Rew v. Beneficial Standard Life Insurance

250 P.2d 956, 41 Wash. 2d 577, 35 A.L.R. 2d 891, 1952 Wash. LEXIS 488
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1952
Docket32033
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 250 P.2d 956 (Rew v. Beneficial Standard Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rew v. Beneficial Standard Life Insurance, 250 P.2d 956, 41 Wash. 2d 577, 35 A.L.R. 2d 891, 1952 Wash. LEXIS 488 (Wash. 1952).

Opinions

Donworth, J.

This is an action on an insurance contract denominated “World-Wide Hospital and Surgical Expense Policy for Family Groups.”

For a consideration, defendant insurer issued to plaintiffs, in Spokane, a policy wherein it agreed, among other things, to pay for plaintiffs’ benefit the sum of ten dollars per day while either of them

“. . . because of sickness or accidental bodily injury covered by this policy, shall be necessarily confined as a resident bed patient within any hospital upon the advice of, and regularly attended by, a legally qualified physician or surgeon, but not to exceed ninety days for any one accident or sickness.”

The policy was issued for a period of one year ending February 8, 1951, and was subsequently renewed for one additional year. It provided that plaintiffs should have the sole righi to select any hospital. The policy also covered the cost of ambulance, laboratory service, drugs, dressings, and certain other expenses in amounts not exceeding specified limits.

One section of the policy, under the heading “Exceptions and Limitations,” read in part as follows:

“The word hospital as used in this policy shall not include a rest, convalescent or nursing home.”

On December 26, 1950, plaintiff wife suffered a cerebral vascular accident, or stroke, which partially paralyzed and completely disabled her. She was taken by ambulance to [579]*579the Deaconess Hospital, a general hospital in Spokane approved by the American College of Physicians and the American College of Surgeons, where for eighteen days she was a bed patient under the care of a legally qualified physician. During this period of time she was acutely ill and in a semicomatose condition. Thereupon, she was removed by ambulance to the Valley View Convalescent Home near Dishman, Washington, operated by a Mr. and Mrs. Stock-man, where she was a bed patient under the care of the same physician until June 12,1951. The Stockmans have operated and done business as the Valley View Convalescent Home since 1948 and have advertised for “guests.” There are, ordinarily, from twelve to eighteen such persons at the home.

The Valley View Convalescent Home on January 13,1951, when plaintiff wife became a patient there, was a licensed “Place of Refuge” as defined by chapter 100, § 1, p. 273, Laws of 1945 (Rem. Supp. 1945, § 8358a, since amended; cf. RCW 74.32.010).

At all times from January 13, 1951, until June 12, 1951, a registered nurse was on duty at the convalescent home, which was equipped with the necessary facilities for administering medications and oxygen. It had no surgery nor obstetric equipment.

While she was a patient at the home, plaintiff wife received medications. She was a helpless bed patient for more than the ninety-day period covered by the policy.

Shortly after his wife had suffered the stroke, plaintiff husband presented a claim to defendant for hospitalization benefits. He later presented an amended claim. Defendant denied any liability under the policy, and plaintiffs then brought this action seeking to recover ambulance and medication costs and the additional sum of nine hundred dollars for the full limit of ninety days’ hospitalization.

Defendant answered, denying the material allegations of the complaint and setting up two affirmative defenses: (1) that the cerebral vascular accident was caused by a condition existing prior to the effective date of the policy and was [580]*580therefore not covered by the policy, and (2) that the Valley View Convalescent Home was not a hospital within the policy coverage.

Plaintiffs’ demurrer to the first affirmative defense was overruled, and they replied, denying the allegations of the affirmative defenses.

One day prior to the trial of the action, defendant filed notice that it had deposited in the registry of the court a tender in the sum of two hundred twenty-five dollars (accompanied by an itemized statement showing how it was made up, including costs to date of order of sixteen dollars), and also gave notice that it would move for leave to withdraw its first affirmative defense. Leave to do so was granted by the trial court.

The action was tried to the court sitting without a jury. Plaintiffs introduced testimony relative to the custom' among doctors in Spokane of removing stroke patients from general hospitals to nursing or convalescent homes as soon as they might be moved so that there would be sufficient space in the general hospitals to care for those acutely ill. In response to a question asked on cross-examination as to the difference between ordinary hospitals and a “place of refuge,” the county health officer, one of two licensed physicians testifying on behalf of plaintiffs, said:

“Well, in the first place, I would say that the use of a nursing home or a place of refuge or convalescent place is for the care of non-acutely ill people, whereas the hospital, in contradistinction, would take the acute as well as the chronic. We look toward these places as being places for people with chronic diseases where we can place them in such a place and give them adequate care. They are limited in the rest homes, as compared to the hospitals, in the amount of service that is extended.”

Similar testimony was given by the other physician.

Defendant presented no evidence. In his oral decision at the close of the case, the trial court remarked upon the facilities maintained at the Valley View Convalescent Home and upon the fact that the policy contained no definition of a hospital.

[581]*581The trial judge noted that it was the custom among doctors to remove patients from the hospitals to “Places of Refuge” as soon as practicable. He concluded that, since respondent wife secured in the convalescent home the same care she would have received at the Deaconess Hospital had she remained there, the Valley View Convalescent Home was actually a hospital within the coverage of the policy.

The court thereafter entered its findings, conclusions, and judgment for plaintiffs in the total sum of $929, which included a recovery of hospitalization costs at the rate of ten dollars per day for ninety days. Defendant has appealed from this judgment.

Appellant insurer makes six assignments of error, but concedes that they present but one question: Was the Valley View Convalescent Home a hospital within the coverage of the policy? The question is one solely of law.

Neither appellant nor respondents have referred to any case directly in point, nor have we found any. Employers Casualty Co. v. Givens, 190 S. W. (2d) (Tex. Civ. App.) 155, cited by appellant, is different on its facts.

This court has laid down and followed the rule that:

“A policy of insurance is a contract, and its language, like that of any other contract, must be given its usual and ordinary meaning, unless it is apparent from a reading of the whole instrument that a different or special meaning was intended, or is necessary in order to avoid an absurd or unreasonable result.” Richards v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 184 Wash. 595, 55 P. (2d) 1067.

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Bluebook (online)
250 P.2d 956, 41 Wash. 2d 577, 35 A.L.R. 2d 891, 1952 Wash. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rew-v-beneficial-standard-life-insurance-wash-1952.