DocketNumber: No. 20755
Judges: Day, Dean, Letton
Filed Date: 2/14/1920
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
For personal injuries sustained from an accident alleged to come within the terms of an accident insurance policy, plaintiff recovered judgment for $1,202.18, and defendant appealed.
Defendant says only these questions are to he determined: “First. In what hazard did Mr. Wheeler receive his injury? Second. How many weeks is he entitled to receive pay for partial disability?”
Defendant admits liability in the sum of $488.50, and argues that the verdict is excessive in all over that sum, for the reason that plaintiff was injured while acting as a “drover, not tending cattle in transit,” an occupation classed by the company as more hazardous than that described in the policy as plaintiff’s occupation, which is therein described as follows: “Money loaner, insurance and general broker — does some traveling.” The injury was sustained while plaintiff was assisting in driving a herd of cattle owned by him to a railroad station for shipment to his ranch. In attempting to mount his horse, the animal lunged forward and, striking him, caused plaintiff to sustain a compound fracture of his right leg.
Section 7 of the policy provides: “If the insured is injured in any occupation classed by the company as more hazardous than that described in the warranties hereinafter contained (excepting ordinary duties about his residence), the company’s liability shall be for only such proportion of the principal sum or other indemnity as the premium paid will purchase at the rate fixed by the company for such increased hazard.”
Under the decisions we do not think that plaintiff’s occupation was changed at the time of the accident as
, It is argued that the verdict, based as it is on 33 weeks of total disability and 26 weeks of partial disability, is excessive, in that the claim as filed with the company alleged only 16 weeks of partial disability, and that plaintiff, having filed no subsequent claim for the additional 10 weeks, was therefore not entitled to payment for the additional time as alleged in his petition. It may be noted, however, that plaintiff in his original claim stated that the partial disability was then present and apparently continuous, and that his injured limb then caused swelling and pain when he attempted to walk. That partial disability prevailed for 10 weeks subsequent to the filing of the original claim sufficiently appears, and we think
Finding no reversible error, the judgment is
Affirmed.