Scinski v. Great Northern Life Insurance

99 P.2d 218, 110 Mont. 106, 1940 Mont. LEXIS 77
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1940
DocketNo. 7,983.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 99 P.2d 218 (Scinski v. Great Northern Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scinski v. Great Northern Life Insurance, 99 P.2d 218, 110 Mont. 106, 1940 Mont. LEXIS 77 (Mo. 1940).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JOHNSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendant has appealed from a judgment entered pursuant to a jury’s verdict awarding plaintiff $500 as indemnity for the final 11 months of a 30-month period of total disability under a health and accident insurance policy, with interest and costs. A motion for new trial was made by defendant and denied by the court.

The insurance policy in question is divided into several parts, only three of which need be mentioned. Part I is the schedule of indemnities and recites that the monthly accident indemnity is $50. Part II provides specific indemnities for loss of life, hand, foot or eye as the result of accident, and is not applicable here. Part III is the portion in controversy here and is as follows:

“Part III. Accident Indemnity — Total or Partial Disability.
“ (a) If ‘such injury’ shall not result in any of the losses
Total Disability enumerated in Part II, but shall, independently and exclusively of all other causes, immediately, continuously and wholly disable and prevent the Insured *108 from performing any and every kind of duty pertaining to any occupation or business, the company will pay, for the continuous period of loss of time caused thereby, not exceeding thirty (30) consecutive months, accident indemnity at the rate per month specified in Par. I;
“(b) Or, if ‘such injury’ shall immediately and eontinuPartial ously disable and prevent the Insured from perform-Disability ing one .or more important daily duties pertaining to his occupation or business, either from date of accident or following total disability, the company will pay for the continuous period of loss of time caused thereby, not exceeding six (6) consecutive months, accident indemnity at one-half the rate per month specified in Par. I;
“Provided, that indemnity under this Part III shall not be payable for disability resulting from any loss specified in Part II; nor for any period during which the Insured is not under the regular professional attendance and treatment of a legally qualified physician or surgeon.”

It will be noted that accident indemnity is to be paid for total disability as defined in the policy “for the continuous period of loss of time caused thereby, not exceeding thirty (30) consecutive months,” excluding (1) disability resulting from any of the specific losses mentioned in Part II, and excluding (2) “any period during which the Insured is not under the regular professional attendance and treatment of a legally qualified physision or surgeon.”

Payments for the first 9 months after plaintiff’s injury were made voluntarily by defendant; the next ten monthly payments were involved in a former action appealed to this court (Scinski v. Great Northern Life Ins. Co., 107 Mont. 525, 86 Pac. (2d) 749) and have since been paid. The present suit involves plaintiff’s claim for payment for the 11 months from August 6, 1937, to July 6,1938, the last 11 months of the 30-month period, though by error not questioned by cross-appeal the verdict and judg *109 ment were for only $500 (covering only ten monthly payments), together with interest and costs.

The only testimony offered was that of plaintiff and his witness, Dr. Shields. Plaintiff testified concerning the accidental injury of his back in a mine; he stated that ever since the injury he had been unable to stoop over or lift anything without pain and therefore could not work at mining, which was the only occupation he had ever followed; that he had earned nothing since; that the mining company refused him employment; that ever since his injury he could “do nothing except walking around and eating and that’s about all;” that after his accident he was taken to the hospital, where Dr. Shields treated him, and that he went to see the same doctor twice each month until March, 1938, and once each month thereafter; that since May, 1937, the doctor had given him no medicine but had examined and questioned him and had advised the continuance of steam baths, and that ever since that date he had continued taking that treatment, but that there was no doctor at the steam baths.

Dr. Shields testified to his treatment of plaintiff beginning on January 6, 1936, for “a contusion or a bruising of the lower lumbar spine;” he said that for workmen’s compensation purposes plaintiff’s disability was considered as temporary total until May, 1937, and was then rated as from 20 to 25 per cent, permanent partial; that since that time plaintiff had been in “a few times,” but that he could not say how many times or just when, except March 11, May 31, and June 27, 1938; that he saw many patients every day and had to rely entirely upon clerks for his records; that he had done nothing but talk with plaintiff and question him; that plaintiff was taking the steam baths and said that he felt better and that his legs were improving, and ‘ ‘ I told him if they were he could continue; ’ ’ that during 1936 and 1937 he did everything he could do for plaintiff professionally, including strapping his back, prescribing different forms of medicine, and diathermy, an electrical heating process, until both he and the patient felt that nothing further could be done; that plaintiff had some arthritis which had not disabled him before his accident but may have been aggravated by it; *110 that at the time of the trial (January 4, 1939) plaintiff was still unable to do “pick and shovel work” or “hard labor with stooping and lifting heavy weights,” but could do “light work such as watching or working at the precipitating tanks,” etc.

Appellant names five specifications of error, two of which were that the court erred in denying defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, and that the verdict was not sustained by the evidence and was against the law. The other three specifications were of alleged errors in giving Instruction No. 11 and in refusing to give defendant’s offered Instructions Nos. 16 and 17.

Instruction No. 11, given over defendant’s objection, was as follows: “If you believe from a preponderance of all of the evidence in this case that Mike Scinski was totally disabled during the months mentioned in the complaint and for which he claims disability benefits, then it is immaterial whether Mike Scinski was or was not under the regular professional attendance and treatment of a legally qualified physician or surgeon. ’ ’

Defendant’s offered Instructions Nos. 16 and 17, which were refused, were as follows:

“You are instructed that the plaintiff cannot recover against the defendant for any period of time during which he was not under the regular professional attendance and treatment of a legally qualified physician and surgeon, and that the periods of time for which the plaintiff would be entitled to recover, if under such treatment, are monthly periods, and consequently, he would be entitled to recover for only such monthly periods as he was under regular and professional attendance and treatment of such physician and surgeon.” (Offered Instruction No. 16.)

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Bluebook (online)
99 P.2d 218, 110 Mont. 106, 1940 Mont. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scinski-v-great-northern-life-insurance-mont-1940.