Wayne v. Travelers Insurance

220 Ill. App. 493, 1921 Ill. App. LEXIS 187
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 19, 1921
DocketGen. No. 26,360
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 220 Ill. App. 493 (Wayne v. Travelers Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wayne v. Travelers Insurance, 220 Ill. App. 493, 1921 Ill. App. LEXIS 187 (Ill. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McSurely

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff, the beneficiary in an accident insurance policy issued by defendant insuring John Beakley, who subsequently died, sued for $4,500, the principal sum of the policy, claiming that Beakley’s death was caused by accident. Upon trial the jury returned a verdict for this amount with interest and upon this verdict the court entered judgment for $5,107.51, from which defendant appeals.

In some of the counts plaintiff alleged-that Beakley’s death was caused by a cut on his lip accidentally inflicted by a barber, but the evidence fails to support this claim. The gist of the other counts, which raised the substantial issue in the case, was that the insured on August 2, 1917, at Dallas, Texas, received a hypodermic injection of arsenobenzol by a reputable physician who was treating him for “an ailment,” and that as an- unexpected result of this' injection and because the arsenobenzol was impure, making it dangerous, and because the quantity was excessive, and because the insured had special idiosyncrasies and an unusual idiopathic condition which neither the physician nor the insured knew existed, the death of the insured was accidentally caused. The defense is that death of the insured was .not covered by the provisions of the policy, which insured

“Against loss resulting from bodily injuries, effected directly and independently of all other causes, through external, violent, and accidental means.”

And the provision that

“This insurance shall not cover accident, injury, disability, death or other loss caused directly or indirectly, wholly or partly, by bodily or mental infirmity, ptomaines, bacterial infections (except pyogenic infections which shall occur simultaneously with and through an accidental cut or wound), or by any other ldnd of disease.”

Defendant says the evidence shows the death of the insured was caused or contributed to by syphilis. Misrepresentations in the application are claimed, but we shall not comment thereon.

We are of the opinion the evidence establishes that the death of' the insured was directly contributed to by syphilis, from which he was suffering, and therefore, under the provisions of the policy above quoted, defendant is not liable.

The evidence tends to show that in the fall of 1911 John Beakley, then 22 years old, admitted to some of his fellow students in Albany, New York, that he had syphilis; at that time he consulted a doctor who diagnosed his disease as syphilis and advised him to have the Wassermann blood test. This test was made with a positive result, which was reported to the physician, who prescribed treatment for syphilis, including injections of Salvarsan. In the fall of 1916, Beakley was at Dallas, Texas, and in the spring and summer of 1917 was still suffering from syphilis in the tertiary or last stage. Dr. White, a physician of Dallas, first saw him in May, 1917, and on examination found symptoms typical of syphilis such as lesions of the nose, throat and lips, and the eyelids with an absence of eyelashes. Beakley informed the doctor that he had had two previous Wassermann tests which were positive in results. The doctor prescribed mercurial treatments, and also gave him an injection of Salvarsan, another the next week, and then a third. The doctor testified that he informed Beakley he was in the last stage of syphilis and that the injections were for this disease; that after these injections the patient exhibited no evidence of any abnormal intolerance or idiosyncrasy against the drug. August 2 the doctor injected 0.6 grams of arsenobenzol. The witness described the technic of this operation, which was an injection in the left arm according to what is called the Mayo method. The manner of the injection seems to have been entirely regular and no question is raised in this respect. Within 30 minutes after this last injection the patient fainted and respiration was disturbed; a pulmotor was used under an experienced man, but in about 2 hours the patient died. The physician testified that no such result, from the injection was expected. The post-mortem showed that the muscles of the throat were swollen, the membrane on the inside edematous, and the throat closed. Dr. White made out the death certificate, wherein he stated that the cause of death was edema of the glottis following an injection of arsenobenzol, 0.6 grams, and “contributory syphilis, duration five years,” and testified that this statement in the certificate was correct. Witness further stated that syphilis .is one of the worst blood diseases in the world. He also testified that in the administration of the injection there was no mistake made nor anything done that the witness did not intentionally do; that he had for years used this method in the treatment of syphilis; that the arsenobenzol was bought from a reputable drug store and the drug was distributed by a reputable drug company of New York; the laboratory preparing it has the reputation of being one of the best medical laboratories in the United States or in the. world; that he had used arsenobenzol a great many times; it comes with one fixed dose in one bottle, and he gave the deceased one dose as put in the bottle by the chemist; that there was no evidence of any traumatic cut on any part of the deceased’s body and that he was given no history of any previous injury.

A number of physicians, who had not seen the deceased, testified for plaintiff and for defendant. There is virtually no conflict in what they say as to the' general characteristics of syphilis and as to its treatment. The Wassermann test is for syphilis, and when it is positive it means that the person has the disease. Among other effects of syphilis is endarteritis, .which is an inflammation of the inner wall of the arteries; this inner lining gradually becomes hardened and deposits are formed so that the arteries become occluded or stopped up. Edema of the glottis,- or swelling of the throat, is a condition which in syphilis not infrequently causes death, the blood vessels in the throat being stopped up so that the tissues become filled with water. Arsenobenzol is a standard remedy for syphilis throughout the world; an injection of 0.6 grams is the usual average dose. The curative ingredient of Salvarsan or arsenobenzol is arsenic, and the administration of arsenic either by injection or through the stomach never has any effect upon the glottis; it never causes edema. Salvarsan was the name given to the remedy manufactured in Germany, but during the war the remedy was manufactured in this country and given the name of arsenobenzol. Their ingredients and curative processes are virtually the same.

The above evidence clearly establishes that death was not because of any improper method in making the injection, or because the quantity of the medicine was excessive, or because the insured had any special intolerance for the remedy.

Plaintiff’s counsel apparently concede this, for special emphasis is laid upon the claim that the drug contained impurities which caused death. One doctor, testifying for plaintiff, was of the opinion that the cause of death was “the toxicity of the arsenobenzol,” and that such toxicity is an impurity in the drug.

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Bluebook (online)
220 Ill. App. 493, 1921 Ill. App. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wayne-v-travelers-insurance-illappct-1921.