Thomas v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.

67 A. 259, 106 Md. 299, 1907 Md. LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 67 A. 259 (Thomas v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 67 A. 259, 106 Md. 299, 1907 Md. LEXIS 90 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit at law, brought by the appellant against the appellee, to recover on an accident insurance policy issued by the appellee company on the life of the appellant’s husband as beneficiary under trie policy.

The declaration contains the usual money counts and a *312 special count. The special count avers that the defendant, by its policy of insurance, dated the 18th day of November, 1904, did insure David W. Thomas for the period of one year against death resulting directly and independently of all other causes from bodily injuries sustained through external, violent, and accidental means, agreeing that if death should result’within ninety days from the injuries, the defendant would pay the beneficiary in the policy named, who is the plaintiff in :this action, if surviving, the sum of ten thousand dollars and for that on or about the 14th day of December, 1904, David W. Thomas was injured by an accident, which caused his death on or about the 31st day of January, 1905.

The defense on the part of the company is that the death of the insured did not result directly or independently of all other causes from bodily injuries sustained through external, violent or accidental means, but on the contrary resulted from ■diseases in no way caused by external, violent, or accidental means.

The judgment was in favor of the defendant and the plaintiff has appealed.

At the trial of the case, the plaintiff reserved nine exceptions, eight of them being to the admissibility of evidence and the ninth, to the granting of the defendant’s second prayer. This prayer was granted, at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case, and is as follows: “The defendant prays the Court to instruct the jury that it appears from the uncontradicted evidence that the death of the deceased did not result directly and independently of all other causes, from bodily injuries sustained through external, violent and accidental means and therefore under the pleadings, their verdict must be for the defendant.”

The prayer being in the nature of a demurrer, it becomes necessary for us to examine the evidence upon which, it was based.

The policy: which is conceded to be a Maryland contract, is dated October 18th, 1904, and provides, that the Fidelity and Casualty Company of New York (herein called the com *313 pany), in consideration of the premium and of the statements in the schedule of warranties hereinafter contained, which statements the assured makes on the acceptance of this policy and warrants to be true, does hereby insure the person named and described in said schedule (and herein called the assured) for the period of one year from noon, standard time, of the day this contract is dated (i) against disability or death resulting directly and independently of all other causes, from bodily injuries sustained through external, violent, and accidental means (suicide, sane or insane, not included) and (2) against disability from illness, as hereinafter defined.

The undisputed facts are, that the insured, David W. Thomas, on the 17th of December, 1904, while walking upon W. Saratoga street, in the city of Baltimore, slipped and fell upon the pavement and injured his ankle.. There were snow and ice on the pavement at the place of the accident, and his fall is alleged to be due to this condition of the street. He returned shortly after the fall to the Young Men’s Republican Club, where he had left a number of friends to go to the Hotel Rennert, and complained of suffering considerable pain in his right leg. Doctor Chambers subsequently diagnosed the injury as a fracture of the fibula, the small outer bone of the ankle. He died on January 31st, 1905. The insured was a man of sixty-four years of age, and at the time of his death the fracture of the ankle had completely healed. Doctor Chambers, who treated him continuously from the date of the accident, December 17th, 1904, until his death, on January 31st, 1905, in the proofs of loss submitted to the appellee, gave as the cause of death, “The primary cause due to the injury and consequent shock, due to the fall. Contributory— enccphalo meningitis. Immediate cause, lung congestion.” He testified that encephalo meningitis was a disease, it is an old form or some form of change in the meninges that covers the brain, changes going on in the brain surface. It is an affection of the brain covering, it means a degeneration. In answer to the following questions, he said:

Q. Doctor, you don’t mean to say all men of 64 have encephalo meningitis?
*314 A. I don’t mean all men under or over 64 that die, die from encephalo meningitis.. That is one of the things you can die from and in my judgment, that is one of things he did die from.
Q. Isn’t that the principal one?
A. That was the most aggravating factor. The final congestion of his lung was the immediate cause.
Q. Did you think the encephalo meningitis was the primary cause?
A. I think that was a contributing caus.e.
Q. When you filled out the certificate to the Health Department you gave encephalo meningitis as the cause of death?
A. Yes.
Q. That is a disease, is it not?
A. Yes.

The proof further shows that at the time of the accident the insured was suffering from a disease called arteriosclerosis, which is a diseased condition of the arteries.

Doctor Chambers, testified, he had more or less marked arterio sclerosis. He also testified:

Q. Doctor, an injury to the ankle of the kind that Colonel Thomas had couldn’t, of course, have produced arterio sclerosis in a man who didn’t have it, could it?
A. Oh, no. It would only be a dangerous factor in a man suffering under those conditions!
Q. Then, Doctor, wouldn’t .you say, arterio sclerosis was one of the contributing causes that brought about his death?
A. I think if his arteries had been perfectly good, it would have been a trifling injury, but, as it was, it was a very strongly contributing factor to his death.
Q. Then are you still of the opinion, as expressed by you in the proofs of death, that the accident, was the primary cause of Col. Thomas’ death?
A. What I meant to state by that is this: The probabilities are, all the probabilities are, that if he had not received this accident, he would not have succumbed to those conditions to which he did in so short a time; that it preciptated those changes and conditions, which frequently occur in a man having arterio sclerosis; all those conditions can be'precipitated by an accident.

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

Related

Booth v. State
608 A.2d 162 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1992)
Gray v. Citizens Casualty Co. of New York
181 F. Supp. 21 (D. Maryland, 1960)
Vargo v. New York Life Insurance
180 F. Supp. 638 (D. Maryland, 1959)
Liberty Nat. Life Ins. Co. v. Bailey
38 So. 2d 295 (Alabama Court of Appeals, 1949)
Brooks v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
163 P.2d 689 (California Supreme Court, 1945)
White v. New York Life Ins. Co.
145 F.2d 504 (Fifth Circuit, 1944)
Bouchard v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America
194 A. 405 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1937)
Donnelly v. Donnelly
143 A. 648 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1928)
Kerns v. Ætna Life Ins.
291 F. 289 (Eighth Circuit, 1923)
Ætna Life Ins. Co. of Hartford v. Ryan
255 F. 483 (Second Circuit, 1918)
Crandall v. Continental Casualty Co.
179 Ill. App. 330 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1913)
Standard Accident & Life Insurance v. Wood
82 A. 702 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1911)
Wabash Screen Door Co. v. Lewis
184 F. 260 (Sixth Circuit, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 A. 259, 106 Md. 299, 1907 Md. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-fidelity-casualty-co-md-1907.