Trau v. Preferred Accid. Ins. Co.

98 Pa. Super. 89, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 151
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 14, 1929
DocketAppeal 134
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 98 Pa. Super. 89 (Trau v. Preferred Accid. Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trau v. Preferred Accid. Ins. Co., 98 Pa. Super. 89, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 151 (Pa. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

The defendant company’s policy insured the plaintiff “ against the effect of bodily injury .......caused solely by external, violent and accidental means.” While it was in force, plaintiff strapped a trunk. As he was pulling the strap tight he felt a sliding or pinching sensation in his left groin, which, a day or two later, he found to have developed into a rupture, requiring an operation.

He brought suit on the policy and recovered a verdict. The court subsequently entered judgment for *91 the defendant non obstante veredicto, and the plaintiff appealed.

In Pollock v. U. S. Accident Assn., 102 Pa. 230, our Supreme Court in construing the same phrase said: “The object of the company is to insure against bodily injuries produced in a certain manner specified, that is, caused by external, violent and accidental means. Not injuries caused by any one of these means, but by all of them combined.” Notwithstanding the suggestion of appellant’s counsel that the Supreme Court in Pickett v. Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co., 144 Pa. 79, “felt it necessary to explain the peculiar language used in that [Pollock] opinion,” we do not understand that it has, in any way, weakened the force of its statement that a policy insuring against bodily injury caused by external, violent and accidental means will not be held to indemnify against injuries caused by only one of these means, but is limited to injuries caused by all of them combined; the adjectives modifying “means” áre not used disjunctively, but conjunctively ; and the bodily injuries relied on must be shown to have been caused by external means, by violeilt means, and by accidental means. We have no right to refine away any of these words in the policy. They are used in the sense ordinarily given them in this connection. “External” as used in the pólicy is equivalent to “outward;” “violent” to “not natural, abnormal,” — as a “violent death;” “accidental” to “happening by chance or unexpectedly.” To secure indemnity under the policy the injury must have been caused by means which were outward, not natural, and which happened by chance or unexpectedly. Did the plaintiff’s injury come within these requirements?

It may be admitted, for the purposes of this cáse, that the injury 'was an accidental one, that is, that it happened by chance or unexpectedly; but that is not the test. Was it caused by means which were external, *92 not natural, and which, happened by chance or unexpectedly? There is no decision in the appellate courts of this Commonwealth squarely on the point, and the decisions in other jurisdictions are not uniform, but we think the weight of authority and the sounder reasoning are opposed to the appellant’s claim.

It is established that the exciting cause of' an acquired, as distinguished from a congenital, hernia is generally some strain or over-exertion, “as in lifting a heavy weight, jumping off a high wall, straining (as in difficult micturition), constipation, or excessive coughing. The pressure of the diaphragm above and the abdominal wall in front acting on the abdominal viscera causes a protrusion at the weakest point”: 13 Ency. Brit. p. 372 (11th Ed.). The learned counsel for the appellant, in his able and interesting argument, admitted that the hernia was not caused by the trunk strap, or even by the process of strapping the trunk, apart from the internal strain which the insured placed on his abdominal muscles while engaged in that chore. He did not slip or fall or do anything that he had not intended to do, but the results were more than he ex-pectéd; He did intend to tense his muscles, but he did not purpose doing so to such a degree as to cause a hernia. To us the situation seems no different than it would have been had the insured suffered a hernia while straining in micturition or at stool, without any intervening' circumstances. There he would have intended to "strain the abdominal muscles in furtherance of his purpose, but not to the extent of causing a rupture. The hernia would have been accidental but it would not have been caused by external and accidental means. The distinction was drawn by the late Judge Henderson in Semancik v. Continental Casualty Co., 56 Pa. Superior Ct. 392, where recovery was denied under a similar policy for death by sunstroke, where no concurring accident was shown. He said: “Volun *93 tary exposure to heat or cold with a knowledge of the existing conditions, and action by the insured in an intended and ordinary manner under such circumstances, resulting in bodily injury does not present a state of facts on which the court can with confidence declare that such injury was effected by accidental means although the injury was accidental in that it was not designed or anticipated.” The same thought was well expressed by the Circuit Court, of Appeals, 5th Circuit, in Carswell v. Railway Mail Assn., 8 Fed. (2d) 612, where the insured died from dilation of the heart caused by his exertion in cranking an automobile: “Where one voluntarily undergoes physical exertion and nothing unexpected or unintended happens while he is doing so, the fact that such exertion unintentionally and unexpectedly causes injury, does not make the means whereby such injury is caused, namely, the voluntary exertion, accidental. The physical injury caused by voluntary exertion or strain, which is unaccompanied by anything which is involuntary, unforseen and unusual is not a result of ‘external, violent and accidental means’ within the meaning of the instrument sued on.” Judge John B. McPherson, when circuit judge of the 3d Circuit, Circuit Court of Appeals, stated the general principle in somewhat different terms, inadvertently confusing “accidental injury” with “injury by accidental means,” in Preferred Accident Ins. Co. v. Patterson, 213 Fed. 597, as follows: “We agree that when a man is'injured while doing merely what he intends to do, he is not injured by an accident, unless the course of his action has been interrupted or deflected by some unforeseen and unintended happening. To illustrate from the facts before us: Since the deceased was attempting to start the engine of his car by turning the crank whatever injury he might sustain from the ordinary strain of that operation, would prop *94 erly be regarded as a result of what he intended to do, and therefore would not be regarded as accidental. But we can hardly suppose that hé intended to slip and fall in the course of the operation, and therefore if he did slip and fall and sustained injury as the direct result thereof, the happening would be unforeseen and unintended and the injury would be accidental.”

So in this case, had the insured while strapping the trunk slipped and fallen, causing the hernia in question, the injury would have been caused by external, violent and accidental means; but when, as here, the operation of strapping the trunk is not interrupted or deflected by some outward happening, but in the exercise of usual and ordinary force results in an unexpected internal strain producing rupture, the occurrence though accidental would not amount to any injury caused by external and accidental means. 11A means is not accidental when employed intentionally, though it produces a result not expected or intended”: Maryland Casualty Co. v. Spitz, 246 Fed. 817, 818 (John B. McPherson, J.).

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Bluebook (online)
98 Pa. Super. 89, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trau-v-preferred-accid-ins-co-pasuperct-1929.