days after such proof.

*754 The plaintiff replied to this notice under the general issue, and, in support of his declaration, testified that he was a fireman in the employ of the New Orleans &> Northeastern Railroad Company, and had been for some twenty-seven years, but that in October, about the first part of the month, he received an injury to his eye by means of a hot cinder getting into and injuring it; that for the first few days after 'the said injury he continued his employment, and that his wife treated his eye by bathing it at night, but that about the 9th of October he had to abandon his employment; that he had his eyes examined and treated, but that they became worse, and, some time early in December, he lost his eyesight entirety. He admitted that he had received a check from the insurance company for one hundred and fifty dollars, which he had credited on the amount of his suit, but stated that he did not understand at the time the check was given hinf that it was intended by the insurance company as a full and complete settlement for his injury; that the agent of the company came out to his house after he had been stricken with blindness and could not read, and stated to him that he had brought him a check, the amount of which was in liquidation of his disability benefits for the time past, as well as two weeks advance, dating from that date by which time the said agent stated he had been iuf ormed Chapman would be ready to return to his employment. He stated that the agent of the insurance company did not read the check nor the release to him; neither did he state that the check was a settlement in full for his injury. He stated that he signed the release by having his son write his name thereon, 'without it having been read to him, with the understanding and in the belief that it was a mere payment of the weekly disability benefits.

The plaintiff is supported in his testimony in this regard by certain members of his family. He is further supported in his evidence that he was blind by the testi *755 mony of a groeeryman wlio lived near by, as well as by some of his neighbors.

The plaintiff also testified that prior to his injury his eyesight ivas good; and he is corroborated in this by some of his neighbors, who testified that they had not observed anything wrong with his sight prior to the injury, but had often seen him reading, and knew that nothing was wrong with his eyesight prior to that time.

The defendant offered the agent who made the alleged settlement as a witness. This witness testified that it was understood that the cheek was in full settlement of the.' plaintiff’s injury; that he took up the policy, and that the plaintiff understood the terms and agreements contained in the instrument of release; and this witness is corroborated by another party who witnessed the signing of the alleged release by the plaintiff.

The defendant also introduced several witnesses, who were employees of the New Orleans & Northeastern Biailroad Company, and who, through their employment, were associated with the plaintiff in his work. These witnesses testified that the plaintiff had received some injury in March, 1926, preceding this claimed injury, and that plaintiff’s eyesight had been defective for some time before he quit the employ of the railroad, or was laid off. They testified that he had failed to distinguish the signals given; that they were working with him during the time he worked after the alleged injury, but that they saw no inflammation in his eyes then, and heard no complaint from him that he had received such injury.

It was also in evidence by a witness for the defendant, that the plaintiff was sent to Dr. J. E. Seale, an eye specialist, for examination of his eyes, about the 9th of October, and that the report of said examination indicated defective eyesight—inability to distinguish colors.' The plaintiff himself, on cross-examination, testified that he was examined by Dr. Seale for color-blindness.

*756 Dr. Seale was called as a witness for the defendant. His testimony was objected to, and the objection was sustained as to what he discovered by his examination of the plaintiff’s eyesight.

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Bluebook (online)
118 So. 437, 152 Miss. 747, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/provident-life-accident-ins-co-v-chapman-miss-1928.