Prusiner v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance

265 N.W. 919, 221 Iowa 572
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 17, 1936
DocketNo. 43256.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 265 N.W. 919 (Prusiner v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prusiner v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance, 265 N.W. 919, 221 Iowa 572 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Anderson, J.

This is an action to recover upon an accident insurance policy for three months disability at the rate of $25 per week. The contract of insurance with this plaintiff is contained in a “rider” or “special beneficiary supplement” attached to and forming a part of a policy of insurance issued to the husband of this plaintiff. It is conceded that the policies were in full force and effect at the time plaintiff claims to have received a disabling injury. The supplementary contract involved here provides a weekly indemnity of $25 for not to exceed a three-month period, against the effects of bodily injuries sustained “directly and independently of all other causes through external, violent and accidental means”, and the paragraph contained in the policy over which this controversy arises is as follows:

“If such injuries so received shall from the date of the accident continuously and totally disable and prevent the said beneficiary from transacting any and every duty pertaining to any and every business and occupation, the company will pay for the period of such total disability, not exceeding three months, the Weekly Accident Indemnity specified above.”

Plaintiff claims to have received an injury through external, violent, and accidental means on the 19th day of December, *574 1934, and that such injury continuously and totally disabled her from the date of the injury to the date of the trial of this case, or in excess of the three-month limitation provided in the contract.

The defendant in its answer admitted the execution of the contracts of insurance, and that they were in full force and effect during the times material to this controversy. The defendant as a further defense alleged in its answer that if an accident did occur to the plaintiff as alleged, the resulting-illness therefrom occurred and was suffered outside of the United States, Canada, or Europe, and that the defendant is not liable on the contract of insurance on account thereof. The defendant further pleaded that the disability of plaintiff, if any, was unduly extended by the failure of the plaintiff to obtain proper medical attention promptly after the occurrence of- the accident and injury.

Testimony was introduced on the part of the plaintiff only, and at the close of plaintiff’s testimony the court sustained a motion of the defendant to direct a verdict for the defendant. From such ruling and order plaintiff appeals.

The facts as disclosed by the plaintiff’s evidence are substantially as follows: Mrs. Jennie Prusiner, the appellant, is a resident of Des Moines, Iowa, and the wife of Benjamin W. Prusiner. She is the mother of three children, all matured. On December 19, 1934, the appellant in company with her husband, her brother-in-laiv, .and his wife were taking a boat trip from New Orleans to Havana and Colon. When getting on the boat at New Orleans about noon on the day mentioned, as Mrs. Prusiner was going into her stateroom she tripped on a rod or projection of some kind which protruded underneath the berth and fell, injuring her right leg. Mrs. Prusiner was about fifty-four years old and a heavy woman. She was picked up by her husband and a couple of employees on the boat and placed in her berth. Her limb was bruised quite seriously and her husband applied mercurochrome and hot applications. The injury became swollen and discolored; was very red, inflamed, and blue; and the appellant suffered a great deal of pain therefrom from the time of the injury to the time of the trial. Mrs. Prusiner remained in her berth on the trip to Havana and while the boat was at Havana, and did not attempt to leave her berth until the boat arrived at Colon, some *575 two or three days after the injury. She was taken from the boat at Colon and made a short trip on bus or train to the interior but did not participate in any of the activities of the party. She had to sit around and keep her leg elevated. The appellant and her party made the return trip to New Orleans and she was taken to her sister’s at Memphis, Tennessee, where she remained about ten days, and then returned to her home in Des Moines about the middle of January. Within a day or two after she arrived home, a doctor examined her leg and was told the history of the accident. He prescribed cold applications and instructed that appellant keep her weight off her leg. Plaintiff testified that she followed the treatment. The testimony also shows that after she arrived home she tried to pursue her duties as a housewife, but she could not do so on account of the pain incident to bearing her weight on the injured limb. Before the injury, while she always kept a maid in the house, she assisted in the usual household duties. After the injury every time she attempted to perform any household duties she suffered severe pains and was compelled to remain quiet. In a couple of weeks after she returned home she was taken to a hospital for gall-bladder trouble and remained there a couple of weeks, but the testimony of the doctors is definite that her gall-bladder trouble had nothing to do with the condition of her leg injury, and the two doctors who treated her both testified that she could not perform her ordinary duties as a housewife due to the injury to her limb, and that this was true irrespective of her gall-bladder trouble; that under proper treatment for her leg she should have been in bed during all of the time following the accident. The doctors instructed her not to climb any stairs and not to be' on her leg for any length of time.

On February 8, 1935, following the accident, a preliminary accident report was filed with the company. This was signed by Dr. E. H. McCaffrey, who was one of her attending physicians. In this report the doctor stated that the injury from which appellant was suffering prevented her from performing any and all duties pertaining to her occupation. Attached to this preliminary medical report was a notice of the accident upon a blank furnished by the company, in which report was made of the date and place of the accident and of the resulting injury and disability.

*576 Such was the condition of the record at the close of plaintiff’s testimony, and the defendant then moved the court for a directed verdict based upon the following grounds:

“1. That the plaintiff has wholly and totally failed to show that the alleged disability was the result, independently of all other causes, of injury by violent, external and accidental means.
“2. That the plaintiff has failed to show that the resulting disability, if any, was the proximate result of the injury alleged to have been sustained on or about December 19, 1934.
“3. That the plaintiff has failed to show that the said injury from the date of the accident did continuously and totally disable and prevent the said plaintiff from transacting any and every duty pertaining to any and every business and occupation.
“4. The plaintiff has failed to show that said injury, if any, was the result of external, violent and accidental means.
‘ ‘ 5. That if the jury were to return a verdict in this cause for the plaintiff, the court would be required, under the laws in view of the evidence here introduced, to set the same aside.
“6.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mason v. Loyal Protective Life Insurance Company
91 N.W.2d 389 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1958)
Schoeman v. Loyal Protective Life Insurance Co. of Massachusetts
32 N.W.2d 212 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1948)
Merchants National Bank v. Epworth Seminary
285 N.W. 143 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1939)
Lotz v. United Food Markets, Inc.
283 N.W. 99 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1938)
Hoover v. Mutual Trust Life Insurance
282 N.W. 781 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
265 N.W. 919, 221 Iowa 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prusiner-v-massachusetts-bonding-insurance-iowa-1936.